Coalition Urges Continuation of State Commitment to School Construction
A coalition of business, labor, education, and professional organizations
is warning that the state is on the verge of breaking its commitment
to fund two-thirds of public school construction costs.
The Coalition for Modern Schools was created because of concerns about
two issues now under consideration that would limit school districts
ability to construct and operate needed facilities. One proposal would
reduce the states share of local school debt service levies; the
other would limit the scheduling of school building referendums.
The state is starting down a very dangerous road, Waunakee
School Superintendent Gene Hamele said at a State Capitol news conference
Monday (June 14, 1999). The commitment to fund two-thirds of school
costs is a cornerstone of property tax relief. If the Legislature does
not keep its commitment to support public school construction costs
that have been approved by referendum, the states commitment to
property tax relief is also broken.
The group is warning the two proposals would erode the quality of education
in Wisconsin public schools.
If the state does not fund its share of referendum-approved building
projects, local property taxes will rise $13.3 million, International
Union of Operating Engineers spokesman Joe Wineke said. Residents
will be less willing to approve new buildings, meaning some students
will continue to be educated in substandard and sometimes inadequate
and aging buildings.
The coalition supports the Joint Finance Committee vote restoring current
law for scheduling referendums, instead of requiring districts to schedule
referendums only during regularly scheduled spring and fall elections.
Keith Kolb of Robert W. Baird & Company said a plan to limit scheduling
of borrowing referendums would reduce school district flexibility to
manage projects, and could harm local economies.
Holding referendums twice a year would tie the hands of contractors,
architects, construction workers and schools, Kolb said. Spring
and fall referendums would mean districts throughout the state would
plan and build at about the same time, creating gridlock in the construction
industry, which would also affect local economies. We urge the Legislature
to uphold the Joint Finance vote on scheduling referendums.
Coalition members include AIA Wisconsin, the Laborers International
Union of North America, the Wisconsin Federation of Teachers, the Wisconsin
State AFL-CIO, WEAC, the Wisconsin Association of School Boards, the
International Brotherhood of Teamsters, the International Union of Operating
Engineers, the School Administrators Alliance, GKS&T Wisconsin,
Robert W. Baird & Co., Inc., and the Associated General Contractors
of America - Wisconsin.
Posted June 14, 1999