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Illinoize Articles on the Lottery Sale

Yellow Dog Democrat offers up a good criticism of the plan from a political point of view, and Cal has a good story on making Policy legal.

I think the funding is dead on this deal. The seven year license for the British lottery by YDD makes some sense, but I’m not sure it improves the state’s financial status that much.

He also mentions Georgia’s case of a semi-public institution to run it, but Georgia also created a new program with its lottery that specifically dedicated the funding to that program stopping the shell game. What might be salvaged out of this plan on the financial end is to look at either the British or Georgia case for potential savings (I have no idea on either subject honestly) and then dedicate the funding to
1) Revolving text book fund

and then perhaps moving towards all of the lottery money going into dedicated funds for different school purposes that aren’t existent now reducing at least the shell game aspects of lottery deals (and yes, Cal is correct, the lottery wasn’t started to fund education)

The problem is that the alternative to the Blagojevich plan doesn’t exist and until then, the programmatic end is important and right now, the focus is on the funding. Not a trivial matter by any means if one wants to continue funding schools, but it obscures important points about serious issues in education. That someone is talking about them is important in itself.

Zorn on the MySpace Rule

Eric makes some good points regarding student behavior and encouraging students to stay involved regarding Libertyville’s new rule to hold students accountable for what they post on line and more generally do outside of school.

When students misbehave, they forfeit the privilege.

The problem with this ought to be obvious:

Extracurricular activities are often the salvation of “bad” kids. Youths who feel lost, alienated, tempted and angry can find their way through participation in sports, music, drama, academic teams and so on.

They can find their special talents. They can find like-minded souls; perhaps a new and more salutary peer group. They can find dedicated, interested faculty members who can keep them aimed in the right direction. They can find opportunities for college scholarships.

The thing is it isn’t an either or decision in disciplinary cases. Even in an age of no tolerance, the Unit 5 policy I linked to suspends students from the team for 1/4 of the season–probably less than a month in high school sports.

I don’t disagree that students should be allowed to participate after an infraction, but part of keeping students involved is using carrots and sticks. A reasonable disciplinary scheme reinforces those efforts of teammates and coaches. 3

Sure, many schools have bad disciplinary schemes–NCHS’ involved a condescending ass smiling at you for a half an hour if you were a boy–but effective schools can build in discipline that is done with the idea of keeping students involved as a part of the process.

So, yes to discipline involing the extracurricular, no to automatic banning of extracurriculars.

Education Plan Carping

I’m not including the finance in this because those are very legitimate concerns, but some of the carping doesn’t seem to get the plan.

One of the key points is that a merit pay system would be developed with teachers and teacher unions to get around the problem of capricious local decisions. I tend to the think merit pay isn’t that big of a deal, but if you are going to do it, this concern has to be met and I think the Governor’s plan wisely avoids the specifics.

The most bogus line

Local superintendents and elected school board members object to portions of the plan that they charge will wrest decisions away from them and put them in the hands of state education officials.

“This is a slap in the face of local control,” said Walt Warfield, executive director of the Illinois Association of School Administrators. The governor is saying “that the state board, which has absolutely no track record of educational excellence, even competence, is in a better position to run a school than a locally elected body,” Warfield said. “The higher up in government you go, the accountability and credibility tapers off.”

East Saint Louis. Brooklyn. Etc. Etc. Taking over failing districts is reasonable in extreme cases and those two examples are perfect.

The idea that local school boards are efficient or effective is nonsense. It’s a body created to insulate decisions from political parties and in the end, hardly anyone pays attention to what happens on the Boards other than if their taxes are increased. It doesn’t make state government perfect, but it does give the State of Illinois the leverage to come in and provide technical expertise that might otherwise be rejected.

And some of the complaints are just dumb:

But State Rep. Roger Eddy, a Republican who is also superintendent of a Downstate school district, said replacing books every six years would take more than the $40 million the governor has proposed to update books. “I think you have to be careful when you mandate a schedule, that you also allocate enough dollars,” he said.

A six year cycle is reasonable. For social studies and science it is imperative as we learn more about our world. Math and other texts need to be updated for new improvements in curriculum.

But that’s just the small part of the problem with the statement–am I to understand this superintendent doesn’t do a curriculum review every six years including materials? WTF? There is no excuse for this sort of crap and with NCLB, one of the few good side benefits to come from it, is an emphasis on better understanding teaching techniques with actual quality scientific research. In six years, pedagogy changes a lot–and so the curriculum should be reviewed, updated and new materials bought. If it takes more money, good enough, let’s find it, but it has to happen. If his District isn’t currently doing that, then he shouldn’t be superintendent.

The biggest fault other than the financing I see in the plan is centralized procurement and building. Given the track record of CMS there is little reason to think centralization will work. A better system would be to provide technical assistance to Districts for issuing RFPs and then evaluating the proposals later.

The other argument from A+ Schools is that it doesn’t go far enough.

I agree. And the funding issue is a big part of that, but the actual plan is decent and would improve education in Illinois–more to the point, it wouldn’t eliminate future changes in law to put the State on a better funding strategy–it only addresses 4 years and then continues some funding.

I’d like the Governor to change his mind about taxes, but he isn’t going to do that, and Madigan isn’t going to leave his people out there with a tax increase with a Governor attacking the plan. The political reality if Rod is reelected is this is about as good as it going to get and it’s a good improvement in terms of programmatic changes and in the long term it doesn’t limit future changes in funding related to a tax swap.

That said, as I said before the release, Madigan is going to have to seriously consider whether this leaves too much of a funding mess to clean up out of interest in Lisa’s potential run in four years. Even if she were to campaign on a tax swap, it could make a couple difficult years while it’s put into place.

The Case for an Independent Counsel Law

Is showcased in several recent incidents. First, the concerns over Congressional privilege brought up by Hastert are serious, though bullshit in the case of Jefferson given there was a search warrant and the FBI took it further with a screening team.

THe best discussion is over at TalkLeft which generally errs on the side of civil liberties and government limitation

In Rep. Jefferson’s case, however, “separation of powers” just won’t cut it if the affidavit for the search warrant shows probable cause to believe that evidence would be found in his office. The same would apply to the President, the Vice President, their staffs, and the judiciary: If there is probable cause linking the place to be searched with an alleged crime, the search has the imprimatur of the law, is presumptively valid under the Fourth Amendment, and that is all that will be required to defeat a separation of powers claim. His private papers concerning his thoughts and votes are not off limits to a search warrant if the allegation in the affidavit is that the vote was paid for. That is bribery of a Member of Congress, and no Congressman is immune from that. Ask former Rep. Duke Cunningham.

When deliberations of a Member of Congress are relevant to charges, how is Congress different from the Executive? One way to mitigate these issues would be to set up a truly independent counsel law again and have independent counsels outside the normal power structure of the executive branch lessening the impact upon the separate branches.

It might also eliminate the stories such as high level DOJ officials from commenting on investigations into politicians. Currently there is an incentive to make a statement because of political ties–as we see in the double denial by DOJ of Hastert being ‘in the mix’ of the investigation over Abramoff.

The story at ABC is here, here, here, and here.

If one remembers Scott Lasser’s statement in 1998 that declared George Ryan was not under investigation, it gives you good reason to respect how Fitzgerald is so damn quiet about his investigations.

As a note, compared to the incestuous Note, Brian Ross is one of the few great investigative reporters left in television. His work on the Marianis Islands and the forced abortion there has been fantastic and he has been the guy hitting stories well ahead of the Abramoff scandal breaking showing the true evil that much of Abramoff’s work brought.

The Topinka Plan

Okay, it’s snarky and such, but let me put it this way, these are three of the most important issues to me:

1) Children’s Health Care
2) Early Childhood Care and Education
3) Education Funding.

I’m not a particular fan of the Governor and I think the financing on this deal is stupid (and many others). However, he has plans in all three areas. I don’t think the education one goes far enough, but it’s a start. His ECC plan is a good idea. And I think All Kids is good though I’m still concerned about the funding.

Right now, Judy is still trying to unite her party and that’s reasonable, but for the general election there is nothing right now on her actual positions in these areas other than vaguely being against All Kids and calling the Governor’s plan a sham.

I think the financing is certainly problematic, but the programmatic end of his plan is a good start. I’m all for a good pile on of the Governor at times, but at some point it has to be pointed out that he’s had some really strong ideas–even with poor funding schemes. Judy wants to be fiscally responsible and it’s good she didn’t sign the no tax increase pledge, but that doesn’t tell anyone how she’ll fix the state’s financial problems and maintain important programs or offer reasonable alternatives in the mean time.

Where the Trib Goes Off the Rails

Those poor relatively well off suburban districts are getting screwed under the plan by the mighty downstate districts.

My ass. Places like Unit 5 might qualify under this complaint, but not the vast majority of Districts downstate.

ut Blagojevich has a political price to pay as well: At first blush, this plan does nothing to address fast-rising property taxes that enrage many voters. And it appears that relatively few of its benefits would go to the suburban school districts that state funding already short-changes. Blagojevich may have just torpedoed the suburban support he’ll need against Topinka.

If Illinois schools receive more funding, some of it should go to teaching the rudiments of economics. That’s where this plan really falls short. Blagojevich argued Tuesday that accountability is a big part of his plan. But mostly it’s about spending more money. As is, many Illinois school officials (especially Downstate) cry poor rather than convince their property taxpayers to shoulder a heftier burden. They cry poor rather than consolidate districts to shrink the number of highly paid local officials. They cry poor rather than show anyone that their real priority is spending smarter, rather than spending more.

Downstate rural schools don’t have tons of administrators and, frankly, in many cases could use more so there is some actual curriculum reform. The best way to pay for that is through consolidation where possible. Too many downstate districts create a situation that is unsustainable.

The inner ring districts in the suburbs are hurt by the current system because their property values are largely stuck without new development, but it’s hardly a crisis across all Districts. Suburban districts can vote for the schools they want for the most part–they actually have the resources to tax. While a property tax-income tax swap might make good sense as a horse trade, it isn’t because of those poor poor people out there in relatively well off communities.

Many downstate Districts that are rural in character don’t have the wealth to tax. Unit 4 and Unit 5 are perfect examples of what the Trib might complain about, but frankly they are the exception. Take even District 87 in Bloomington that is exactly like inner ring suburban districts which are landlocked and face relatively little growth in assessed valuation. Other rural districts don’t even have that.

Consolidation helps the problem, it doesn’t solve it for most rural districts. They need a higher foundation level and they desperately need technical help in the areas of finance, curriculum and help in building modern buildings.

Trib Editorial–The Structural Problem Created

The Trib gets the finance end correct

If you’re wondering how, in prior decades, Illinois governors and legislators created the state pension funding crisis that so cripples their successors today, grab a front-row seat. This school funding plan rests on the same philosophy: Today’s needs are so pressing that it’s OK to take money from future generations of schoolkids.

It’s the same old story of selling off assetts and then using the proceeds up in the short term while not dealing with the need for increased taxes or cuts in services. Given the general voting patterns in Illinois increasing taxes is a permissible position under the right circumstances, but Blagojevich long ago punted on that idea. Perhaps most frustrating is that the current tax system is regressive and so keeping it as it is hurts the poor the hardest.

Unless Judy is going to face up to that reality, it’s another four years of one or the other lying about state finances. No one has been honest since Dawn Clark Netsch and unfortunately, a lot of bad campaign choices led that to be a cautionary tale.