Wisconsin State Budget = Cuts to Education (special video edition)

As Governor Jim Doyle golfs and collects big checks from donors, school districts all around Wisconsin are working hard to find ways implement the cuts Doyle and the Committee on Joint Finance sent their way, while doing their best to preserve the quality of education.  Here are some video news reports.

Doyle Says Local Funding Problems Could be Worse (from WQOW, Eau Claire)

There was a time when the leaders of our state worked for progress, trying to improve conditions.  Now we are stuck with the message that things are “not as bad as they could have been” and the only thing our leaders seem interested in improving are their golf swings and campaign coffers.

State Cuts Force School Districts To Trim More In Budgets (WISC-TV, Madison)

Both Madison Superintendent Dan Nerad and John Matthews of Madison Teachers Incorporated have very worthwhile things to say about comprehensive school finance reform in this clip.  Watch it.

La Crosse Schools Brace For Deeper Than Expected Budget Cuts (WKBT La Crosse)

As Superintendent Jerry Kember points out, budget woes are nothing new to Wisconsin’s schools.

State’s Budget Plan Leaves Madison School District Unhappy (WSAW, Wausau)

More bad news closer to home for the  Wausau area (no video):

Raises, jobs on line in Merrill Area Public Schools amid budget crisis.

D.C. Everest School Board approves $1.5 million in cuts.

And more from elsewhere in the sate:

State budget plan cuts $1.5M to Green Bay schools: Proposal follows $6M already slashed by district,

Wisconsin passes budget problem on to local governments: Critics say tax system fundamentally flawed.

Even before the latest news from the state, it was impossible to keep up with all of the cuts and layoffs in districts throughout Wisconsin.

This has to end.  Be part of putting a stop to this short-sighted madness, join the June 16 Walk on the Child’s Side 10th Anniversary March and Rally in Madison!

Thomas J. Mertz

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A Different Slice for Governor Jim Doyle

doyle_golfThe Green Bay Press Gazette reports that after cutting state support for education, social services, shared revenues and almost everything else, Wisconsin Governor Jim Doyle will be hosting a golf fundraiser today.  While you can can witness his budget cuts for free, it will cost you $1,250 to see Doyle slice on the links.

Thomas J. Mertz

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Voices of Dissent — The Wisconsin State Budget

By Milton Glaser, for more information click the image.

By Milton Glaser, for more information click the image.

A couple more voices of dissent on the Wisconsin State Budget deal (joining those previously noted, Ed Garvey, the Wisconsin Council on Children and Families and me).

Dustin Beilke had this to say on the Isthmus/Daily Page:

How unfortunate, then, that so many of the thoughts running through my mind during the 4 hours and 43 minutes I spent plodding along the course had to do with the state budget and the recent announcement that state leaders were agreeing to more state employee layoffs and “furloughs,” and across-the-board spending cuts. These reductions will mean less aid to the poor and the elderly, larger classes and fewer course offerings for public school children, less financial aid for college students whose parents aren’t rich, fewer books in libraries-a lower quality of life for all of us, a dimmer future for the youngest among us, and desperation for those losing their jobs or their last shreds of dignity.

The small handful of commentators who still track state government mostly praised the governor and the Joint Finance Committee for making these “tough choices.”

I disagree. The tough choice would have been the one that most commentators no longer even seem to consider: raising taxes. Among the state’s editorialists, columnists, bloggers and radio commentators Ed Garvey is the only one I found making this obvious suggestion (The Republicans in the Legislature are saying the Democrats are raising taxes even though they aren’t, but I don’t think that counts.)

Other states are increasing taxes during these times when the circumstances so obviously demand it. The New York Times editorial page is encouraging states to do the right thing rather than further denigrate our economy and our future with draconian cuts and layoffs.

The logic behind cutting budgets during an economic downturn like the one we are in is faulty at best. It says that taxpayers cannot afford higher taxes when they are already losing their jobs and having their homes repossessed. But the unemployed do not pay income taxes. And when one level of government shortchanges us, like the state, the burden falls to another level of government or upon our most vulnerable fellow citizens.

But economic logic is not what takes tax increases off the table. It is the political logic that says it is harder to raise campaign money and win re-election if your opponent can say you raised taxes. It is mostly wrong: Incumbents almost always win no matter what they do. But the campaign professionals who generate the political logic don’t specialize in taking risks and are not in the business of serving the public interest.

John Smart’s post on Fighting Bob is about the education cuts in the budget.

Spare our schools

The new state budget realities might lend credence to the notion of cutting funding for our public schools, but as a former school board members I am here to say that is exactly the wrong answer. We must fully support our schools as the surest method to grow the economy out of this economic hole.

Who could possibly think that we can solve our nation’s very serious economic problems with a less-than-well educated work force?

Please, Governor Doyle and legislators, don’t cut school aids, not even by a single dollar. Please allow local revenue limits to increase as much as possible under the law. Please don’t hamstring school boards by repealing the QEO. Please don’t change the rules for contract arbitration. And please do not throw the fiscal responsibility for our schools out to
referendum and onto the backs of local property-taxpayers.

I know, I know – the first comment will be, “So – where will the money come from?” Well, there are ways and there are means.

A recent study showed that a 1 percent increase in the state sales tax would, if dedicated to education, basically solve all of our problems. That would bring us to 6 percent, at the same level as Michigan, and still lower than Illinois and Minnesota. Another suggestion is to reduce the list of tax-exempted products and services, thus bringing in more revenue and making the system more fair at the same time.

There are other revenue plans under consideration in Madison, such as treating capital gains as income – and the combined reporting proposal (an attempt to close the “Las Vegas Loophole” that allows interstate corporations to avoid paying taxes on profits made in Wisconsin by lumping them in with profits made in other states) and, of course, a long overdue increase in the beer tax to $10 per barrel.

If you are not familiar with the Institute for
Wisconsin’s Future
, I encourage you to check them out. The IWF was established in 1994 to research our economic policies and make suggestions and corrections. It is a non-profit, non-partisan organization, and is “rooted in the belief that an educated, engaged citizenry is key to improving individual outcomes.”

Take a look at their suggestions, which are well analyzed and supported by thorough vetting.

Although I failed in my recent bid to be elected to the board of the new Chequamegon School District in Glidden and Park Falls, that doesn’t mean that I am no longer concerned about our schools and our kids.

Everyone who knows me knows that. I am contacting my state legislators and the governor’s office asking them to support our schools. Will you do so, too? The future of our state depends on it.

You can register your own dissent by contacting elected officials, writing letters to the editor (details here) and joining the Walk on the Child’s Side on June 16.

Thomas J. Mertz

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State Budget Passes JFC – Vote With Your Feet

carpetbaggerThe Committee on Joint Finance voting along party lines,  passed the budget bill at 5:30 this morning (Friday May 29, 2009).  It now goes to the Senate and Assembly, where passage along party lines is also anticipated.

The WisPolitics Budget Blog has all the details.

The text is here, it looks little changed from the deal reached earlier this week.

News reports from the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel and the Wisconsin State Journal are linked here.

The Journal Sentinel also has a good  editorial on the lack of openness in the process.

My quick guesstimate is that the budget deal will mean nearly $3 million less in revenue for the Madison Metropolitan School District.  Cuts are coming, here and elsewhere.

What to do?

State elections are not till November 2010, but you can show your displeasure with the education portions of the budget by voting with your feet, joining the Walk on the Child’s Side on June 16.  The march begins at Library Mall at 11:00 AM and the rally on the steps of the Capitol will be at Noon.

Be there.

Thomas J. Mertz

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Wisconsin Budget “Fix” — The Saws Come Out

Two Lumbermen with Saw, from the Wisconsin Historical Imgages Collection

Two Lumbermen with Saw, from the Wisconsin Historical Images Collection

Albert  King, “Crosscut Saw” (click to listen or download).

Such large cuts to education in the Wisconsin state budget “fix” just released (budget papers references in the text can be found here), that the axes are temporarily going up on the shelf and the saws have come out .

No time for a full analysis, just listing some of the low lights:

  • Delete sate general school aids increase, $21,945,700.
  • Reduce General School Aids Funding, “$147,001,900 GPR annually in funding for general school aids, which would represent a reduction of approximately 3.1% from base level funding of $4,799,501,900.”
  • Undo the previous use of Stimulus money to fill 2008-9 gap. [see comments]
  • Reduce per pupil Revenue Limit increase from $277 to $200 for 2009-10 and set adjustment at $275 for 2010-11.
  • A “hold harmless” provision for Revenue Limit adjustments if the Consumer Price Index is negative (something good).
  • Delete SAGE increases.
  • Modify the effective date of the QEO repeal to July 1, 2010. “For school
    district collective bargaining agreements that begin on or after July 1,2009, and that are not settled on the effective date of the bill, provide that until July 1, 2010, interest arbitration on unresolved economic issues would only be permitted if consented to by both the school district employer and the collective bargaining representative. In addition adopt Alternative B1 in Paper #330.”
  • 2.5% reductions in categorical aids, see below for the ugly impact

cutsUgly, ugly ugly.  It is all ugly and will get uglier as the implementation of these cuts is debated in districts around the state.

More later, including a fact check to see if total education revenues actually ” increase by approximately 5% on a biennial basis.

Thomas J.  Mertz

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Rumors and Deals — Wisconsin State Budget Update

whispering

Legislative “leaders” met behind closed doors for nine hours yesterday, May 27, 2009.  The Committe on Joint Finance is expected to “finish their work” in a public session starting at Noon today.  The agenda is here.

s_handshake3

Because they are meeting outside of the light of public scrutiny and the Legislative Fiscal Bureau has not posted budget papers on the education portion of the “fix,” we have to rely on rumors and memos from interested parties to learn what is happening.  Fortunately, the team at the WisPolitics Budget Blog has been doing a fine job reporting what little is rumored or known.

The big three education developments are some numbers on the Allowable Revenue Limit increase, a suggested compromise/delay on ending the Qualified Economic Offer from WEAC and the first inklings of a compromise proposal on Milwaukee voucher schools from State Senator Lena Taylor.

On the Revenue Caps, the word is that the new allowable increase for 2009-10 will be between $200 and $210 per pupil, instead of the $277 in the Governor’s initial budget.  By my calculations, that means about a $1.7 million to $1.8 million cut for the Madison Metropolitan School District.  No word on further cuts to categorical aid (yet).

The QEO compromise issue is complicated (I am not sure I understand it), but the general idea is that the proposed elimination of the QEO and the changes in arbitration rules would be delayed and temporary reforms would be put in place.  The proposal from WEC also includes things like allowing four year contracts and combining bargaining units.  You can read the WEAC memo here.  I haven’t seen a reaction yet from the Wisconsin Association of School Boards.

Without more details, it is hard to get a handle on Senator Taylor’s proposal on voucher schools.  here is what WisPolitics is reporting:

In February, Doyle called for a series of changes to the program that would require choice schools to meet many of the standards now imposed on public schools. That includes requiring the same number of instruction hours each year as public schools, administering standardized tests, and requiring all teachers and administrators to have a bachelor’s degree.

“What I’ve offered as a modification is really in many ways more stringent than what the governor has done,” Taylor said.

Taylor said today the compromise package had not been drafted yet.

But some key changes to the governor’s proposal include:

*Removing a requirement that schools must be accredited prior to accepting MPCP students, which Taylor said would be problematic for newly formed schools. Accreditation agencies require schools to be operating before they can be accredited. In its place, the compromise would require schools not yet accredited and wishing to enter the choice program to be screened by the Department of Public Instruction to determine whether they have the financial wherewithal to properly operate and have their educational plan and curriculum approved by a pre-accreditation agency. Furthermore, schools would have to undergo yearly academic audits by the accrediting agency.

*Requiring teacher’s aides to have at least a high school diploma, an area the governor’s proposal does not address.

*Giving schools two years before having to administer the Wisconsin Knowledge and Concepts Examination to students, whereas the governor’s proposal would require that to happen within one year.

See more in Milwaukee Notes.

And as the Joint Finance Committee does their work, school districts await the bad news and prepare for more cuts in educational opportunities.

Menasha just got through cutting $1.27 million and agreeing to use over $200,000 from their Fund Balance to avoid further cuts (including maintaining SAGE).  What comes out of the JFC, the Legislature and the Governor’s office will likely lead them to reexamine these decisions look for additional cuts.

The Waupun Area School District has already cut $1.1 million from their 2009-10 budget and anticipate the latest hit from the state will require laying off 12-15 staff members, larger class sizes and fewer opportunities.

Whatever the Governor and his people tell you, the cuts are real.

Stay tuned.

Thomas J. mertz

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Back in Stride — Walk On the Child’s Side Update

From the Wisconsin Alliance for Excellent Schools:

What: 10th anniversary Walk on the Child’s Side

Who: All Wisconsinites who care about their public schools

Where: Walk from the UW-Madison Library Mall to the steps of the State Capitol

When: 11 a.m. on Tuesday, June 16

Make a statement for school-funding reform

* Your legislators will be invited to walk with us. Make sure they are there representing, you, your community, and your children.

* Speakers at the Capitol will include Randy Braun, Walk on the Child’s Side veteran and superintendent of the Cameron School District; Randy Kunsch, CARE member and Walk veteran; Mary Bell, WEAC president; Art Rainwater, former Madison school district superintendent and Walk veteran; and Jennifer Morales, Walk veteran and former Milwaukee school board member. Other speakers, including students, will be added.

* Off-site parking will be available with shuttle buses running to and from the event.

* Bring and sign or banner telling who you are and where you are from. Event organizers will have materials to make signs at the last minute.

* Wear your original Walk on the Child’s Side shirt. Some will be available on a first-come, first-served basis.

A decade after the first Walk on the Child’s Side and 15 years since the state’s school-funding system was passed into law, not much has changed except that the funding crisis has deepened among Wisconsin’s public school children and schools. If you come to Madison for the anniversary Walk, you will make an important statement on behalf of those children, their schools, and all of our futures.

The Walk on the Child’s Side will begin at the University of Wisconsin-Madison Library Mall at 11 a.m. and end at the Capitol. Several speakers will talk about the history of school-funding reform and call for legislative action. Walkers will end the day visiting with their elected officials to ask them to work together for comprehensive reform. What’s new since the last update Sponsors of the 10th anniversary Walk on the Child’s Side are Price County Citizens Who CARE, Northern Tier Uniserv, and the Wisconsin Alliance for Excellent Schools. If this isn’t the biggest and best Walk, legislators and the Governor won’t get the message.

Download a flier here.  Save the date and spread the word!

Thomas J. Mertz

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MMSD Equity Report Due

Logo for the 2008 Minority Student Achievement Network (MSAN) Conference, for more on MSAN click the image.

Logo for the 2008 Minority Student Achievement Network (MSAN) Conference, for more on MSAN click the image.

On June 2, 2008 The Madison Metropolitan School District Board of Education adopted a new Equity Policy (policy here, minutes here, video here). This policy requires a two-part annual report on equity, described as follows:

Reporting

Administration will report on an annual basis to the Board of Education the extent of progress on specific measures in eliminating gaps in access, opportunities and achievement.

Administration will develop an annual report that will provide data on the distribution of staff, financial, and programmatic resources across all schools.

In six days, a year will have passed since this policy was adopted. By the end of that six days, the annual equity report is due.

After all of the work of the Equity Task Force and all of the disappointments — with the Board of Education never even discussing important portions of the Task Force work (and here), and with the Board’s confused and inattentive dropping of the implementation portion of the draft policy (and here) — the only clear victory for the Task Force and Equity was the annual report requirement.

It is essential that this report be issued, be substantive, and be given a thorough examination by the Board and the public.

Although it was an open secret and a common complaint that the previous Equity Policy was never followed, I’m going to take it on faith (for now) that the required report will be issued. I can’t control how the Board treats this report, but I will do my best to raise public awareness and facilitate an examination. That leaves the substance of the report and I have some ideas I would like to share.

In part, as a response to NCLB and state laws, The MMSD administration already issues reports on achievement and achievement gaps. A report on access and opportunities would be something new, and would get to the heart of some of the concepts of Equity put forth by the Task Force and adopted by the Board:

Goals

  1. The district will eliminate gaps in access, opportunities, and achievement by recognizing and addressing historic and contemporary inequalities.
  2. The district will recognize and eliminate inequitable policies and practices at the district level.

Ideally, the first annual report would provide a baseline to assess if progress is being made in access and opportunities.

I would suggest that this portion of the report be as comprehensive as possible, broken down by school and demographics, and place a particular emphasis on access and opportunities for advanced programs or individual work. Evidence of disproportionality is the key. Under state statutes, the district already reports on disproportionality in special education referrals and placements (link to the  PowerPoint presentation because unfortunately I can’t find an actual report on line). This could serve as a model.

The report should include both opportunities (by school) and participation in fine arts programing, world languages, technical and vocational education, remedial and other support opportunities — did you know that at least three elementary schools have no Reading Recovery –, honors, Talented and Gifted (TAG, including In Step referrals and outcomes), accelerated programs, AP, really anything and everything that is outside of the core, basic curriculum. All of this should cover curricular, co-curricular and extra-curricular opportunities and access.

I said above that special attention needs to be given to advanced opportunities. I was twice recently reminded of how important this issue is. The first time was the complete absence of African American and Hispanic students taking the qualifying test for West High School Accerelated Biology. The second time was in an Capital City Hues interview with long-time Madison educator Tenia Jenkins. Ms Jenkins had this to say:

So you set up a mechanism that targets one group and the other groups obviously benefit from it. But there are some groups where that doesn’t happen, for example, the gifted and talented classes in the district. They’ve been around for 20-25 years. And most Black children are still not benefiting from them, only a few here and a few there. So what we are simply asking is for the district to set up the same kind of thing for Black children that they are doing for White students in terms of gifted and talented classes.

The perception and reality is that TAG is (mostly) for “White students.” This must change. One way to start is by forcing the administration, the Board, and the public, to confront the stark data on disproportionate access, opportunities and participation.

The other part of the report involves resources. There is one breakdown of resources in the annual budget, but I don’t believe that this is sufficient for Equity purposes.

There are three things I would like to see incorporated into the resources analysis: an assessment of needs, staffing descriptions, dollar and FTE allocations.

The first would involve some version of the Equity Resource Index/Educational Needs Index developed by previously by the district to distribute resources based on factors that have been demonstrated to negatively impact academic success.

The second should be along the lines of this being a user friendly look at school staffing prepared on Middle Schools in 2006 (link corrected, previous linked document here — TJM, 5/28/09).

Last, budgetary resources need to be considered in terms of both Full Time Equivalent (FTE) and dollars per student. One the most important recent lessons on Equity is that experienced teachers tend to be in lower needs schools, dollar figures for staffing capture some of this inequity because more experienced and better trained teachers rise higher on the pay scale. An example of the latter from 2006 can be accessed here.

These differing versions of looking at resources need to be presented in a manner that makes the relationships among them transparent.

There are other things I would like to see in an Equity Report — such as demographic breakdowns of classroom assignments by school, demographics of requests for inter and intra district transfers and transfers granted — but these fall outside of the report requirements in the policy. You take what you can get.

I’m looking forward to the Equity Report, the discussion it prompts, and (I hope) the actions that come from that discussion.

One last note. I know that much faith has been placed in the current Strategic Planning process, but it would be a mistake if that process supplanted, not supplemented the good work on Equity (and other things) that came before.

Thomas J. Mertz

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“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

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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

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