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Monthly Archives: October 2010

About that Public Hearing… (Part 2)

I posted on Wednesday about a public hearing on the proposed Whitewater Unified School District budget. See, About that Public Hearing…. In that post, I offered a few suggestions for next year. (Hold the hearing at a convenient time outside of ordinary working hours, “Announce the hearing prominently on the main page of the district’s website,” “Place the entire budget proposal online, on the district’s website….before the hearing…”)

These suggestions are easily implemented. I know that they are, because only a day after I posted them, one finds that the district has announced three public sessions on a referendum to refinance school district debt. (Note: I don’t think for a minute that these sessions were in response to my post; I think they were made public because refinancing for a lower rate is an easier discussion than the budget discussion.)

Here’s a screenshot of the district website announcing the three sessions:

A few remarks about all this, with reference to the district’s budget proposal (and other topics).

Public discussion about the budget should be routine; when it becomes routine, it won’t be so difficult.

There are more important matters than the budget. I don’t think the most important, difficult, or interesting questions concern the budget. The highest topics concern the curriculum and policies of the district. If the budget’s too hard to talk about, then one has no reason to be confident about the district’s willingness to address more important maters.

Avoiding discussion of practical matters only exacerbates political opposition.

Political opposition is far more than a supposedly anti-school or possibly ephemeral pro-Tea Party phenomenon. It may be self-flattering to think that those who favor the status quo are defenders against unwashed hordes, but it’s just a silly pose. People likely oppose the status quo — including the budget — for different reasons. There’s no single, ‘anti-referendum’ or ‘anti-budget’ group. Opposition is diverse.

In my own case, I’m not part of any movement other than the long and proud libertarian movement. (I support the right of peaceful protests now, for other groups, as I did when anti-war protests were common a few years ago.)

People favoring limited government, individual rights, and free markets have been a part of this country’s history long before the present-day term ‘libertarian’ was coined. We were a part of discourse on this continent even before this beautiful republic was founded. We were here long before current political movements; we will be here long after.

Whitewater has lots of very sharp people who would be willing to debate these matters. I have always contended that most people are very sharp. It’s just a silly pose to think that a few, however situated, are the only clever people in town, a clique of ‘wise men,’ etc. Society and the things we enjoy from it do not rest on the shoulders of a few people, but on the skill and insight of many.

If people are frustrated or disappointed, leaders should first look to themselves and ask: How could I have addressed these matters more effectively? Hiding’s not an effective tactic. It’s an ineffective, counter-productive one. If, a year from now, disappointed voters reject one proposal or another, leaders will have themselves to blame.

It’s no longer enough to ‘get your message out’ through a few sympathetic outlets. There’s a naive idea that if an official relies on a fawning website or an obliging reporter, all will be well. Those days are long since gone, such as they were; no one has the ability to deliver one message and set one agenda. Status quo messages are either ignored, or ridiculed, outside of a diminishing number living within an echo chamber. In any event, readership and traffic numbers do not favor defenders of politics-as-usual in Whitewater. A message of independent commentary draws more readers than ceaseless cheerleading.

(Tomorrow, I will show how a recent announcement about Whitewater’s Innovation Center isn’t merely ineffective, but counter-productive, to the interests of that project’s proponents. I’m a critic of the project, and there are times when I think: I wish proponents would publish more announcements, as their notices about the project are so inartful, odd, and self-defeating.)

These are hard times for many; the easy way helps no one.

Friday Comment Forum

Here’s the Friday open comments post.

Today’s suggested topic is open. It’s a free-range forum.

The use of pseudonyms and anonymous postings is, of course, fine.

Although the comments template has a space for a name, email address, and website, those who want to leave a field blank can do so. Comments will be moderated, against profanity or trolls. Otherwise, have at it.

I’ll keep the post open through Sunday afternoon.

Have at it.

Just Admit it, Newspapers: You’re Scared of Muslims – Reason Magazine

That’s about the size of it —

As Radley Balko noted in yesterday’s Morning Links, the Washington Post and other newspapers pulled Wiley Millers syndicated “Non Sequitur” cartoon from their comics pages two Sundays back, because Miller pulled a familiar-to-Reason-readers “Where’s Waldo?” gag with the Prophet Muhammad….

On the other hand, maybe comparisons or references to Waldo are just infuriating.

Over a month ago, I posted a criticism about the absence of Whitewater City Manager Kevin Brunner’s name on a notice about a public hearing for a failing tax district, and included a picture of Waldo.

The joke was straightforward (he’s not standing up for a notice about a project now that it’s failing) and conventional (everyone knows about the Where’s Waldo? series).

(There was a similar reference behind a Where Was George? speech that Ted Kennedy gave at the Democratic National Convention in 1988.)

Maybe some people just don’t find Waldo a laughing matter.

By the way, Reason includes the cartoon that the Washington Post wouldn’t run.

See, Just Admit it, Newspapers: You’re Scared of Muslims – Hit & Run : Reason Magazine.

Whitewater Cares Weekend

I received the following press release that I am happy to post —

Please Join Downtown Whitewater as they Present
Whitewater Cares Weekend

Friday October 15th & Saturday October 16th

Help us help those in need as we partner with the following businesses and charities to make a difference

DROP SITE CHARITY/ORGANIZATION ITEMS BEING COLLECTED
Bergey Jewelry
173n West Main Street
Lions Club Eye wear, hearing aids
Dales Bootery
155 West Main Street
Souls 4 Soles New and gently worn footwear
Studio 84
121 West Center Street
Food Pantry
Holiday Care Program
Non-perishable food/cash * New children’s books, art supplies (please no coloring books)
GMA Printing
136 West Main Street
Operation Christmas School supplies, toys, hygiene items, anything to fit into a shoe box
FrameDog
145 West Main Street
Community Clothes Closet Kids winter coats, boots, gloves, adult clothing also accepted, 13 gal trash bags
Sweet Spot Coffee Shoppe Red Cross Cell phones

Make a donation to 3 or more of the charities and
Receive a Triangle Savings Coupon Book, FREE

Individual businesses may have individual rewards for donations
Most collections run through October

Daily Bread for Whitewater, Wisconsin: 10-15-10

Good morning,

Whitewater’s forecast calls for a sunny day, with a high temperature of sixty-one degrees.

It’s coffee with the principal this morning in schools throughout our district. At Lincoln School, it’s picture re-take day, and there’s also a Road Rally on the playground. At Washington School, it’s Walking 4 Washington, a P.A.T.T. fundraiser featuring some famous area mascots.

The Comment Forum will be up today, and back on schedule, at 10 a.m.

Kim Hixson / Evan Wynn 43rd Assembly Forum 2010 — WCLO

I posted yesterday on a Wisconsin State Journal profile of the candidates for the 43rd Assembly District, Kim Hixson and Evan Wynn. See, Wisconsin State Journal – Candidate Profiles: 43rd Assembly District.

Nearby station WCLO has a podcast of interviews with both candidates: “WCLO News Director Stan Stricker spends 30 minutes with each of the candidates for the 43rd Wisconsin Assembly District race.”

See, Evan Wynn / Kim Hixson 43rd Assembly Forum 2010 — WCLO.

On the Upcoming 2011 Whitewater, Wisconsin Municipal Budget

It’s municipal budget season in Whitewater, Wisconsin, and in towns across America. Whitewater’s budget will be presented in stages, over more than one Common Council meeting. That’s been a practice here for years; this year is no different.

I’ll offer a few remarks on a municipal budget, before commentary another time when the city’s proposed budget is unveiled. (Between now and then, I will write in detail about a recent analysis of the City of Whitewater’s fiscal condition.)

A small, rural town with a college campus. We’re a small town of 14,454 people, with a college campus, located in southeast Wisconsin. That’s the easiest way to describe our town. It’s an accurate, but superficial, description. From that single sentence, one would be ignorant of much of what Whitewater’s like. One might expect — and there are more than a few in town who would expect — that the town was a Hallmark card brought to life. I’d say that we are a beautiful, but also a troubled, small town.

A town of considerable poverty, especially among children. Sadly, across all groups within our schools, there’s significant hardship among children — 35.4% of Whitewater’s students require free or reduced lunches. Over one-in-three children in Whitewater — a supposedly “Banner Inland City of the Midwest” — require financial assistance merely to buy a school lunch. Whitewater ranks 11th of 50 schools in this unfortunate category.

(For a recent study from the non-partisan Public Policy Forum, see Report shows wide disparity in Walworth County per-student spending. The report is available online in pdf format, and there’s a section about Whitewater available online, too.)

(The report covers the City of Whitewater and towns nearby that are part of the Whitewater Unified School District. Complete Census data for the city alone are not yet available.)

One hundred carefully circumscribed trolley routes, happy pictures, or proud declarations are no substitute for seeing Whitewater’s poverty as it is today — so that we may be better off tomorrow.

I’m not a progressive, but at least the New Dealers knew how to depict conditions honestly, so that they might spur their fellow citizens to action. Dorothea Lange’s pictures were haunting, yet useful.



New Dealers didn’t favor photographs like this because they disliked America, but because they loved America. (No matter how misguided some of their efforts were — and they were misguided — I recognize that they cared about ordinary people; today’s big-spenders often hawk silly projects that don’t help the needy, but are simply welfare programs for white-collar workers.)

Reducing spending to reduce the tax burden is a good thing. One will sometimes hear that “people just want to pay less in taxes.” One hears this exclaimed with disdain, as though it were the same as saying “people just want to eat kitten and puppies.”

Having earned something, by their own labor, one might expect people to be able to enjoy those earnings for themselves and their families. There’s considerable temerity in bureaucrats smiling and mugging for the camera with the millions they didn’t earn, but only took by compulsion as taxes, from those who did earn that money. It’s not productivity, or success, to play with the millions that others earned.

Indiscriminate reductions are a bad idea — our situation is too dire. Mere austerity — simply spending less — is not enough. We should spend less than we do, so that we might tax less. Simply spending less might be enough for an otherwise prosperous town, in temporarily hard times.

We’re not that town. There are too many poor and working poor in Whitewater to contend honestly that this is a successful, thriving town. No small faction of residents wishing to insist that we’ve arrived will change the truth of our condition. In any event, a few striving men, successful only in promoting themselves through an endless campaign of cheerleading, is the last group whose word anyone should take.

Reductions in spending should affect those at the top, not those most vulnerable. We have too many bureaucrats, and tiny Whitewater’s City Manager was next-to-absurd last year to contend that one solution in Whitewater is to trim the bureaucracy. Tiny Whitewater shouldn’t have a bureaucracy at all. I’ll take him up on his offer, though. Salaries of principal leaders should be held steady or reduced. Others across America have had to take wage cuts — it’s time for Whitewater’s officials to do the same.

That’s also why I am opposed to cuts in spending for a library or even for recreation. Those cuts disproportionately affect the poor and disadvantaged. They’re a middle class official’s idea of seeming responsible, while he leaves less for the poor, as he goes off a trip, etc.

Reducing spending in some areas to reallocate or defend existing commitments is a good idea. Our priories should reflect poverty in town. Spending under the fantasy of a thriving middle class community, when that’s not what we are, is both misplaced and wrong. If Whitewater must spend — and she must — basic public safety, growth and opportunity, and the needs of the poor should trump a manager’s silly schemes.

As for growth and opportunity, it should be real and genuine, and a reduction in fees that actual business people pay is a great place to start.

This is a good time for fee reductions. We need to spur growth. We’re losing jobs now. Spurring growth should begin with reducing fees.

Whitewater took eleven million in grants and public debt for a so-called Innovation Center, but that failing project is less useful to anyone than a single million would have been for fee reductions, or even immediate job training, and expanded food, clothing, and other assistance for the poor, particularly children.

(I understand well that the money for the tech park cannot be reallocated. In fact, we should not have taken any of it; those grants, etc. should have been left to a community that wouldn’t have so selfishly used tax money. Another community would have made better use of those millions. Brunner, Telfer, et al., should not have raised their hands to ask for money for so empty an idea.)

Yet, so ineffectual is the Innovation Center project, that even a fraction of that money spent directly in assistance to the poor would be better than how the whole amount is being spent now.
Cut deeply, beginning at the top, with most savings going to tax or fee reductions to spur genuine private growth, and other savings going to services that aid the poor, while preserving services that benefit the needy.

One or two fewer department leaders, and significant reductions in the use of consultants, would go a long way toward closing a gap, while also reducing taxes & fees, and preserving necessary services.

I’ll add detail to these ideas as the budget process unfolds, with specific suggestions along these lines.

Author to share stories of the strange and unexplained — Walworth County Today

A spooky, Halloween-time treat —

Best-selling author and Wisconsin’s leading authority on the paranormal Linda S. Godfrey will present a book talk and signing for her newly published book, “Haunted Wisconsin: Ghosts and Strange Phenomena of the Badger State” at 6:30 p.m. Oct. 20 at the Lake Geneva Public Library….

Be prepared for Kenosha’s Headless Nun, the Man Bat of La Crosse, Rocky the Rock Lake Monster, and John Dillinger’s phantom. Explore Aztalan’s ancient mounds, the ghostly bars and taverns of Madison and Milwaukee, and the creepy town of Caryville, one of the most haunted places in America. Following the program, copies of all her books will be available to be signed. The program is sponsored by the Friends of the Lake Geneva Public Library….

See, Author to share stories of the strange and unexplained — Walworth County Today.

Opinion: A step toward curing Washington’s spending disease – eliminating earmarks – Rep. Eric Cantor – POLITICO.com

There is no question that earmarks – rightly or wrongly – have become the poster child for Washington’s wasteful spending binges. They have been linked to corruption and scandal, and serve as a fuel line for the culture of spending that has dominated Washington far too long. These reasons alone would justify completely eliminating earmarks, but the basis for my position doesn’t end there.

The old adage that he who can’t be trusted to reform the “small” problems can’t be trusted to reform the “large” ones applies as much to government as to individuals. Both Republicans and Democrats have an enormous task before us if we are going to get America’s fiscal house in order.

See, Opinion: A step toward curing Washington’s spending disease – eliminating earmarks – Rep. Eric Cantor – POLITICO.com.

Daily Bread for Whitewater, Wisconsin: 10-14-10

Good morning,

Whitewater’s forecast for today calls for a mostly sunny day with a high temperature of sixty-six degrees.

At Lincoln School, proud home of the Leopards, it’s Market Day today, with pickup from 5-6 p.m. in the upper gym.

On this day in 1947, American Chuck Yeager became the first person to break the sound barrier.



Link: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dke2i-xO1uo

The Wisconsin Historical Society recalls that on this day in 1912, while campaigning for president as a third-party candidate,

Theodore Roosevelt [Was] Shot in Milwaukee

On the night of October 14, 1912, Theodore Roosevelt was shot in Milwaukee. Roosevelt was in Wisconsin stumping as the presidential candidate of the new, independent Progressive Party, which had split from the Republican Party earlier that year. Roosevelt already had served two terms as chief executive (1901-1909), but was seeking the office again as the champion of progressive reform. Unbeknownst to Roosevelt, a New York bartender named John Schrank had been stalking him for three weeks through eight states. As Roosevelt left Milwaukee’s Hotel Gilpatrick for a speaking engagement at the Milwaukee Auditorium and stood waving to the gathered crowd, Schrank fired a .38-caliber revolver that he had hidden in his coat.

Roosevelt was hit in the right side of the chest and the bullet lodged in his chest wall. Seeing the blood on his shirt, vest, and coat, his aides pleaded with him to seek medical help, but Roosevelt trivialized the wound and insisted on keeping his commitment. His life was probably saved by the speech, since the contents of his coat pocket — his metal spectacle case and the thick, folded manuscript of his talk — had absorbed much of the force of the bullet. Throughout the evening he made light of the wound, declaring at one point, “It takes more than one bullet to kill a Bull Moose,” but the candidate spend the next week in the hospital and carried the bullet inside him the rest of his life.

Schrank, the would-be assassin, was examined by psychiatrists, who recommended that he be committed to an asylum. A judge concurred and Schrank spent the remainder of his life incarcerated, first at the Northern Hospital for the Insane in Oshkosh, then at Central State Hospital for the criminally insane at the state prison at Waupun. The glass Roosevelt drank from on stage that night was acquired by the Wisconsin Historical Museum. You can read more about the assassination attempt on their Museum Object of Week pages.

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