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A Milwaukee kindergarten teacher Thursday (July 26, 2007) urged the legislature’s budget conference committee to protect Wisconsin’s great schools from decline by including pro-public education measures in its final proposal to the governor.
![]() Kelly McMahon, a kindergarten teacher in the Milwaukee Public School System, talks on camera as part of a WisconsinEye broadcast following her remarks at a Wisconsin Values event Thursday (July 26, 2007), at the State Capitol. |
Kelly McMahon, who teaches five-year-olds in the Milwaukee Public School system, made her comments at the State Capitol as part of the Wisconsin Values initiative. Wisconsin Values is a diverse coalition of 29 organizations advocating for a state budget that reflects the priorities that are important to the state – including education, health care and social services.
McMahon was one of several people who gave personal accounts of the importance of proper funding for areas such as public education, universities and technical colleges, health care, child care and social services.
“Reducing the per-pupil revenue limit adjustment to $200, not even an inflationary increase, would translate into roughly 1,700 teachers losing their jobs in Wisconsin,” McMahon said, referring to the Assembly Republicans’ budget proposal. “Milwaukee Public Schools alone would face the prospect of having to cut an additional 200 teachers.”
| Watch the WI Values Press Conference featuring Kelly McMahon's comments (starting 23:30 min.) |
The result of that for MPS and other public schools would be crowded classrooms and elimination of educational programs such as art, music, foreign languages, forensics, and physical education, McMahon noted.
The Assembly Republicans in their budget also slash general school aid by $85.4 million over the next two years, compounding the cuts that will be necessary in Wisconsin school districts, McMahon said.
McMahon outlined several parts of the Assembly’s budget that would harm children:
“In the weeks and months to come, I hope the conference committee will say ‘Yes’ to public education, say ‘Yes’ to ensuring our children reach their full potential, and say ‘Yes’ to preparing our youth for the jobs of tomorrow that will grow our economy,” McMahon concluded.
Posted July 27, 2007