Rep. Sykora Votes His Conscience on Education Issues
When Rep. Tom Sykora looks at education, he doesnt look through
Democratic- or Republican-shaded glasses.
| |
Were not being realistic
if we dont look at education and the people that are providing
it, and provide them some sense of
comfort that the state recognizes them as valuable contributors." --Rep. Tom Sykora |
The Chippewa Falls legislator sees the issues directly through the
eyes of a father and of a person who strongly believes in equal educational
opportunity for all children.
What we need to do is look at every kid as an individual entity
and apply the standard that the kid gets an equal educational opportunity
no matter whether they come from the wealthiest or the poorest
district in the state, Sykora said.
Sykora does not always vote with his Republican colleagues. He is the
lone Republican co-sponsor of a bill to repeal the Qualified Economic
Offer law, which severely restricts teacher bargaining rights in Wisconsin.
Were not being realistic if we dont look at education
and the people that are providing it, and provide them some sense of
comfort that the state recognizes them as valuable contributors,
Sykora said.
We should listen to their voice as a bargaining unit just like
any other. Maybe not all in the Legislature understand it. But I think
wed have a better working relationship that way.
The issue of teacher bargaining rights is intertwined with the issue
of school district revenue controls and equity in school funding, Sykora
said.
And those problems must be addressed together.
The education system is going to have to get in there and compete
like everybody else, Sykora said of the need for fair teacher
salaries. I understand why there is a QEO from the standpoint
of getting a handle on the cost of education because the bulk of the
cost is in salaries.
But there is a point where it tips the QEO from being useful
to losing quality teachers, he said.
The law is creating stress on teachers and an aura of discontent, he
said.
And many (teachers) are looking for an alternative rather than
staying on for 20 to 25 years.
But you cant repeal the QEO without addressing revenue controls,
and that goes hand-in-hand with restructuring the states school
finance system so it is equitable, he said.
Sykora said the ideal situation would have each district
judged according to its specific needs, with a fine-tuning of the current
categorical aids system. Sykora supports the creation of a weighting
system where each student would be assigned funding according to need.
He is not optimistic change is near since it requires both parties
working together without trying to politicize the thing. And it
seems like everybody is dug in so deep.
All parties, he said, including elected officials and unions, must
move beyond the rhetoric toward the changes.
We are all winners if we do the right kind of job, he said.
As the father of a developmentally disabled girl, Sykora has a special
interest in and a special understanding of the important
role of special education.
Under revenue controls, school districts must provide special education
services within the limits of their budget. This means districts must
take dollars from other programs to provide special needs programs.
When Sykora campaigned for his first term five years ago, many citizens
he met working door-to-door were unaware one of Sykoras five children
is a special education student.
Ive had people just attack the concept, he said.
I just bit my lip.
Sykora said he genuinely understands the frustrations of parents who
see regular education programs cut to fund special education programs.
As a parent of two students in the basic programs, I dont
want their programs shortchanged, he said, but added his special
education daughter deserves quality programs as well.
Sykora said if the federal government fairly funded the special education
programs it requires of school districts, state schools would receive
an additional $250 million a year.
Those funds would likely eliminate the resentment some parents feel
toward special education programs.
It is the same resentment and tension Sykora sees between some taxpayers
and their school district, or between financially strapped districts
and teachers seeking a pay increase.
It is kind of a vicious cycle, he said, and all that
comes back in a negative way to affect the child and quality of
the educational experience.
That is why we need to fix it.
So Sykora fights through his frustration when he attempts to discuss
equity funding in front of his caucus and with key leaders.
The ones that I need to talk to and convince ... shut you right
off, he said of the current scenario in which education issues
are deeply rooted in partisanship. Sooner or later, well
have to get past that.
His hope, ultimately, is to get members of both parties to recognize
the need to develop a new, fair system of school funding.
I think if we would just throw (the current system) away and
say, What does every child need? and make a decision with
that criteria, wed move this thing a lot faster, Sykora
said. It is not a Democrat or Republican issue.
Posted September 28, 2001