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Terry
Schwaller of Shiocton had some pretty high expectations for his first
WEAC Summer Academy, and he wasnt disappointed.
Its been better than I could have hoped,
said Schwaller, who begins his third year of teaching next month.
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| Terry Schwaller of Shiocton writes a post card to Governor Doyle. |
Schwaller, who was elected to a position on the Bayland
UniServ Board last May, enjoyed the Emerging Voices training where,
he said, he learned the ropes and got some experience.
It was great working with people, connecting and networking, he said, and finding out about the potential everyone has to get involved and make a difference.
Schwaller was among more than 400 members who attended
the Summer Academy July 31-August 3 at the Radisson Paper Valley Hotel
in Appleton. The Academy featured sessions on a wide variety of topics,
including leadership and organizing skills, the Wisconsin tax system,
bargaining, contract enforcement, grievances and public relations. It
also included training on online courses focusing on refining skills
for paraeducators and classroom management for teachers. (See photo
gallery for additional coverage.)
The Academy also featured a Thank the Governor Organizing
Event at which participants wrote post cards thanking Governor Doyle
for his action on the state budget. Thanks to the governor, the budget
boosts school funding by $861 million, which is $404 million more than
the Legislature provided for public education in its version of the
budget bill.
Schwaller, for example, wrote: Thank you for
doing the right thing and standing up for schools, teachers and
most importantly the children." The post cards were given
to Doyle aide Rich Judge following Judges address to Summer Academy
participants Tuesday afternoon.
Judge told participants that if it were not for their
hard work and that of other WEAC members throughout the state, Doyle
would not have been there to protect schools and restore millions of
dollars in school funding to the budget passed by the Legislature.
We cant do it without you, he said.
Judge, who is already working on managing Doyles
re-election campaign in 2006, said WEAC members again will be the backbone
of that effort by mobilizing support in every corner of the state. You
are the folks who are most connected with your communities, and you
know what matters, he said.
Judge said Doyle is probably one of the greatest
friends of public education this state has ever seen and his re-election
is crucial to preserving great schools in Wisconsin. But the 2006 elections
are not just about the governors race, he said.
You deserve to have a Legislature that understands the QEO must go or maybe just the Legislature needs to go, he said.
On Monday evening, participants were treated to a Hawaiian-themed picnic - complete with a tropical buffet and hula dancing - courtesy of WEA Trust. The event - at Jones Park across the street from the hotel - featured a wide variety of activities, including volleyball, badminton and mini golf. But the hula dancing was the hit of the day as dozens of participants swayed to popular Hawaiian tunes, including Tiny Bubbles.
WEAC President Stan Johnson and WEA Trust President
Fred Evert welcomed the crowd and used the opportunity to talk about
the special relationship between the Trust and WEAC members.
While most insurance companies look at the conditions
of human misery sickness, accident, disability and death
and ask, How can we profit?, your Trust looks at those same
conditions and asks, How can we help? Evert said.
Johnson and Evert said the Trust is dedicated to maintaining
and improving the economic well-being of members. They said the Trust
was the first insurer to offer prescription drug coverage as a standard
benefit under its health plan, the first in Wisconsin to cover transplants
as a standard benefit, and a pioneer in scientifically researching and
proving that individuals who have timely access to medical information
can make informed, cost-effective health care decisions.
The Trust is an excellent example of what can be accomplished when the focus is on you our members rather than on quarterly profits, payments to brokers, and more money to shareholders, Evert said.
Background on the Summer Academy agenda
Posted August 5, 2005