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WEAC members continued to speak out on behalf of Governor Doyle's state budget plan Wednesday (April 9, 2003) as the Legislature's Joint Finance Committee wrapped up its budget hearings.
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We believe that repealing the QEO
as part of the budget will lead to the retention of quality
staff who deliver world-class educational programs to children. |
The committee will now begin amending the plan, and the need for WEAC
members to speak out on behalf of their profession and great schools
will intensify in the next few weeks and months, according to WEAC President
Stan Johnson. Johnson called on members to contact their legislators
and urge them to support the budget proposed by Doyle. Members can use
the OnWEAC Cyberlobby to get background
information and direct links to their legislators.
At the committee's final hearing in Madison, Johnson said the governors plan keeps education a top priority, even though the state is facing a record deficit.
Even during these tough fiscal times, the budget provides an
increase in aid for K-12 schools, adds flexibility to revenue caps for
low-spending districts and maintains funding for key programs like 4-year
old kindergarten and the SAGE class-size reduction program, Johnson
told legislators. WEAC recognizes each of these proposals as part
of a strong commitment to preserve great schools during the toughest
fiscal crisis in state history.
Johnsons prepared testimony called on legislators to support
the governors proposal to eliminate the Qualified Economic Offer
law.
Ending the QEO will enable educators to be part of the solution
to the states financial troubles, he said. We believe
that repealing the QEO as part of the budget will lead to the retention
of quality staff who deliver world-class educational programs to children.
Johnson also told legislators that WEAC supports the governors
efforts to maintain and expand funding for the Wisconsin Technical College
System, and called on the Legislature to approve state employee contracts
without delay.
Other WEAC members who testified at the Madison hearing echoed Johnsons
call for approval of stalled state employee contracts.
We are the mainstay of Wisconsins state services,
said Mary Turnbull, a WEAC Council #1 member who teaches at the Ethan
Allen School at Wales, a juvenile correctional institution. Education
is imperative for successful community existence upon release from the
corrections system.
Turnbull said she and her colleagues work with the states neediest students in less than ideal physical conditions, and yet their contract has not been honored.
Mary Joas, who also teaches at Wales, described some of the dangers teachers face while working with violent criminals.
"In corrections, I work with and have worked with colleagues who have been raped on the job, colleagues who have been held hostage, blindfolded, bound and one teacher who was tied to an explosive, acetylene gas tank.
"Our unions are appalled that you have approved a 3% wage increase for each and every one of yourselves but you refuse to approve our negotiated union contracts," Joas said.
Echoing a sentiment expressed by WEAC members at previous Joint Finance
Committee hearings in other parts of the state, members from Fort Atkinson,
Reedsburg and Belleville told the panel how revenue controls and the
QEO have harmed their profession, their personal lives and their schools.
We must provide funding for not just good, but great schools,
Fort Atkinson middle school teacher Lucy Walter said. We must
recruit and retain the best and the brightest to our classrooms.
Walter said the QEO has created low teacher morale, hard feelings between administrators and teachers, and tension-filled schools that are not conducive to learning.
Stan Johnson's complete testimony
Resource page on the 2003-05 state budget
Posted April 10, 2003