Category Archives: Uncategorized

“Ain’t No Sunshine,” The Joint Finance Committee Does the Education Budget (and Much Else) Updated

Annular Solar Eclipse at High Resolution Credit & Copyright: Stefan Seip, via NASA (click image for more information)

Annular Solar Eclipse at High Resolution Credit & Copyright: Stefan Seip, via NASA (click image for more information)

Bill Withers, “Ain’t No Sunshine” (click to listen or download)

[Update at the bottom]

Wisconsin is generally considered to have good open meetings/open records, “sunshine” laws. However, it appears that significant revisions of the state’s 2009-11 biennial budget is moving through the Joint Finance Committee (JFC) with little or no public scrutiny, analysis of any sort, and no opportunity for fully informed public input. Meetings were held and crucial votes taken over the weekend, continuing today. This is not good governance.

Late on Thursday May 21, 2009 Governor Jim Doyle and Joint Finance Co-Chairs Mark Pocan and Mark Miller announced a deal on a budget “fix” involving significant cuts to many programs and services, including $291 million in state funding for education. On Friday May 22, Secretary of Administration Michael Morgan issued a memo on the “fix” that was short on details and long on spin. It contained one paragraph on education funding and left many questions unanswered, including whether school districts will be allowed to raise property taxes to make up for the cuts from the state and how the cuts will be balanced between general aid and categorical aid.

Today (Tuesday 5/26) the agenda for the Wednesday, May 27 1:00 PM meeting was announced. It is a full plate including shared revenue for municipalities and counties, taxes, health services, transportation, children and families and the following education items:

Public Instruction — General School Aids and Revenue Limits
Public Instruction — Categorical Aids
Public Instruction — School District Operations
Public Instruction — Choice and Charter

Although the Assembly and the Senate will get a crack at the results of the Joint Finance work, one-party rule will likely mean that what gets decided tomorrow, stays decided.

As of 7:55 PM, May 26, less than 18 hours prior to the Joint Finance meeting where the fate of education for the next two years will be decided, essential questions about the “fix” remain unavailable to the public.

The Legislative Fiscal Bureau (LFB) has been scrambling to prepare new analyses, taking into account the budget cuts Doyle, Pocan and Miller favored over revenue reforms, but they have yet to get to the education matters (click on the link for the latest analyses, as noted the papers for the Wednesday session are not there as of this posting). Without either text of the “fix’ or an analysis, it is impossible to give a fully informed opinion and therefore difficult to attempt to influence members of the Joint Finance Committee or mobilize others to contact the JFC.

The published 2009-11 Budget Procedures for the Joint Committee on Finance, promised that

LFB Budget Papers. The Legislative Fiscal Bureau will attempt to distribute its papers at least 72 hours prior to each of the Committee’s executive sessions.

Obviously this isn’t happening. I don’t blame the LFB; I fault the politicians who apparently want to wield their budget saws and axes in the shadows, outside of public awareness, without public input.

What’s even worse is that without the analyses of the LFB, the members of the Joint Finance Committee will vote without comprehending the full consequences of their choices.

This is bad governance any way you look at it.

For more information of open government, visit the Wisconsin Freedom of Information Council and the Midwest Open Government Project.

Update (2:02 PM, 5/27): According to the WisPolitics Budget blog the 5/27 JFC session will not start till 4:00 PM at the earliest.  An agenda for 5/28 has been released, listing the items that has previously been on the 5/27 agenda.   No LFB papers on the education items have been posted.

Thomas J. Mertz

1 Comment

Filed under "education finance", Accountability, Best Practices, Budget, education, finance, Local News, School Finance, Uncategorized

Let’s Call Cuts, Cuts — Budget Rhetoric Fact Check

pete_townshend_rs_958_170.6478946

Pete Townshend photographed by Annie Leibovitz, for more information click on the image.

The Who, “Won’t Get Fooled Again” (click to listen or download)

This budget season in Wisconsin began with Governor Jim Doyle’s Orwellian statement that ““Not getting cut is the new increase in this budget.” It has been all downhill from there. The latest cut of $291 million in education aid has been accompanied by the misleading factoid that after these changes, school district revenues from federal, state and local sources are still expected to increase by approximately 5% on a biennial basis.

This distracting rhetorical labeling of cuts in programs and services as a monetary “increase,” is a classic Republican ploy. The idea is to discourage an examination of the impact of the cuts. In the case of the Governor’s latest budget proposal, touting the 5% figure is an attempt to hide more than cuts. It shifts the accountability from state resources to federal and local ones, creating a funding cliff of federal stimulus money that can only be used in targeted ways.

Never mind that conservative estimates put the cost of continuing the same educational opportunities for Wisconsin’s students at a level that would require a biennial increase at a minimum of 7.5% to 8%. Never mind too that the majority of that 5% comes from federal money, over which Doyle has little or no say, and most of which will be gone in two years, leaving the state and the districts on the edge of a cliff. Also, about 1/3 of that federal money comes with huge strings attached and can only be used for specific purposes, mostly to “supplement, not supplant” state and local expenditures. Further, to get to that 5% increase, school boards will need to significantly increase property taxes….(more about the numbers below and in a subsequent post).

Never mind all this, the Governor wants us to think about that 5% increase and forget about the reality of cuts in educational opportunities and shifts from state money to federal and local revenues.

The governor wants you to ponder, “how can people complain about cuts to education when there is an increase?” Don’t be fooled (again).

The rhetoric and numbers concerning school funding coming out of the Governor’s office have consistently been presented in ways designed to obscure the reality of significant decreases in state aid, as well as a level of combined state and federal aid that is far below “cost-to-continue” or even the level required to keep school budget cuts at the 1% to 2% that has been the norm in Wisconsin for the last 15 years under our broken state school finance system.

Before further going into the recent rhetoric and numbers, a little history lesson is in order.

All sorts of budgets — schools, states, households… — grow each year even if there is no expansion, because the same activities, programs, services or purchases get more expensive. This is the idea behind “cost-to-continue” or “same service” budgeting. It gives a baseline that says, if we want to continue doing the same things in the same ways, this is what it will cost.

Way back in 1996, President Bill Clinton proposed changes in the Medicaid program. The changes included new efficiencies and discontinuing some things. As a result, the total cost of the Clinton proposal was less than the cost of continuing the program as it had been (although more than current spending levels). Clinton repeatedly referred to “cuts” in the Medicaid budget.

Then Speaker of the House (and now Obama advisor), Newt Gingrich, repeatedly called Clinton a “liar” for saying he was cutting the Medicaid budget. According to Gingrich, the only things that counted as cuts were those that decreased the dollars. This rejection of “cost-to-continue’ basis became the Republican frame for budget discussions.

[Read about the Clinton/Gingrich conflict over the meaning of “cuts” here.]

In most cases, the GOP has used this to try to deny that less than “cost-to-continue” increases are cuts. That’s what State Rep. Brett Davis and other Republicans did in the last budget cycle.

In the past, Democrats in Wisconsin resisted this rhetorical fraud; now Governor Doyle is doing exactly what Gingrich and Davis did, telling us that cuts aren’t cuts. Pretty disgusting.

At the press conference on the budget fix Governor Doyle said, “overall school districts will have more money.” He also said that it would be difficult for some districts, and rhetorically averred from “sugar coating” the situation. Yet the emphasis on the “increase” is a coat of sugar.

This message of an overall increase was repeated, with numbers attached, in a memo issued today by Secretary of Administration Micheal L. Morgan. Here is the main part on education funding:

memo excerpt

Note the last line “school district revenues are still expected to increase by approximately 5% on a biennial basis.” Elsewhere in the memo the total new “School Aid Reduction” is given as $291 million.

Just to be clear (before moving on), that reduction isn’t from real district-by-district “cost-to-continue” budgeting or even from a “cost-to continue,” based on the already inadequate funding levels of the 2007-09 state budget. It is from the previous Gubernatorial proposal which represented a significant decrease in school aid levels, resulting in an estimated shift from the fictional 2/3 state portion of general aids to less than 62% coming from the state, as well as cuts in categorical aids of 1% (the Legislative Fiscal Bureau memo is here). It looks like the new cuts will bring a further shift to property taxes (to be examined in a subsequent post). The new reductions are Doyle’s second cut with the knife (or the third if you count the annual cuts created by the structural gap built into Wisconsin’s school funding system, a system that Governor Doyle has not lifted a finger to fix).

By my calculations a 5% increase in total education funding (federal, sate and local)  over the biennium comes to about $1.105 billion ( I am working on a post providing a closer look at the numbers and fed/state/local breakdowns). About 35% of this increase is in $381 million of ARRA/Stimulus funding for Title I and IDEA programing. This money cannot be spent on general operations, and with some limited exceptions, must be used to supplement not supplant state and local funded efforts targeting children in poverty and special education students. The inclusion of this money is questionable as both rhetoric and policy. Without this money included, the net increase over the biennium would be about 3.28% (remember that cost-to-continue is at least 7.5% to 8%).

About 50 districts in Wisconsin will receive no Title I money and only about 35 will receive over $1 million in IDEA money. The Wisconsin Association of School Boards further notes that

…the U.S. Education Department is asking states to submit much more detailed information on how they plan to improve student learning before they can tap a sizable portion of the second round of ARRA funding, which is scheduled to go out in the fall. To tap a portion of special education aid and Title I funding for disadvantaged students, states must explain how they will comply with transparency and accounting requirements.

If the state simply offsets state aid for federal aid, there may be difficulty in securing the second round of funding. The U.S. Department of Education also plans to allocate $4.35 billion in “Race to the Top” grants, which aim to reward states and districts that make significant strides in closing achievement gaps, raising academic standards, tracking student progress, and improving the distribution of high-quality teachers. Dramatic cuts to state education spending may hinder the state’s and local school districts’ efforts to secure these grants.

In other words, if Wisconsin school districts use the stimulus money in the manner the Governor has advised, the state may be ineligible for the remainder of their anticipated payments and will certainly be disqualified from the $5 billion in the “Race for the Top” funding.”

The 5% is a chimera and the cuts are real. As Curtis Mayfield said, “If you are cut you are going to bleed.” All the talk of 5% increases won’t change that reality.

Education in Wisconsin has been cut repeatedly for 15 years and the blood has been flowing for just as long. Even though the Governor only pulled the knife out again late on Thursday, May 21, some districts are already anticipating the latest bloodletting.

On Wisconsin Public Television’s “Here and Now,” Madison Superintendent Dan Nerad spoke of $2 million in additional cuts (on top of the $3.8 million already cut). Nerad also spoke of the difficulty of the timing of the Governor’s announcement, the continuing uncertainty about flexibility to make up for lost state revenue with property taxes under the revenue caps, and most importantly the need for comprehensive school finance reform to give Wisconsin adequate, equitable and sustainable education funding.

The Sheboygan Area School District cut $5 million and eliminated 45 full time teaching positions, 11 librarians and 2 guidance counselors three weeks ago. In the wake of the Governor’s announcement, they anticipate the need for $3 million to $5 million more in cuts.

In Hudson, where unemployment is a full point above the state average, the district has struggled to preserve education while limiting property taxes. Ideas to address the problems include a salary freeze, cuts in transportation, summer programs, layoffs

You can be sure that there will be ugly budget sessions in districts around the state in the months to come. AMPS will report on as many as we can.

One indication of the direction this is going comes from the Wisconsin Association of School Boards. Their most recent press release carried the message “Don’t Cut Our Future,” but a legislative alert issued a day prior included a request for members to lobby for “Changing state statutes to allow school boards to lay off staff for the 2009-10 school year.” These are desperate times.

Cuts and layoffs, cuts so large and late that school boards need a change in the law to make them, cuts on top of cuts. Too many cuts to hide behind the transparent rhetoric of “5% increases.”

Stop insulting the people of Wisconsin with this talk of Governor Doyle. Stop using Republican spin to hide the full impact of your politically motivated choice to cut, instead of tax . Stop undermining any hope for comprehensive reform in the future by muddying the water with talk of increases at a time when you are cutting.

Let’s call all cuts, cuts.

Thomas J. Mertz

Leave a comment

Filed under "education finance", Budget, education, Elections, finance, Gimme Some Truth, Local News, School Finance, Uncategorized

The Democrats Cut Education and Services, Relative Silence Ensues

beaver-cut-742551There is that old question about whether a tree falling in empty woods makes a noise.  Last Thursday, May 21, 2009 Wisconsin Governor Doyle got out his budget cut saw and began felling numerous trees. He has since passed the saw to the Democratic controlled Joint Finance Committee who are poised to finish the work.  Although many organizations and individuals were very vocal before the cuts were announced, there has been relative silence since.

Prior to the announcement of the budget ‘fix,” 65 organizations joined in an effort to convince lawmakers that new revenues should be part of the answer to state’s deficit.  Other organizations and individuals,  such as the School Finance Network and Paul Soglin and Barry Orton (and me),  sent similar messages.

Since the announced “fix” involving large cuts to core government services, there has been relative silence.  Maybe it is the shock of the  betrayal by Democrats who seem to have abandoned the principles of their platform.  Maybe it is misplaced loyalty or sympathy to elected officials who express regrets instead of glee as they cut away.  Maybe it is just the long holiday weekend.

Whatever the reasons, if this silence continues our elected officials will breathe a sigh of relief knowing that there will be  no political consequences for their betrayal.

One notable exception to the silence comes from Ed Garvey at Fighting Bob.  He gets it almost exactly right:

Is there a difference?

OK, there is a budget shortfall. We know that; we know schools are under-funded; and local governments are have trouble raising money. So why would a Democratic governor cut school aid, lay off state workers, cut aid to local government, and threaten to cut more jobs unless the unionized state employees agree to reduce their pay “or else”? (No bargaining? Bad faith? You betcha. Is that how Democrats negotiate in good faith with the union? “My way or the highway?” Heck, Tommy treated state employees better than that.)

I don’t get it. Isn’t it time Jim Doyle opted to lead? Leadership in these tough times would require him to step on lots of Gucci slippers worn by the big campaign contributers. Time to announce that he won’t run so he can lead, or announce he is running as the governor who believes in fair taxes, good public schools, a respect for the bargaining process, an end to contracting out, and support for an increase in progressive taxes. (Did I mention public financing of campaigns?)

C’mon! Wisconsin Democrats cannot keep cutting just when working families need help. Tell the Neanderthals in the Legislature that there is a difference between the two parties. Lead or get out of the way.

I hope the coming days will bring more protests like Garvey’s.  I’ve got my own in the works , now posted on AMPS.

Thomas J. Mertz

2 Comments

Filed under "education finance", Accountability, Budget, Contracts, education, Elections, finance, Gimme Some Truth, Local News, Uncategorized

“Walk on the Child’s Side” June 16 — Don’t Forget

phillips1Don’t forget to save the date for the June 16, “Walk on the Child Side” 10th anniversy school funding action.

In light of the recent budget moves in Wisconsin, this action has never been more necessary.

WEAC has a good page up on the event, here is what they have to say:

School funding reform rally is June 16 in Madison

Ten years after a group of northern Wisconsin educators first walked across the state to draw attention to the need to reform school funding, they will return to Madison for a rally focusing on the fact that “the kids are still waiting.” And everyone who supports school funding reform is invited and encouraged to attend.

The school funding reform rally will begin at 11 a.m. Tuesday, June 16, at the Library Mall on the University of Wisconsin-Madison campus. Participants will march to the State Capitol and rally on the Capitol steps.

“We need to help our legislators understand that we can’t wait much longer,” according to a flier supporting the rally. “We need to help our kids now.”

The rally marks the 10-year anniversary of the first Walk on the Child’s Side, a 240-mile march along Wisconsin highways, from Butternut to Madison, to draw attention to the plight of school districts and Wisconsin’s children as a result of a failed system of school funding. Walk on the Child’s Side was held for four years.

This year’s rally is sponsored by the Price County Citizens Who CARE (the original sponsor of Walk on the Child’s Side), the Northern Tier UniServ, and the Wisconsin Alliance for Excellent Schools.

WEAC President Mary Bell, who participated in the original Walk on the Child’s Side, said WEAC supports the 10-year reunion rally. She will attend and encourages all supporters of school funding reform to join in the march and rally.

“Despite the realities of Wisconsin’s economic recession, our advocacy for school funding reform must continue in full stride,” Bell said. “When the economy turns around, we need to have all eyes focused on school funding reform as the top priority for reinvestment.”

Teri Hanson, a representative of CARE and a key organizer of the original walks, said this year’s event will be a celebration of how far the funding reform movement has come and, more importantly, will deliver a message to state government that “Wisconsin’s schools are in crisis and the governor and Legislature have ignored it for far too long.”

The event will include live entertainment and speeches. Organizers are working on convenient parking locations and shuttle buses to make attendance as easy as possible.

Information updates will be provided on the WAES Web site at www.excellentschools.org.

The rally is timely, as the Legislature debates the 2009-11 state budget. According to the Legislature’s calendar, budget deliberations will begin on June 9 and run through June 30. Participants are encouraged to bring signs and banners and to schedule visits with their lawmakers while in Madison.

Sponsors are asking participants to:

  1. Make sure your group or organization is behind this event.
  2. Talk to your school board about bringing a bus load of school and community members for the day.
  3. Start a phone tree and begin arranging some car pools.
  4. Discuss your community’s participation at meetings of your clubs, organizations, or groups.
  5. Tell your legislators you expect them to attend and then make sure they do.
  6. Use your organizing skills to make sure you bring at least 10 people with you … or more.

For more information:

Be there! Make your voice heard!.

Thomas J. Mertz

3 Comments

Filed under "education finance", Best Practices, Budget, education, finance, Local News, School Finance, Take Action, Uncategorized

Breaking — Doyle Says Yes to More Cuts, No New Taxes

168677803v11_350x350_Front

Watching the budget “fix” press conference via WisconsinEye. Mark Pocan and Mark Miller are by Governor Jim Doyle’s side, so little hope for Joint Finance action.

5% across the board cuts to most state functions; 2.5% cut to education, 2.5% cut to shared revenue.

More double talk about stimulus money and education funding.

Seems to leave the door open to maybe a temporary delay on ending the Qualified Economic Offer.

Claims to “protect” education. Revenue cap allowable increase will be reduced.

Lots of talk about “protecting property taxpayers.” Nothing about investing in the future of our students or our state.

Not good.

More here on WisPolitics.

I guess that we have answers to this quiz.

Thomas J. Mertz

1 Comment

Filed under "education finance", Budget, education, Local News, School Finance, Uncategorized

Data Driven Sanity

Image from "Guest Blogger Scott McLeod on Data-Driven Decision Making" on the eduwonkette, click on image for more on D3M from that sorely missed blog.

Image from "Guest Blogger Scott McLeod on Data-Driven Decision Making" on the eduwonkette blog, click on image for more on D3M from that sorely missed blog.

Diane Ravitch has some more words of sanity on Data Driven policy making at the Bridging Differences blog.  Click the link for the entire post; here is an excerpt:

This approach rests squarely on the high-stakes use of testing. One only wishes that the proponents of this mean-spirited approach might themselves be subjected to a high-stakes test about their understanding of children and education! I predict that every one of them would fail and be severely punished.

We agree that a better approach is needed to assess how well students are learning what they are taught. We agree that current standardized tests are not adequate to the task of determining the fate—whether they should be rewarded or punished—of children, teachers, and their schools.

I think that testing is important and can be valuable, as it helps to spotlight problems and individuals in need of help. But the determinative word here is “help.” The so-called reformers want to use accountability to find people in need of termination and schools in need of closure. Let’s hope this punishment-obsessed crowd is never put in charge of hospitals!

Unfortunately, events are not breaking in the direction we both prefer. The stimulus bill includes millions so that every state can create a data system. This system will track the test scores of every student, from pre-K to college, and attribute their test score gains (or lack thereof) to their teachers. When the information is available, it will be used and misused. Every teacher (at least those who teach the tested subjects) will have a public record detailing whether his or her students made gains or not. This information will be used to establish calibrated merit pay schemes, so that each teacher will get more or fewer dollars depending on the scores of the year. Is this piecework?

The federal government seems ready to impose a Dr. Strangelove approach on our schools to turn them into “data-driven systems.” Not, as you suggest, “data-informed” systems, but data-driven systems. Teachers will certainly teach to the tests, since nothing else matters. The only missing ingredient from this grand data-driven scheme will be education.

More on data driven policy on AMPS here.

Thomas J. Mertz

1 Comment

Filed under Accountability, Best Practices, education, National News, nclb, No Child Left Behind, Uncategorized

Quotes of the Day — A Tale of Two Governors

Illinois Governor Quinn

[Illinois Governor Patrick] Quinn laid out what a “doomsday” budget might look like if lawmakers “slash and burn” their way to close a deficit of at least $11.6 billion instead of going along with his plan to boost taxes.

“In a tough time we don’t want history to say the people of Illinois threw a lot of their fellow citizens overboard because they didn’t want to make any sacrifices or tough choices,” Quinn told reporters after detailing a litany of possible cuts to more than 300 people at the City Club of Chicago, a local civic club.

94575

Chicago Tribune.

[Wisconsin Governor Jim] Doyle, when asked by a reporter what he would do if the Democratic-controlled Legislature sent him a budget with sales or income tax increases, responded, “I hope that does not come to my desk.”

MMSD Today.

Leave a comment

Filed under "education finance", Budget, education, Elections, finance, Local News, National News, School Finance, Uncategorized

Cherry Pick’n, Or When Scott Milfred Does Data Driven Policy

cherry+picking1Scott Milfred’s column in the Sunday May 17, 2009 Wisconsin State Journal is a textbook example of the kind of foolishness people indulge in when they are dazzled by data that seems to support their favored policies.

Mr. Milfred likes charter schools. One piece of the recently released test score data for the Madison charter school Nuestro Mundo was positive, Mr Milfred seizes on this single piece of data, giving it no examination or context, then asserting that the entire state needs more charter schools.

In a previous post on the Nuestro Mundo WKCE results, I wrote:

All good, but really too little change or information to justify any action or inaction. Data should inform actions, but not drive them. Do we really want a system where decisions are made based on how 1 or 2 or 3 kids test on a given day?

Apparently Mr.Milfred does, and he wants it for the entire state.

The post quoted above explained that the rise in test scores being hailed amounted to about four kids in fourth grade improving. Further, it noted that mobility issues make it difficult to be certain of even this much. That post also noted that scores in other subjects still lag and that this year’s third grade scores are pretty bad.

Mr. Milfred’s money quote is:

Eighty-one percent of the Nuestro Mundo fourth-graders tested proficient or advanced in English reading on the most recent tests. That’s better than the fourth-graders in the district as a whole, most of whom speak only English.

Getting at the limited utility of this statement requires looking behind the numbers some more.

First, I don’t know where the 81% comes from, DPI/WNSS says 80% and since there are exactly 0 students from the Nuestro Mundo fourth grade whose results are reported, a percentage of 81 is impossible. The district advanced/proficient for fourth graders is 75.9%

If one fewer Nuestro Mundo student had hit the advanced/proficient cut score, the school percent would be 77.5%; two fewer, 75%and below the district average. So that’s the one, or two or three kids whose scores Milfred wants us to base policy on.

Let’s look at some demographics. Nuestro Mundo’s fourth grade class has a 4o% poverty rate; the rate for MMSD’s tested fourth graders is 44.6%. As more than one researcher has noted “…Standardized Achievement Tests are [more] Sensitive to Socioeconomic Status Rather than Instruction…

Nuestro Mundo’s fourth grade has one tested student with disabilities (2.5%); MMSD’s fourth grade as a whole has 251 tested students with disabilities, or 15.7%. Only 47.4% of the fourth graders with disabilities in Madison tested advanced/proficient (note, the testing of some disabled students amounts to a torturous game of asking someone to do what they clearly cannot; the use of these results to judge or punish schools and districts is a sick practice…I have similar feelings about the use of tests in this way with non-English speakers).

You can do the Math, adjust for demographics and Nuestro Mundo’s fourth grade achievement starts to look a lot like the average fourth grade in Madison.

I don’t want to dwell on it much further, but fourth grade math scores at Nuestro Mundo aren’t good, especially for low income or ELL students. Here are a couple of graphs:

CFT0518_184349348

CFT0518_184713393

Only 33.3%  of ELL students scoring advanced proficient on Math gives one pause.

Unlike Mr. Milfred, I’m not simple-minded enough to urge any drastic policy based on these scores. They deserve considered and continued attention, further investigation and perhaps some remediation, but even though they are much more negative than Mr. Milfred’s vaunted reading scores are positive, I don’t think there is enough information here to say (for example) “shut the school down.”

Unfortunately, as long as we have standardized tests substituting for knowledge and learning — in both classrooms and policy debates — people like Mr. Milfred will latch onto some simplistic cherry picked results to push this reform or that.

It isn’t all that different from the mentality that created this economic crisis. In that case, investors wanted to bypass investigation and thought, and boil risk down to a single number. They could check their brains and pretend all was well because “the numbers were good.” Never mind that what was behind those numbers was a mystery to the investors and a house of cards that was doomed to fall.

In education there is a politician’s and polemicist’s desire for easy transparency and accountability. Test scores must be published, but few look at the tests or even the cut scores and scales. The complexities of the tests and scores are swept aside and almost completely forgotten are all things not on the tests and all those things that can’t be boiled down to a single number.

Things like “value added” have the potential to make this worse by removing “the number” further from comprehension by most.

People like Scott Milfred then use things — a number(s) — that they don’t understand, to spout off about other things — education policy — they don’t understand.

Don’t listen to them. Look behind the numbers and the polemics, read and learn and contribute. Education is too important to be hijacked by the lazy likes of Scott Milfred.

One last note. If I read Mr. Milfred’s column correctly, he is a parent of a Nuestro Mundo student. This information should be prominently disclosed when Mr.Milfred, or the Editorial page he is in charge of, opines on the topic. It has not been.

Thomas J. Mertz

Leave a comment

Filed under Accountability, Best Practices, education, Gimme Some Truth, Local News, Uncategorized

Action Alert

action alert

You can make a difference by letting the members of the Legislature’s Joint Finance Committee know you expect them to use common sense and take a balanced approach to working through the state’s financial crisis. We solve nothing if we dismantle our schools and other important public services. Right now:

  • Pass along this e-mail alert to as many other people as you can.E-mail members of the
  • Joint Finance Committee (click here for their e-mail addresses — http://www.legis.state.wi.us/lfb/jfc.html) with your suggestions about dealing with the gap.

Thanks.

Tom

Thomas S. Beebe, Executive Director
Wisconsin Alliance for Excellent Schools


More on AMPS, here and here and a sample message here.

Thomas J. Mertz

Leave a comment

Filed under "education finance", Budget, education, finance, School Finance, Take Action, Uncategorized

Sow and Reap – More on the Wisconsin State Budget

Jean-Francois Millet, The Gleaners, 1857

Jean-Francois Millet, The Gleaners, 1857

You can only reap what you sow and it looks like Governor Jim Doyle’ s reluctance to reap and sow may be leading Wisconsin to more hard times and lean years.

In a statement today reported by the Journal Sentinel, Governor Doyle indicated that in response to revenue shortfalls, a new proposal requiring 5% cuts in state aid to public schools and local governments is in the works (more here). These would be devastating to programs and services that are already strained.

He used the word “forced,” but in very similar terms to the Republicans, who in the last budget cycle, claimed to have been “forced” to cut aid when they were acting on their own volition, the “forcing” Doyle refers to is in fact a choice being made by the Governor himself.

As previously noted (here and here), there is much potential for Wisconsin to restructure our revenue choices to meet these shortfalls and move toward an equitable and sustainable tax structure.

The Institute for Wiscosin’s Future (IWF) put out a “cliff notes” one page version of the Catalog of Tax Reform Options for Wisconsin today . Here it is:

Tax Reform Option

Taxpayers Affected

Annual Fiscal Impact

(FY2010-‘11)

INCOME TAX OPTIONS
Reinstate the estate tax with a $1 million exemption: When Wisconsin last had this, rates ranged from 0.8% to 16%, averaging 5%. Forty percent or more could be offset by a lower federal tax. The estates of Wisconsin’s wealthiest—about 1% of those dying each year. Estates left to surviving spouses would not be taxed. $21 million FY10; $85 million FY11
Tax 100% of capital gains: Wisconsin now taxes only 40% of capital gains; Governor’s budget proposal would increase that to 60% Investors who profit from sales of stocks, bonds, real estate and other assets. IRS says over 70% of capital gains go to persons with incomes above $100,000. $170 million FY10; $192 million FY11
Increase from 6.75% to 8.75% the income tax on taxable income above $300,000 for joint filers and $225,000 for single filers. Governor’s budget proposal would raise the rate to 7.75%. High-income taxpayers. A couple with $400,000 taxable income would pay $2,000 more, some of that offset by lower federal taxes. $362 million FY10; $272 million FY11
SALES TAX OPTIONS
Extend the sales tax to personal services:

(Such as beauty, barber and other personal care; vets for pets; health clubs; admission to educational events/ places; dues to fraternal organizations; auto club fees; funerals.

Primarily Wisconsin households, though businesses would pay a share. $93 million FY10; $96 million FY11
Increase the state sales tax rate from 5 cents per dollar to 6 cents 82% of the increase would be paid by Wisconsin residents, 9% by state businesses and 9% by residents of other states. $806 million FY10; $847 million FY11

Note: Fiscal impacts based on latest Department of Revenue and Legislative Fiscal Bureau estimates.

The IWF is also a co-sponsor of a press conference bringing people together to “Speak Up for a Budget the Puts People First” (click on the title for more information and a a flier). It is being held next Tuesday, May 19, at 9:30 AM in the State Senate Parlor. Be there if you can.

The ball is also in the Joint Finance Committee’s court. What ever Doyle proposes, they have a big say in the process. It is absolutely essential that they hear from constituents that new revenues are the only way we can sow for a bountiful future. The Committee is chaired by Madison’s Mark Pocan and Monona’s Mark Miller. All the contact info is here. They need to hear from you! A quick call, an email, anything.

The Journal Sentinel story also noted:

A 5% cut would cost schools about $258 million, although some of that could be offset by federal stimulus money (emphasis added).

Confusion still reigns on the stimulus funds. Two quick clarifications may help. First, the “flow through” money has already been earmarked to pay for a large chunk of the state’s share of the inadequate allowable revenue (the inadequate allowable revenue increases have been almost entirely shifted to property taxes). That horse has left the barn. Second, the general rule for the other stimulus money (Title I and IDEA) is to “supplement not supplant.” There are some loopholes, but they aren’t big enough to absorb this hit. In terms of general operating revenues, the stimulus has been basically spent already. Let’s stop pretending otherwise.

Come the the press conference. Get those notes and calls done. This is important.

Thomas J. Mertz

Leave a comment

Filed under "education finance", Best Practices, Budget, education, finance, Local News, School Finance, Take Action, Uncategorized