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Monthly Archives: March 2009

On the School District Administrator Candidates: Press Coverage

There have been a few newspaper stories about the two final candidates for our next school district administrator. At both the Janesville Gazette and the Daily Union, there were mid-March announcements of the two finalists. See, in the Janesville Gazette, “Whitewater superintendent finalists announced,” and from the Daily Union, “Whitewater picks two superintendent finalists.”

The Daily Union story never follows up on the odd description of the Whitewater Country Club venue for the forums as a ‘neutral’ location. Nor does the reporter explain a favorable remark from the WUSD Board President to the effect that ‘the board was very impressed by the number of applicants, adding that Dennis Richards, a Wisconsin Association of School Boards representative, said that is a very high number and it reflects well on the district.’

The unexplained background on the remark makes Richards seem unaffiliated with the selection, like some kind of observer. He’s not.

Who’s Dennis Richards? He’s from the consulting group the WUSD hired to conduct the candidate search. One might expect Richards to speak well of the district that hired his organization. I know who Richards is because the Janesville Gazette reported on the selection of his organization, the Madison-based Wisconsin Association of School Boards, in a December story. See, “Whitewater school district hires firm to find new superintendent.”

Yet more recently, the Gazette offered a detailed story, asking questions of the two finalists (Dr. Suzanne Zentner and Dr. Dennis Pauli), themselves. See, “Two remain in running for Whitewater superintendent.” Far as I can see, it’s the only local story that involves reporting of the candidates’ statements. One learns more there, at the Gazette, than from the WUSD website.

Our district might have posted more information on its website than it has, that others might have more background. A serious press will ask questions, but a tame press will avoid meaningful examination of public institutions and officials.

On the School District Administrator Candidates: Location and Timing of a Public Forum  

On the Timing and Location of the Reception and Public Forum.  It’s one each day, for two days, from 4:30 p.m. to 6 p.m., at the Whitewater Country Club, on March 31st and April 1st, for the administrator candidates. 

One could not offer better evidence of the failed culture of our community.   

(A matter-of-fact email sent days ago to the Board president, at the address listed at the WUSD website, asking about the timing of the public forums, went unanswered.) 

Who, possibly, thinks that 4:30 p.m. to 6 p.m. offers convenience to anyone except teachers, administrators, local politicians, city bureaucrats, and other local hangers-on? 

The group that might find this schedule difficult would be parents who who work inside the city privately, work or outside the city (and there are many residents like this).  If part of these events includes a public forum, which part of the public did district expect to attend easily?  

Listing all the places that the candidates will visit during the day is useless to those not teachers or administrators. A public forum, afterward, should have been more reasonably scheduled with the true public (not a smaller group of the same supposedly important people) able to attend conveniently. 

Who, possibly, thinks that the Whitewater Country Club is the right place for this public forum, or even a reception?  (I’m sure it’s a fine club, but that’s hardly the point.)  Other than the same group of people who talk to each other too often, how many others, just as much of the community, will drive out to a small, private club they’ve likely never before attended?  

We need no small, private place to host a reception for a public school district.  We need not pretend, falsely, how fancy we are. 

Cast those silly notions aside, and embrace a new and more open culture.  

We might have had a truly open reception, in any weather, right on the lawn of our high school.  Many events set up suitable reception tents, heated at any time, where food, conversation, and a public presentation can easily be held. 

Instead of a meeting at a private club — a genuinely welcoming forum and reception in the center of the city.  

In that place, there would be no need for important people, ‘dignitaries,’ etc.  Those elected to serve might serve others, offering simple food, from their own hands, at their own effort.  Members of the public would, in that better gathering, sit in the very front; those who held office, or had paid positions for the district or city, would sit in the very back, in seats farthest from notice or hearing.  Those who struggled with private employers, out of town work, daycare, and the many pressures of daily life, would be treated as honored guests, and in that way feel special.  Those who proudly claimed themselves public servants would truly be as much.    

This community, this state, this republic, will never be special, nor truly unique, because of the things that fancy people like.  America is special and unique for her liberties, the envy — even in these sad times — of all the world.  

An open meeting on asphalt, in the most undistinguished place, means more than the finest event at a private club, on the loveliest floor.    

I spoke to someone from the WUSD yesterday, who talked to me at length about all this: “This is the way it’s done here.” 

Yes, I know.   

On the School District Administrator Candidates: District Information

Over the next two days, two candidates, Dr. Suzanne Zentner of Arizona, and Dr. Dennis Pauli of Illinois, will visit our city as candidates for District Administrator of the Whitewater Unified School District.  I know as much, from announcements in newspapers, private websites, and our own district’s announcement. 

One can find that announcement through a link on the district’s main page.  Here’s the announcement, as a screen shot: 

 

Here’s the text of that announcement: 

Final Slate of District Administrator Candidates Announced Whitewater Unified School District School Board President Charles Nass announced today the two finalists for the position of district administrator of the Whitewater Unified School District. From a pool of 22, the School Board selected seven candidates. A team of school board members and administrators interviewed the candidates March 5 to March 12.

Final candidates are Dr. Suzanne Zentner, Associate Superintendent of Teaching and Learning, Isaac School District, Phoenix, Arizona; and Dr. Dennis Pauli, Assistant Superintendent for Curriculum and Instruction, Round Lake School District 116, Round Lake, Illinois.

The next step in the selection process will be to hold day-long interviews with the candidates. Each candidate will spend one day in the district touring the school buildings and meeting with the principals and others. The interview team will conduct a final interview with each candidate.

Staff, parents, and the community are invited to attend a public forum and reception at the Whitewater Country Club from 4:30 to 6:00 p.m. on March 31 for Dr. Suzanne Zentner, and on April 1 for Dr. Dennis Pauli. The School Board plans to make its selection no later than April 2.

If you have questions, please contact Board President Charles Nass at 262-903-9511 or chucknass@wwusd.org.

A quick comment, regarding the District’s announcement — 

Additional WUSD Website Information.  There’s none, so far as a search of the WUSD site reveals.  No information on candidates’ backgrounds, by district, community demographics, summary of career accomplishments, etc. 

One hears so very much about parents, and non-parents, in the community being stakeholders, from the current District Administrator.  If that’s true, and if that means anything, then why not more detail on the website, well in advance so the community might have time to consider these candidates.  Not merely a reception and public forum held at the last hour, but more time for reflection?   

One may find this information, of course, but an open district — a truly open culture — would share these vital facts without hesitation.  Why so reluctant?  Those who will decide will still be able to do so, having had so much time as they like for lawful, closed-session deliberations. 

A candid district is a better, stronger district.  

Daily Bread: March 31, 2009

Good morning, Whitewater

There’s a reception tonight, from 4:30 p.m. to 6:00 p.m. for one of the two school district administrator finalists, Dr. Suzanne Zentner. The reception’s at the Whitewater Country Club, “located on Hwy 89 just South of the intersection of the Hwy 89 and Hwy 12 Bypass on the south edge of the City of Whitewater.”

From the Wisconsin State Journal, an unexpected find, on the origin of the word ‘bubbler’

MADISON, Wis. (AP) — One of Wisconsin’s most prominent regional terms – calling a drinking fountain a bubbler – probably comes from a 1910s corporate marketing campaign.

Usage of the term is concentrated in southeast Wisconsin, where the Kohler Co. marketed its early drinking fountains around 1917, said Joan Hall, editor of the Dictionary of American Regional English.

Those porcelain bowls contained “bubbling valves” that made the water bubble as it came through. Pretty soon, Hall said, the valves became known as “bubblers.” Then, people started calling the whole product by that name.

“And as they changed to look more like drinking fountains, the name stayed the same,” Hall said.

Register Watch™ for the March 26th Issue of the Paper.  

Here’s my coverage of the paper that, well, supposedly covers Whitewater.  First, though, a trenchant observation from the Phantom Stranger, received over the weekend.  Always my pleasure to hear from him, and here’s what he had to say about recent issues of the Whitewater Register:

…and to make matters worse, their news is two weeks old…I mean, the Wisconsin slogan story as a headline on the March 26 edition (story happened March 16); and the March 14 candidates forum is the most recent story on the website — 2 weeks later, still—!!!

He’s right.  Until today, March 30th — two weeks’ time later — the candidates forum still led Whitewater news stories at mywalworthcounty.com. 

The banner headline of the Register‘s March 26th issue, entitled, “Wisconsin is the Place to ‘Live Like you Mean It’ refers to a new state slogan covered elsewhere far earlier.  The story, from correspondent Amber Benson, oddly acknowledges that the slogan was unveiled on March 16th.  The slogan is not, itself, a Whitewater story, and deserves less coverage in a paper that proudly places Whitewater in its title.     

Inside, on page 2, the Register acknowledges reporting that Associated Press reporter Ryan Foley, a prominent reporter, has written about others who have used this slogan already.  Foley’s reporting, entitled, “Originality rules in Wisconsin? Not in new slogan,” deserves more than an inside-the-paper mention. 

(See, at Forbes.com, Foley’s fine reporting: http://www.forbes.com/feeds/ap/2009/03/23/ap6201724.html.)   

The Register‘s headline story is neither timely, nor unique to our city, nor curious about how a slogan that so many others have used before would be launched as though it were fresh.  That’s the kind of curiosity that makes for good reporting.  Curiosity about those in power, how politicians and bureaucrats present themselves, and what lies behind their statements. 

One notes, too, how variable the number of pages in the front section of the Register can be — in the March 26th issue 14 pages, in others, as few as 10.  That’s a big shift in potential ad space, or copy space.  Most papers try, even in this recession, to keep page space more fixed, issue to issue.  It’s not a good sign for the Register.   

Another more telling sign, at the my.walworthcounty.com website:  when I clicked on “Whitewater news” on that page, I found that the ‘site sponsor’ was…wait for it, Whitewater…myracinecounty.com.  

Too funny – not even a fine out-of-town sponsor connection, like Madison, Cambridge, or Williams Bay.  Instead, a sponsor connected to a different kind of place, Racine County.    

Prisoner Monday

Continuing for the next several weeks, it’s Prisoner Monday here at Free Whitewater. Why? Because a longtime reader previously suggested to me that being in Whitewater sometimes felt like living the plot of The Prisoner.

It’s a great British series, that tells the story of a secret agent who resigns from his agency, only to find himself in a mysterious place called The Village.

AMC has the full episodes of the original series online, and also offers one-minute summaries of those original episodes. I’ve previously posted the first five videos.

Here’s the sixth, one-minute summary, of an episode entitled, “The General.” (“With the aid of an unseen General, a professor develops a subliminal process for educating the population of The Village. Number 6 must discover the identity of the General, and prove that knowledge is not wisdom.”)

Be seeing you….

The full video is also available at AMC.

Enjoy.

more >>

Daily Bread: March 30, 2009

Good morning, Whitewater

The Community Development Authority meets today at 4:30 p.m. at the Municipal Building.

School’s back in session, at the university, and in our school district.

Over the the right, on my calendar of meetings, I have listed the receptions for school district administrator candidates, one each, on Tuesday and Wednesday of this week. (More on that, later today.)

In Wisconsin history, according to the Wisconsin Historical Society, marking March 28, 1933:

On this date a group of women paid thanks to the inventor of the typewriter, Milwaukee’s C. Latham Sholes, in a national radio program. Amelia Earhart, Anna Boettinger (Franklin Roosevelt’s daughter), Mrs. Robert E. Speer, the president of the National Young Women’s Christian Association, all participated in the program.

Emphasis added.

Impressive invention, and impressive, too, that Amelia Earhart was part of the program. Quite something, really…one could not ask for a better tribute.

Register Watch™ for the March 19th Issue of the Paper

The March 19th issue of the Register reveals both the dependency of the paper as part of a chain, and how poor writing leads to bias or uninformed reporting.

Supreme Court Race. Consider the above-the-fold story on our Supreme Court race, “Judging the Judges.” The story describes a forum before the Milwaukee Press Club at which both Wisconsin Supreme Court candidates spoke.

(Quick note: I am an Abrahamson supporter; Koschnick made a mess of judicial administration in Jefferson County, is running a political rather than judicial race, and has the lesser support among associations of lawyers in the state.)

Look, though, how staff writer Andrew C. Westbrook describes the positions of the candidates — in just under two dozen paragraphs, Westbrook typically leads with Koschnick’s contentions, and leaves Abrahamson in the position of replying to him. Westbrook adopts this technique throughout the article – first Koschnick’s position, and only afterward Abrahamson’s reply. (Thus, Koschnick on judicial activism, on criminal defense rulings, on political contributions, on the supposed anti-police tendency of the sitting Chief Justice of our court, and only after Koschnick’s charge does Westbrook recount Abrahamson’s reply.)

Why does Westbrook write this way? Perhaps, it’s merely a technique, and these accusation-and-reply exchanges never took place. If so, then Westbrook’s distorted the nature of the forum, for a rhetorical device, and a biased one at that.

Alternatively — and those who have followed the campaign know full well — this is how Koschnick presents himself, more politician than judicial candidate. (Judge Gableman became Justice Gabelman this way, just last year.)

Westbrook owes it to his readers to explain this manner — that Koschnick attacks by nature — calling into question his judicial temperament. His manner, and Gabelman’s, is a significant departure from the dispassion one hopes for in a judge, on any court. Westbrook’s story is ultimately uninformative, and reporting that relied on academics in law (or political science) would have offered readers some valuable background.

It’s not as though there was not room in the paper for more detail, and real reporting — the story continues inside, on page 5. There was plenty of room for more.

Westbrook covers this race like it’s a town council contest; it’s not. We’re supposed to be — but are less so each day — a non-partisan, good government state. One hopes for more from a front page, banner story.

(Is not, by the way, Westbrook an editor elsewhere in the Southern Lakes chain? The chain uses, I think, editors at one paper as staff writers, elsewhere. It’s a possible sign of how feeble this chain has become, that it must scrimp at every opportunity.)

Federal Funds for Whitewater. Also above the fold is a story entitled, “City Officials Optimistic about Federal Funding.” One learns that there may be a few possible sources for federal funding, including Milwaukee Street, and a technology park.

(On a technology park — all the funding in the world doesn’t change the sad truth that this town lacks the culture for a thriving technology park, and all the money in the world won’t make tender plants grown among our two or three hundred weeds. Brunner sees this as a ‘tremendous marriage,’ but Whitewater needs more than a Dolly Levi in the Municipal Building.)

Here’s how Editor Schwenke tells the tale:

After instituting a hiring freeze on full-and part-time City of Whitewater job positions earlier this month due to state and general economic concerns, City Manager Kevin Brunner announced the city could likely receive grants for various major development and reconstruction projects in the city.

Quick replies:

1. Does Schwenke think that his readers have short-term memory failure? Only two weeks’ time earlier, Schwenke reported — accurately — that City Manager Kevin Brunner went to council for cover support and approval for a several months’ hiring freeze. (Brunner feared ‘polarizing’ others over a hiring freeze of city workers.) See my earlier post, “Register Watch™ for the March 5th Issue: Hiring Freeze” for more details.

Writing that this was Brunner’s action — as one normally defines the term among the clear, resolute, firm — is risible. Brunner sought cover then, on an obvious mater; he shouldn’t be credited with action now, two weeks’ time later.

2. Imagine being optimistic about federal funding — Why does the city need this federal funding, after all? Because without it, our fiscal condition is dire, not merely for 2009, but beyond. That’s why some of the projects about which Schwenke writes in the story are pushed out so far — 2013 might as well be 2023 — it’s a budgetary device to say some day, some how…

If we are optimistic about federal funding — the tax receipts (or interest bearing debt) from others in America to pay our way — it is because we have failed to budget for ourselves properly. We seek now the last resort of every local official who cannot pay his own way — money from the state, or federal government. State funds are unavailable — Wisconsin’s struggling — and so our City Manager turns his gaze toward … Washington. They’ve billions in deficit spending ready for distribution; Brunner may yet find a place at the trough.

Schwenke’s article asks not a single question, though, about why federal money might be necessary for us, or whether it’s a good idea. It’s so much easier to write his way, but after decades of similar writing, we find ourselves in a situation where we need others so far away, and no one bothers to write about what this may mean.

Register Watch™ for the March 12th Issue of the Paper

Here’s an assessment of the March 12th issue of the Whitewater Register, my Register Watch™ feature.  For those new to the website (welcome, by the way), the feature started because Whitewater’s weekly newspaper has played a longtime role publishing poorly written, dull stories that coddle local politicians and supposedly important Whitewater residents. 

In fact, the Register’s part of an out-of-town chain, offers few local stories, runs ads mostly for out-of-town businesses, and is in a multi-year circulation decline.   

If the Register were not part of a chain, I doubt it would still be publishing; even as part of the Southern Lakes chain, the print edition of the paper may not last much longer.  MyWalworthCounty.com’s the long-in-coming website of the newspaper chain, and that website may be a futile effort to boost circulation for newsprint links in the chain, or perhaps to offer Southern Lakes a publishing platform when many of the local papers fold.  

I don’t know if the Register will fold, but it seems increasingly likely.  Two years ago, or even a year ago, I talked with many people in town who told me that Hell would freeze before the Register would fold.  I’m not so sure anymore.  

(One sign of the Register’s increasing irrelevance is the interest that Whitewater politicians have directed elsewhere.  One follows this interest:   where they turn their attention, I’ll turn mine.)    

The Register’s March 12th issue has an above-the-fold story on civil rights activist Minnijean Brown-Trickey, one of several black students escorted under federal force into Central High in Little Rock.  Brown-Trickey recently spoke on our campus, and her story is both inspiring and, coming as an address on campus, a local one, too.  More of these stories, and the sensibility underlying them, might have made a difference, these last few years.

This could have been a feisty, plucky weekly newspaper, and through that course, might have survived, independent and proud.  Inquisitive stories on political issues, and watching City Hall the Municipal Building closely might have assured an everlasting future. Some feelings might have been bruised, but every reporter who wrote those inquisitive stories on budgets, politicians, and policies would have slept for being true to a free press’s scrutiny of municipal affairs.  

Look, though, at how much white space the Register’s front page has — even with a bold type headline for the story, there are large amounts of white around the headline (and too much around the paper’s bold banner).   To see how anemic the paper’s Whitewater coverage has become, one need only look to page 10, where an East Troy story greets Whitewater residents: “Chamber, WCEDA and Village team up for small business loan workshop.”  It’s the Whitewater Register, but a story about the East Troy Area Chamber of Commerce. 

I wish the best to each and every resident of East Troy; that the Whitewater paper carries the story tells all one need know about our local press.       

Daily Bread: March 27, 2009

Good morning, Whitewater

There’s a fine website, called Local Government Watch, committed to a focus on town government, not merely in Wisconsin, but across America:

While most government watchdogs are watching Washington or the statehouse, who’s watching the courthouse and city hall? This site is intended to give you an example of just what sort of chicanery goes on with your local tax dollars.

The Local Government Watch’s Wisconsin page link is available at http://localgovwatch.blogspot.com/search/label/Wisconsin, and as a link on my blogroll.

Area’s unemployment rate tops state, keeps climbing — GazetteXtra

If anyone were so foolish that he or she doubted the seriousness of our economic condition, then grim statistics will sweep away all uncertainty. Nearby Janesville now has an unemployment rate of 13 percent, the highest in all Wisconsin.

The story’s at the Gazette:

http://gazettextra.com/news/2009/mar/26/areas-unemployment-rate-tops-state-keeps-climbing/

Public Servants of Whitewater — Reject Selfish Compensation

We’ve no politicians in Whitewater, Wisconsin.  We’ve no career bureaucrats, either.  They’re all public servants.  Ask them, and they’ll be happy to tell you as much.  I’ll take them at their word — they (like the Vulcans from Star Trek) have “come to serve.”  We are fortunate for it. 

They have surely noticed what others have, too — that America sinks in recession, groans under increasing public expenditures, all with no end in sight.  Only two dozen miles away, Janesville sinks into something worse than mere recession; her number of unemployed grows each day.  Much was made of the benefits of being in her orbit in better times; in these difficult times, one might guess our prospects, like hers, are darker.   

Let’s be clear, and set aside the euphemisms of well-fed, white-collar politicians and career bureaucrats, that we have ‘difficulties,’ ‘challenges,’ &c.  No we don’t.  We have jobless residents, destitute neighbors, and hungry and frightened fellow citizens.  Not far away, in some vulgar hovel, but here, in the ‘Banner Inland City of the Midwest.’  Here, in this city, of this state, of this beautiful republic.  

All the preening, false humility, and showy processions change nothing of our fellow residents’ condition.   And yet, our Common Council comes to serve

I have a modest proposal, seemingly small, but principled: 

Renounce compensation for service while holding elective office in Whitewater.  Take none of it for yourselves.  Confer it, completely and transparently, to those in need.
 

These are not times in which those who represent Whitewater should take even a penny in compensation from this community.  If it’s an honor to serve — and it is — and one hears it from our politicians often — then it should be a true, unpaid honor, under the increasing unemployment, hunger, and poverty of our city.  (The same should be true — easily as much, perhaps more so — of our elected Municipal Judge, Richard Kelly.) 

Lincoln was right, considering an even more sinister circumstance — one should not wring bread from the sweat of other men’s faces.  

Service needs no compensation, no stipend, no ersatz retirement check.  Reject it all – in doing so, our political class will have embraced a truly principled and fair service.