Principal for a Day

Dave Zweifel was one of the many “principals for a day” in the annual Foundation for Madison’s Public Schools sponsored effort to bring community leaders into the schools. The column he wrote is worth a look. The conclusion emphasizes a truth we don’t hear often enough:

The challenges Marquette and all our other schools face is to do their best with each one of those kids. The goal is to turn them all into responsible adults.

From what I saw on my tour as principal with Andrea Kreft, they’re doing more than their best.

Thomas J. Mertz

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Quote of the Day

“Out here in Howard, we have growth of students, so consequently they would certainly want to see that amount of money come back to the school. I can understand that. However, I don’t think they want to see coming into one pocket with their property taxes and going out the other with all the taxes that the governor put on otherwise, and that’s where we’re making our stand”

State Representative Karl Van Roy

I really can’t make heads or tales of this as a policy statement (or of all the GOP flip flops and changes on the school portions of the budget).

As I understand it, the GOP now wants to spend more on K-12 education, but doesn’t want to pass a budget that would pay for the spending. That’s like Reaganomics or the way Bush is keeping the costs of the Iraq occupation off the books. Spending is easy; taxing is hard.

This may work as a political posture, but as policy it is juvenile and insulting.

Thomas J. Mertz

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Six Months and Counting

Yesterday marked six months since the Board of Education officially received the report of the Equity Task Force. At that meeting the Board noted the report required follow up. It remains listed as a priority for this year.

I understand the Board is busy, but six months is a long time.

Thomas J. Mertz

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More Presidential Education Info

I want to thank Jerry for his post and add a few things.

The Education Writers Association is doing an Education Election blog with regular updates.

Teacherken at the Education Policy Blog and the dailykos has posts up on Obama, Richardson and Edwards education statements. They are worth reading in full, but the titles give some idea:

Obama on education – decent, not spectacular

Richardson: education plan & conference call, but really not ready

A very good Education Plan from John Edwards

Thomas J. Mertz

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New Glarus Passes Operating Referendum

Congratualtions to our neighbors. 11 votes. Wow.

Thomas J. Mertz

New Glarus approves $500,000 for schools
State Journal staff
dhall@madison.com
NEW GLARUS — Voters here Tuesday narrowly accepted a proposal to exceed state-ordered revenue caps by $500,000 annually, an amount the district said is needed to adequately maintain technology and curriculum needs and make necessary repairs.

The unofficial vote tally Tuesday night was 616 to 605.

The $500,000 is a recurring amount, meaning the school may exceed the revenue caps by that amount each year. District taxpayers will pick up the entire cost of the increase in the first year it takes effect.

But after that, the state will pick up about two-thirds of the increase — or more than $300,000 — with local taxpayers picking up one-third.

The referendum was deemed necessary following the rejection of two referendum questions in March, when a $21.7 million building request was handily defeated but an additional proposal to exceed the revenue caps failed by only three votes.

Money raised by passage of Tuesday ‘s ballot question will be spent on technology and curriculum maintenance, new boilers at the high school and grade school and new compressor units at the high school, along with other basic building maintenance, according to a fact sheet produced by the New Glarus School District.

District officials estimated the effect of Tuesday ‘s referendum on property taxes for a home assessed at $200,000 would be $257 the first year and $87 per year thereafter, due to increased state aid.

New Glarus is about 25 miles southwest of Madison, and the Green County district currently enrolls 856 students, about 120 more than were enrolled in 2001, according to Department of Public Instruction records.

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MMSD Receives $710,000 in improvement grant from DPI

Madison schools will receive $710,000 from DPI to enhance principal leadership and to offer further professional development around curriculum differentiation. Read more here.

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TID and School Finance Op Ed

Thomas J. Mertz: Legislators need to focus on flawed school financing

Thomas J. Mertz, guest columnist — 10/06/2007 9:23 am

The earlier than anticipated closure of two tax incremental financing districts may provide Madison Metropolitan School District with $5.4 million — and an opportunity to temporarily escape the full effects of Wisconsin’s broken education finance system and avoid both budget cuts and a divisive referendum this year.

Communities and Schools Together, a grass-roots advocacy organization dedicated to securing the support our schools need, asks the City Council to support the closure of these districts and urges the School Board to use these unanticipated revenues to partially or fully offset the 2008-2009 structural gap between allowed revenues and costs under the state revenue limits.

CAST has been working since March to gather community input regarding an operating referendum. We heard an outpouring of support for strong funding of public schools. We would like to thank all those who have volunteered, offered support or provided input on their priorities to the School Board. We would also like to thank the board and the administration for recognizing the need for a referendum and beginning the process in a timely fashion.

Referendum campaigns are not easy. Madison values education but getting approval of any increase in taxation would be difficult. CAST is confident that district voters would affirm the importance they place on education by supporting a referendum. However, even a successful referendum might exacerbate divisions in the community. The closure of the tax incremental financing districts gives us an opportunity to avoid this for one more year.

In the coming year we will welcome a new superintendent. The closure of the tax districts and the use of that money for operating expenses will allow for a positive period of transition, instead of one devoted to healing the wounds of draconian budget cuts or a referendum campaign.

As beneficial as the tax windfall will be, it will not cure the ills of a flawed system of school finance.

After 15 years of finding efficiencies, cutting over $60 million and eliminating over 600 staff positions, every additional reduction threatens the education of our children, the health of our neighborhoods, and the economic strength of our region. The $5.4 million will allow the schools to continue doing the good they do for one more year, but it isn’t enough to restore all the valuable programs that have already been cut or expand the good with new programs like 4-year old kindergarten.

Absent reform at the state level, the next fiscal year will require an operating referendum to prevent even larger cuts. In order to again look at school budgets as an opportunity to do the most good instead of an exercise in doing the least harm, the state must act to address the fundamental flaws in the way we fund our schools.

At the CAST meeting there was a spontaneous and collective commitment to redirect our energies toward state school finance reform. Our current system is a contradictory collection of underfunded mandates requiring districts around the state to cut about 1.5 percent from their same service budgets annually.

The children of Wisconsin deserve a system that guarantees sufficient resources for all children to achieve, that provides for reasonable local control, that recognizes the diverse needs of our students and communities, and that seeks fairness in taxation and puts education first.

Until the next referendum, CAST will be working with ABC Madison (All the Best for Children) and the Wisconsin Alliance for Excellent Schools to support the resolution sponsored by Rep. Sondy Pope-Roberts demanding that the Legislature address the problems of school funding and all other efforts to bring about positive reform.

Community and Schools Together welcomes the prospect of setting aside referendum campaigns to work for fundamental changes in school funding at the state level. Please join us; our future depends on getting this right.

Thomas J. Mertz is co-chair of Communities and Schools Together.

The Capital Times © 2007

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Quote of the Day

State Rep Brett Davis issued a column and a press release yesterday. In both he touts his support for enacting a full state budget and the assembly bill providing for separate k-12 funding.

I am doing everything I can to get a full state budget approved. Since the Conference Committee can’t agree on every part of the budget yet, at a minimum it is important a good faith compromise be reached now on education and aid to local governments.

Leaving aside whatever merits the passage of the Assembly bill may have as policy, only a fool would believe that it did anything but hurt the chances of getting a full budget passed quickly. I don’t think Davis is a fool but apparently he thinks we are fools. Davis wants to be seen as a moderate who is open to compromise and a friend of public education. Let’s review the record.

On On April 20th Davis said he was “crafting legislation” based on UW Professor Alan Odden’s adequacy plan “to overhaul the state’s school-finance system.” He added: “I’m committed to working as hard as I can for that [have the proposal ready and hold hearing in the Fall].” As of September 18th, his office could not give a progress report or timeline for the legislation or hearings.

On July 11th Davis joined with all but one of his Republican Assembly colleagues to pass a budget proposal that was filled with right wing policy initiatives and would have been devastating to Wisconsin’s schools (more here and here).

When on August 9th the GOP JFC members made a new and almost equally devastating education offer, Rep. Davis appears to have been silent.

As the weeks passed with little progress, the GOP realized that in addition to the much heralded defunding of state and local government programs that would occur due to a delayed budget (starve the beast), no budget would also mean increased property taxes. On September 18th they blinked and sought cover by having the Assembly pass a bill on k-12 funding and local government aids. These bills have zero chance of passing the Senate or being signed by the Governor. They are simply a way for the Republicans to save face after their previous games with the budget didn’t work out the way they wanted. They are also “political sideshow” designed to distract from the GOP’s failure to negotiate the full budget in good faith.

Throughout this period Davis, as Chair of the Education Committee, has refused to schedule a hearing on the Pope-Roberts school finance reform resolution, dismissing it as a political tactic. Funny that he didn’t vote against the political tactic of the GOP Assembly budget, didn’t point out the games being played with education funding in the Conference Committee and continues to champion the dead-on-arrival separate education funding bill — they are all transparent political tactics.

If Rep. Davis is sincere in his concern for schools, his embrace of the Odden plan and his desire for compromise then at very least he should schedule a hearing on the Pope-Roberts proposal and use this hearing to pave the way for a long promised introduction of his legislation based on the Odden plan. The Pope-Roberts resolution simply asks for a solution that meets certain criteria; according to Davis his Odden based bill will meet (or come close to meeting) those criteria.

This seems like a perfect opportunity to work together and move toward a solution, the kind of opportunity a moderate who cares about schools would jump at. Too bad Rep. Davis is too busy tying himself in knots by working for a full budget while stumping for means to take the pressure off the Conference Committee; by attacking supposed Democratic political ploys while participating in GOP charades; by playing to moderates while trying to keep the WMC money flowing.

Davis may think that with a few words in a well crafted press release he can paper over the contradictions in his actions and statements. This time the gap between words and actions is too big and the record too clear for him to get away with it. Free advice to Rep. Davis – maybe next time act like the moderate who values education and looks for compromise that you claim to be and you won’t end up in such a twisted mess.

Thomas J. Mertz

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We are not alone #17

Things have been bad in Park Falls for a long time. A $850,000 referendum failed in April. After that they announced an unbelievable set of cuts:

  • Reduce staff by one full-time staff member in the district offices.
  • Reduce staff by one half-time staff member in the elementary school office and one half-time staff member in the high school office.
  • Reduce by one maintenance position.
  • Reduce by one transportation position.
  • Reduce by 1-1/2 food service positions.
  • Reduce by one high school history teacher, one elementary and middle school guidance counselor, one high school technical education teacher, one half-time middle school consumer education teacher, one elementary alone.gifmusic teacher, one half-time high school physical education teacher, one half-time high school English teacher, one elementary school teacher, one .6-time middle school music teacher, and one special education aide. Further reduction includes five positions due to attrition/retirements.
  • Eliminate the position of middle and high school disciplinary assistant.
  • Eliminate all middle school [grades six to eight] athletics and other extracurricular activities — club or volunteer activities only.
  • Eliminate the following sports: cheerleading, hockey, gymnastics and golf.
  • There will be varsity and junior varsity sports only, no freshman or “C” teams.
  • Two coaches only per sport, varsity and junior varsity — any others must be volunteers.
  • Only authorized WIAA programs will be funded.
  • Eliminate the summer marching band program.
  • Reduce the FBLA program by disallowing national competition, unless other funding can be found.
  • Eliminate the forensics program.
  • Cut participation in any music competitions beyond the solo and ensemble competitions.
  • Reduce district’s technology budget by $30,000.
  • Reduce building administrators’ budgets by $55,000.
  • Reduce overall maintenance budget by $25,000 – $30,000.
  • Close the swimming pool.
  • It is further recommended that all athletic coaches and extra-curricular advisors be laid off at the end of the 2006-2007 season, including the position of grades seven-12 athletic director. These positions will all be re-evaluated, posted and rehired as necessary, as per collective bargaining agreement, with first consideration being given to employees of the school district.
  • It is also recommended that a system of fees and charges be established for school activities and events to raise additional revenue. A committee has been established to determine fair fees and charges. Such fees and charges would be for all athletic and music events, for use of the building by any profit-making activity [such as drivers’ education, karate, etc.], for special course textbooks and materials, for any non-class-related school computer usage, and for anything else the committee deems appropriate.
  • They are currently working on a consolidation with Butternut (another struggling district). Apparently the consolidation will produce some temporary savings but in the long run the combination of a basic state funding system that is designed to fail, declining enrollments and “sparsity” will take them right back where they are now (unless of course our lawmakers enact real reform).

    Sparsity is used to describe the special issues faced by large geographic districts with small enrollments, for example the need to staff a French or chemistry class for only a handful of students. These sorts of diseconomies of scale along with the need to maintain schools within a couple hour drive of student’s homes create real challenges and our funding system denies districts the resources they need to meet these challenges.

    Meanwhile, (according to the Park Falls Herald) “Impacts of cuts in school district felt

    This is the part that got to me:

    Elementary School Principal Michael Plemon addressed the board during his administrative report about the “desperate need for a guidance counselor” at the elementary school.

    “I believe strongly that we need this at the elementary level,” Plemon said. “We have got a kindergarten class and a first-grade class, I’m not exaggerating when I say this, where I could already be in a situation of suspending kids from school. We’ve got a few kids in that situation that need guidance. These are children that need help and discussion, and a place for them to go and get some guidance.”

    Plemon said he is able to handle the situations and discipline on a day-to-day basis, but that those students aren’t getting the help they need to change the behaviors, and that the concerns include the other students.

    “Children today come with a lot more social issues than they once did,” Plemon said, noting the need for assistance with issues including grief, loss, self-control and other social skills, especially anger management. “You’re looking at five to maybe 10 kids in the elementary, but they have this anger management issue every day. Other kids are getting hurt because of this.”

    “It is an area I believe is vital for our elementary school,” he said.

    Waller said a good rule of thumb is one guidance counselor for each principal. The district currently has one guidance counselor, working in the high school and middle school. Waller said the item would be on the agenda for the October meeting, but many board members felt the need was important and asked if it could be placed on the agenda for the meeting scheduled for tonight, Thursday, Sept. 27.

    In response to a question from board member Jean Gottwald, Schuchardt said the position was not in the 2007-08 budget but could be added.

    How long can this insanity go on? Make some noise! Call, write, visit any and all legislators and don’t let Governor Doyle off the hook. Come November, let’s work statewide to elect people who will fix this.

    Thomas J. Mertz

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    Beware!

    Smiling faces sometimes pretend to be your friend
    Smiling faces show no traces of the evil that lurks within
    Smiling faces, smiling faces sometimes
    They don’t tell the truth uh
    Smiling faces, smiling faces
    Tell lies and I got proof…

    Beware, beware of the handshake
    That hides the snake…I’m telling you beware
    Beware of the pat on the back
    It just might hold you back

    “Smiling Faces Sometimes ”

    by Norman Whitfield and Barrett Strong
    Performed by the Undisputed Truth (listen here)

    On Monday October 1st the MMSD Board of Education will vote on “support” for the Wisconsin Way Initiative. My advice is, beware. Every indication is that behind the smiling public face of populist civic virtue lurks the hand holding snakes of powerful vested interests.

    Funded and sponsored by the Wisconsin Realtor’s Association (WRA), the Wisconsin Education Association Council (WEAC), the Wisconsin Transportation Builder’s Association (WTBA), the Wisconsin Counties Association (WCA) and Wood Communications Group, Wisconsin Way is self-described as “a non-partisan, grassroots effort to reduce property taxes by creating a more fair and equitable funding system that promotes excellence in education and public service.” More specifically, the initiative has identified “make[ing] Wisconsin taxes fairer and reduce[ing] the property tax burden;” providing “a first-rate educational system” to create “a 21st century work force;” and “up-grade[ing] and maintain[ing] our current infrastructure” as the most pressing issues. According to their materials, the chief obstacles to meeting these needs are demographic (mostly an aging population and “economic realities”) and “a fiercely partisan political environment.” They will be hosting a series of public forums “to engage Wisconsin citizens in a constructive, solution-oriented conversation.”

    It should go without saying that the issues and problems identified are real and deserving of attention (although far from comprehensive – where’s healthcare, inequalities in education and income, environmental concerns… – and are not presented as I would). Public forums are hard to argue with and although I have my doubts about any new solutions emerging they can be an effective tool for educating the public and cultivating a climate for reform.

    The smiling face of the Wisconsin Way is very attractive. If all was as they would like you to believe, then I would applaud their work, urge MMSD to give support and eagerly await the results. However, the whole project is so rife with misrepresentations that I think some truth telling healthy skepticism are needed.

    The Wisconsin Way “who we are” statement is a good place to start. They claim to be “a non-partisan, grassroots effort.” I’ll grant them “non-partisan (although bi-partisan would be a better description and keeping in mind that the phrase is so devoid of meaning in this context that Wisconsin Manufactures and Commerce is technically “non-partisan”). Grassroots is too much of a stretch. The current entry in Wikipedia (not a perfect source, but sufficient) defines a “Grassroots movement” as “one driven by the constituents of a community. The term implies that the creation of the movement and the group supporting it is natural and spontaneous, highlighting the differences between this and a movement that is orchestrated by traditional power structures.” I know grassroots efforts, I work on grassroots efforts, gentlemen, you are no grass roots effort.

    In modern politics, an attempt by public relations professionals to disguise an interest driven agenda with the trappings of a populist grassroots campaign is called “astroturfing.” Think the bait-and-switch phony signatories of TV4US’s (read AT&T and friends) video franchise give away campaign. Think the corrupt and ambitious Edward Arnold sponsoring the “John Doe” clubs in Frank Capra’s “Meet John Doe.” This seems to describe the Wisconsin Way.

    Wood Communications principal James Wood (by most accounts the driving force behind Wisconsin Way) is a public relations professional. His highly successful (and connected) firm boasts of their government relations’ services “positioning your issues and engaging in the process that drives policy making.” Wood himself has described the reliance on opinion polling to frame the initiative as well as the lengthy and difficult birth of the Wisconsin Way, so he admits there is nothing spontaneous. Ed Garvey (one of the few voices that has been questioning the Wisconsin Way) mentions a rumored $1 million price tag. I’ve heard reports of the carrot for taking part in training sessions (and maybe the forums themselves for selected groups) includes a very generous per diem stipend.

    The fun really starts when you look at the other sponsors who ask us to believe they want overturn the status quo of “a fiercely partisan political environment.” It is abundantly clear that the simplest way they could contribute to this worthy goal would be by ending their own participation; firing their lobbyists and using their political endorsements and contributions in a more productive manner.

    At this point it is probably worth saying that Wood and the WCA may be sincere in their civic mindedness. I am less charitably inclined toward the others.

    WRA, WEAC, WTBA and WCA spent a combined $843,784 in lobbying between January and June of 2007. WEAC ($314,899) and WTBA ($230,028) rank #3 (corrected, the #1 that appeared earlier was a typo) and #8 in dollars spent. By any definition they are all part of “traditional power structures.”

    Although the WRA lags in lobbying ($116,599 is hardly chump change), they more than make up for this with their targeted political spending through RPAC. Their January continuing campaign finance report includes $105,000 in contributions to a much uglier astrotruf outfit called “Coalition for America’s Families.” Headed by former Wisconsin GOP chair Steve King, this group helped fund this exercise in homophobia that helped pass the anti Gay Marriage and Civil Unions amendment. Their website features, along with pleas for vouchers, guns and lower taxes, an ad saying that Governor Doyle wants to raise your taxes in order to pay for free health care for gay couples. Once you get over your disgust, you have to admire their ability to link their social and economic agendas. These are the people directly responsible for the poison political atmosphere the Wisconsin Way presents itself as an alternative to. It took me a long time get over the disgust and when I did I also came to the conclusion that I don’t want to be even indirectly associated with these people. I hope the Board of Education agrees.

    The WRA, the WTBA and WEAC all have well defined agendas based on the interests of their constituents. It is hardly surprising that the issues identified by the Wisconsin Way are aligned with these interests. The Realtors want lower residential property taxes, so does the Wisconsin Way. The road builders want spending on roads, the Wisconsin Way calls this “infrastructure.” WEAC represents teachers and education spending is on the Wisconsin Way list (although it should be noted that most of the supporting materials are about higher ed and there is very little about the insanity of the current k-12 education finance system). Although the word “inclusive” appears often in Wisconsin Way materials, the reality is that at some level this is about the interests of the funders. Pretty much business as usual.

    There is lovely little passage in their White Paper playing the old “fair and balanced” game of setting up two groups or positions as deserving equal consideration, when one is demonstrably wrong:

    “Two major political positions emerged. One held that Wisconsin taxpayers were already overtaxed and that taxes should be frozen or reduced. This side argued that schools, the UW System and local units of government could manage the lack of new money by operating more efficiently and/or cutting unnecessary services. The other held that while some Wisconsin taxpayers might be overtaxed, there were plenty of taxpayers (corporate and individual) who were not paying their fair share and that failure to support education and other local services would do serious damage to the state’s infrastructure and the ability of local governments to serve their constituencies.”

    By Wisconsin Way’s own account, Wisconsin needs to better fund infrastructure and education, so the money has to come from somewhere. This is the only mention of corporate taxation and I don’t recall any mention of sales taxes. Maybe the Wisconsin Way will end with a proposal for more corporate taxation, an expanded sales tax and fairer property taxes (with fewer exemptions for businesses). I’d like that, but I’m not holding my breath.

    The White Paper also reveals how rigged this exercise is. First they hold the public forums, but the real business will occur behind closed doors and the only people sitting at the table will be the sponsors:

    “At the conclusion of this first round of public forums, Wisconsin Way partners will summarize the major conclusions and proposals offered by the citizens and
    ask a variety of academic and policy experts to review and comment on them. After that review is complete, the Wisconsin Way will draft a preliminary “Wisconsin Way Agenda” that will be presented at six to eight regional public forums in early 2008. Based upon the public reaction to, and comments on, the preliminary document, a final “Wisconsin Way Agenda” will be developed to serve as the basis for an on-going
    discussion with elected officials and opinion leaders.”

    Don’t be fooled by that last round of public forums, this is known as test marketing, like a preview for a movie.

    If MMSD wants to support the Wisconsin Way it should request in exchange a seat at that table. Otherwise they will end up like those citizens and lawmakers who found their innocent queries about video competition presented to lawmakers and the public as support for a specific piece of legislation.

    Beware!

    Thomas J. Mertz
    (please note the opinions expressed here are mine and do not represent the position of any group I am associated with)

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