Accountability Manifesto

Jim Horn (of Schools Matter, The Education Policy Blog and Monmouth University) thinks it is time turn the tables on the “failing businessmen and politicians” who have been promoting and legislating ill-conceived accountability requirements for our schools and start demanding that they be held accountable for their failures.

Jim has posted an initial list and I think it is a good one.

§ all American citizens will have health insurance coverage that offers equal coverage and facilities for mental and physical health;

§ the federal government will have devised a menu of school integration plans from which school systems across America will choose in order to live up the Supreme Court decision of 53 years ago which declared that separate schools are inherently unequal;

§ American business and government will deliver to the American people a practical plan for full employment in jobs that offer livable wages;

§ All families in America will be offered affordable and quality child care whose cost will be based on income;

§ A minimum wage, workmen’s compensation, and social security withholding will be provided to all workers, both citizens and immigrants. Businesses that do not comply will be forced to close until they do comply.

§ State governments and the federal government will devise a funding structure for public schools that is not dependent upon property taxes.

§ Business and government will take the action required to reduce greenhouse emissions of Americans to a level that will sustain a healthy planet.

§ A national action plan that includes private and public commitments will be offered to rebuild the infrastructure of America, to offer adequate and affordable housing for all Americans, to reenergize the arts, to enhance our parks.

§ Once these things are done, American businessmen and politicians, if they still have the urge to do so, may continue their public school reform initiatives–if they are willing to include the public in each and every step of their reformations. Otherwise, forget it.

I’d add something about a just system of taxation. What else belongs here?

Thomas J. Mertz

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Dave Zweifel Gets It Too

Dave Zweifel’s piece in today’s Cap Tmes like Ed Garvey’s recent Op Ed points the finger of blame for school woes where it belongs: the irrevokably flawed state funding system.

The whole thing is worth reading, but the heart of it is at the end:

But it occurred to me that the real reason all those people were there — with the exception of those involved with the school naming controversy — was because of those stupid revenue caps that the state Legislature has forced down the throats of every school district in Wisconsin — caps, incidentally, that have the blessing of WMC.

Someone loses because of those caps. Here in Madison, where the caps have created a need to cut $7 million from the budget, among those paying the price are the Marquette neighborhood and Catholic school kids who need rides to school.

The legislative Republicans and former GOP Gov. Tommy Thompson all came up with this great idea, claiming that it was the only way to stop reckless spending by school districts.

Well, some, including the budget-slashing proponents at the state’s largest business lobby, are finding that maybe that spending wasn’t so reckless after all.

Thomas J. Mertz

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Make $$ for your school’s PTO at Hilldale’s Fair Indigo Store on Saturday May 12th–Be There!

FUNDRAISER TOMORROW

Saturday, May 12th
At Fair Indigo Store in Hilldale

(outdoor store front)

In honor of World Fair Trade Day,
50% of Sales go to MMSD School PTOs
50% goes to Fair Indigo Foundation

When you make a purchase, identify your School. 50% of your purchase will be designated to your school PTO.

If 20 people spend $100, your school makes $1000!!

All store merchandise is eligible, even
GIFT CERTIFICATES.

Store hours 10-6

In a nut shell, a company called Fair Indigo is
celebrating World Fair Trade day by focusing on needy children around
the world. They are donating 50% of their sales to a Fair Trade
Foundation that focuses on needs of children in developing countries
and the other 50% to MMSD PTOs, where we focus on needs of kids right
here in Madison.

The company donates 50% of your purchase to your school. For example,
if you spend $100, $50 goes to your school.

Folks need to name their school when making purchases. That is how your school gets the 50% match.

If you don’t name the school, the money goes into a large pool that Fair Indigo will then donate to MMSD PTOs based on some “need” criteria.

Thank-you Fair Indigo Store for giving back to the community. What a great community partner for MMSD schools and our world community as well.
posted by Janet Morrow

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Learn how you can help fix the MMSD budget woes

Many of you have been following the budget debate here in Madison over the last two months. Sadly, this is not the first time that MMSD has had to cut the budget, however, it is the most dire, as cuts have come to directly effect schools and their neighborhoods. Parents and community members have spent hundreds, if not thousands of hours lobbying the board to save their school or program. Districts across the state are engaging in similar difficult conversations.

While people are quick to show up at school board meetings when budget cuts are being considered, the public officials most able to address the problem are rarely approached. The revenue for school budgets comes from a combination of local and state taxes. However, school boards have no authority to directly determine the level of local spending. Local districts can only raise additional dollars through the passage of an operating levy, which historically in Wisconsin have a 50/50 chance of passing. The legislature and the governor determine the design of the funding system as well as the level of state contribution. They make the rules of the game and control the majority of the purse strings. Rather than organizing to lobby the school board who can only pick among a collection of unpopular options, citizens need to work at the state level and encourage the legislature and the governor to reform the funding system.

There is growing support around the state to fix the funding system. However, nothing will get done until the legislature feels pressure from its constituents. There are a number of relatively easy actions that can be taken to urge the legislature to solve this problem.

Get educated. While the intricacies of the funding system are mind-boggling, it is not difficult to grasp the concepts behind the system. There are many ways to learn about this problem so that you can speak confidently about the issue. Two easy first steps are listed here.

· Connect with others in Madison who are concerned about this problem. abcmadison is a local group that has formed to address this issue. You can join the group by going to yahoo.com and searching for abcmadison. Fill in the information to get on the e-mail list. Plan to attend the next meeting which is scheduled for May 16th, 6:30 in Room 103 of the Doyle Building.

· Visit the MMSD website, http://www.madison. k12.wi.us/. Click on, “Take Action on School Funding,” under Hot Topics. Among other things, you will find information on legislative issues, links to recent newspaper articles about school funding, and how to write a letter to your legislator.

Talk to your legislators and the governor. The legislators who represent Madison support education finance reform. Let them know that you appreciate this support, but are interested in knowing what they are doing to take a leadership role in reforming the finance system. Furthermore, Governor Doyle has not taken a leadership role to solve this problem. He needs to understand that the people of the state of Wisconsin support public education and want to see the problem fixed and that we expect him to do something about it.

Talk to your family, friends, and neighbors. The problem can only be solved if a grassroots effort across the state develops and pressures the legislature and the governor to act. Public schools are a public good, and we all enjoy the benefits of a strong public education system. While it is obvious that parents and students have something at stake, others in the community need to realize that they too are affected by the quality of public education in the community. Talk to others you know, especially people who live in other parts of the state, and ask them to get involved in their community. Furthermore, reform will only happen when citizens from across the state pressure the legislature. Madison cannot do it alone.

Reforming the funding system is no easy task. It requires a long-term, sustained effort to focus the governor and the legislature to address the problem. The more people express their concerns the better the chances of success. Please take a few moments out of your busy schedule to learn more about how the state is impacting the quality of education in Madison and other communities around the state.

Deb Gurke is a citizen representative of the Madison Metropolitan School District Communication Committee. You can reach her at 608-238-2350 or dgurke@wisc. edu.

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Sen. Mark Miller of Madison is Sponsoring a Bill to Increase Special Education Funding

Senator Mark Miller (Joint Finance Committee member and Madison area representative) is supporting $130 million in additional funding for special education – his staff told an AMPS member of this in a phone call today. Consider letting Mark know you appreciate his efforts:

Telephone
(608) 266-9170

Email
Sen.Miller@legis.wisconsin.gov

It’s critical to let our elected officials know that we support and appreciate their efforts on behalf of our public schools. This could be a great help to MMSD.

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Breaking News: Marquette-Lapham Reconsideration

At the request of Carol Carstensen, Maya Cole, Beth Moss and Johnny Winson Jr, new Board President Arlene Silveira has added a reconsideration of the Marquette-Lapham consolidation to the agenda for the Monday, May 14th 5:00 PM workshop (no public testimony) meeting.

TJM

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Ed Garvey Gets It

Although I can see a continued (albeit smaller) role for property taxes, school funding from other sources is needed and on the big picture, I’m with Ed Garvey (and am wishing he was our Governor instead of Doyle).

Ed Garvey’s words also give me another chance to plug educational historian David Tyack’sA Conservationist Ethic in Education Reform” and remind all that there are many good things about the “Status Quo” and if “innovation” means closing neighborhood schools, increasing class sizes, cutting arts and extra curriculars, then I want no part of it.

Thomas J. Mertz

From today’s Capital Times:

Ed Garvey: Schools’ problem is a horrible system of funding

By Ed Garvey
May 8, 2007

OK, I’m mad as hell and, as the star of “Network” yelled, “I’m not going to take it anymore.”

What has driven me to this state of mind? An editorial in Sunday’s Wisconsin State Journal was the immediate cause. Stupidity in state government tax policy is the underlying factor, and the fact that our children and grandchildren will struggle in substandard public schools was the impetus I needed. We must get serious about public education.

First, the obvious. This nation has enough money for the military operations in Iraq and Afghanistan, now estimated at $2 trillion.

Here in Wisconsin we have plenty of dough for every new prison project and for longer sentences for crimes. We spend like drunken sailors on shore leave when it comes to highway bypass projects dreamed up by the highway lobby, but we apparently cannot afford excellent public schools.

Nope. Can’t do it. We spend $25,000 to $30,000 per year per inmate in our prisons, but we can’t take care of special needs children.

The State Journal editorial was titled “For schools, status quo is not an option.” While the School Board got an unenthusiastic pat on the back for cuts approved last week, more cuts are needed, according to the newspaper.

Here in a nutshell is the educational philosophy of the State Journal: “Schools must create ways to deliver education more cost-effectively.”

As if education can be packaged, wrapped up and delivered like a Mother’s Day gift. Well, it ain’t that simple.

Education is not a commodity to be “delivered.” It is a process involving the administrators, teachers and students. The students aren’t customers, and they don’t “consume” education over lunch. They need attention — some more than others. They need the best teachers, and we all need an educated citizenry.

The State Journal added to my angst with these words, “The board saved more than $800,000 by increasing class sizes in art, music, physical education and in other classes called special.”

Whoa, Nelly! The editors might as well shout it out — “Who cares about art, music, debate, forensics, drama, dance anyway? Aren’t our kids in school for job training?”

What is the real problem? Not smaller classes, or too much extracurricular activity. It is the nutty funding of education. Our schools have been held hostage to an absurd system of funding our schools through property taxes.

The Madison School Board has just voted to close or consolidate schools (your choice). They cut almost $8 million from the budget needed for programs, but the anti-education Wisconsin State Journal editors want deeper cuts without once suggesting the impact of these cuts on the education of our students. They ignore the impact on our community.

Excellence in our schools? Secondary. Saving money is all that seems to matter.

But I have to ask, saving for what? To fall behind other school districts? To watch math and science scores plummet? To see many of our best teachers leave? To find that professionals will look elsewhere to raise and educate their kids?

I guess I am a suspicious type. I suspect the State Journal will soon begin a crusade to push state politicians to support the Milwaukee voucher program, created by the neocon Bradley Foundation, for Madison. In Milwaukee, vouchers are given so children can go to any school — private, parochial or charter — at taxpayer expense. Why? Because underfunded public schools are failing.

If the public schools in Madison fail because of insufficient funds, the State Journal will argue that it is time to give poor parents “an option” to send their kids to private schools at taxpayer expense. In other words, abandon the bedrock of our democratic system: public education. Needless to say, there will be precious little discussion about the experience of those kids who remain behind in the public schools.

The “option” we really need? Enough money for smaller classes, enough for special needs kids, enough for the gifted.

So, you ask, how can school districts deal with the animosity from property taxpayers when we know the property tax is the worst tax ever devised? The money from property taxes should be linked to property, not to schools.

And that is the point. As corporations pay a smaller percentage of property taxes than homeowners, the burden falls on the middle-income families who are struggling.

So? Move school taxes off the property tax. Period.

Change the debate. Our schools are not “inefficient.” The tax base to support education is nuts. Money for schools must come from sales and income taxes. OK, possibly 25 percent could come from property taxes.

Stop inflicting wounds on our children and focus on a Legislature dominated by contributions designed to keep the givers from paying their fair share. Even they should want an educated work force.

Larger classes. Are you kidding?

Ed Garvey is a Madison lawyer, political activist and editor of the fightingbob.com Web site.

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We Are Not Alone #12

The City of Menasha’s Board of Education meets tonight to try and wrestle with an $800,000 budget deficit. Chief among their concerns is maintaining SAGE classrooms as the number of incoming kindergarteners increases each year.

Menasha School Board focuses on budget deficit

I applaud the Menasha Board of Education, and all the many other school districts around the state that recognize and value the benefits of smaller class sizes. In dire fiscal situations, an easy solution would be to increase class sizes, but school boards are holding the line on quality versus quantity.

Karen Bassler

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We Are Not Alone #11

Most of the “We Are Not Alone” series offers glimpses of how other districts are suffering. I’m happy today to post an entry that focuses on positive action for improvement in New Glarus. It isn’t much, but these days any signs of hope are good.

Some highlights (full story):

NEW GLARUS — A new name and a focused purpose were the results of the meeting of the Citizen’s Action Committee in New Glarus Wednesday night.

After discussion that covered a variety of topics related to the failed school referendums, the committee set a short-term goal as one step on the path toward its long-term goal: a strong future for New Glarus schools.

To that end, the committee has renamed itself the Concerned Citizens for a Strong School. The committee will remain a group of citizens, rather than being appointed by, and thereby connected to, the school board.

Bright also said the board is considering holding a referendum in the fall for money that will cover the operations of the schools for the 2007-08 school year.

According to John Johnson, director of educational informational services for the Wisconsin Department of Public Instruction, state statutes allow districts to pass a referendum to exceed revenue caps by Nov. 6 and still have them apply to the current school year.

Bright said the school board made a policy change at its last meeting which will allow the public to more easily voice its opinion at board meetings.

“They (the school board) are going to discuss ways to make themselves more accessible to the community so people have the opportunity to (be heard),” he said.

Thomas J. Mertz

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Let’s Focus on the Real Problem

Congratulations to the Wisconsin Legislature!

They get the Academy Award for Best Performance in Reneging Responsibility and Passing the Buck.

They also come out the winners in successfully failing to address a doomed public finance system for Wisconsin’s schools, while managing to pass the anger and frustration onto the backs of local communities, creating a cast of mythical villains that include school adminstrators, teachers’ unions and essentially all-volunteer school board members across the state.

Frustration, chest-pounding, threats and blame are being recreated at a local level in 424 school districts across the state. Friends no longer speak. Families are threatening to move. Most important, many kids are stressed out by the adult anger around them. Great atmosphere for meaningful learning.

I bet more than a thousand Madisonians have emailed or called our 7 BOE members in the past 3 weeks. I’m willing to bet newcomers Beth Moss and Maya Cole have gotten more correspondence than anyone else. Great inauguration into a thankless job that doesn’t pay enough to cover mileage to visits across the district’s 50+ schools.

Has anyone emailed or called Don Pridemore? Raise your hand if you have.

Don Pridemore is the Republican Assembly member in Hartford who chairs the “Education Reform” committee in the Assembly.His committee has received the Sondy Pope-Robert bill to reform public school finance. But he refuses to call for a hearing on public school finance in Wisconsin. He claims no one has ever asked.

Nope, they probably haven’t. He and his well-paid colleagues in the Legislature can fly under the radar because it’s easier to call a school board member who has been serving for exactly 12 days than it is to take the time to go back on this website to find Pridemore’s contact info and put a few lines together, or call his office and call for a hearing on school finance reform.

So, here it is:
Don Pridemore, 267-2367, Rep.Pridemore@legis.wisconsin.gov
People in Pridmore’s district ESPECIALLY need to be contacting him.

Beth Swedeen

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