Revenue Controls Put District in Fight Against Bankruptcy
By Joanne M. Haas
The threat of bankruptcy looms over the School District
of Waukesha where the state's eighth largest district faces a multi-million
dollar budget hole carved out by state revenue controls and declining
enrollment.
"We're at a watershed," school board member Roger Danielsen
said of the decision to ask voters for more money in April. "If we don't
pass this referendum, this school district will begin to hemorrhage. And
the problem with the hemorrhage is you can't stop it fast enough. It just
continues to get worse."
The recent round of financial problems for this district
of 945 teachers and about 12,800 students hit with the 1999-2000 school
year. That's when spending was cut by $1 million to meet the requirements
of state revenue controls. Another $3 million had to be cut for the present
school year. And now the district is looking at another $1.4 million in
cuts for next school year. That includes about 38 full-time equivalent
positions, including the environmental education program and computer
and reading specialists.
Putting hopes in referendum
Officials are trying to avoid these devastating cuts by planning a spring
referendum seeking taxpayer approval to exceed the revenue limits.
|  Waukesha Superintendent
David S. Schmidt |
"You can't cut $5.5 million out of a budget that is
labor intensive without impacting kids," said Superinten-dent David S.
Schmidt, nearing his third year at Waukesha.
But the deficit doesn't end there. District Business
Services Director Bob Buchholtz's projections show more than $3 million
in additional cuts will be needed between next year and 2006 for a total
cumulative deficit of $8.5 million, unless there is a successful referendum
or modifications in the state revenue control law.
The referendum will involve two questions. One seeks
about $24.4 million in capital projects through borrowing, and the second
seeks $4.9 million for technology needs and to restore programs and prevent
cuts in the coming two or three school years.
"Without this referendum passing, we might be one of
those districts that will close its doors because we don't have the funds,"
said elementary media specialist Linda Templin, who will be reassigned
to the classroom if budget cuts for the 2001-2002 year are enacted.
Quality of education threatened
|  Linda Templin |
If the referendum fails and the 38 jobs are cut, the
quality of children's education will be severely damaged. Among the anticipated
cuts are five elementary school librarians, leaving three to cover the
17 elementary schools; three high school reading specialists; the only
teacher who runs the environmental education program; and three elementary
computer-math teachers.
"Morale is dwindling fast," said 6th-grade teacher Patrick
Carroll, in his ninth year with the district. "We try to keep it out of
the classroom. Our goal is to educate the kids so they learn to the best
of their ability."
Still, resources are disappearing. Last year, Carroll
said, his colleagues at Lowell Elementary School waged a penny campaign
in which students were asked to collect the coins to buy computers accessories.
The campaigns didn't stop with pennies and kids. Parent
Mary Finman and her Parent-Teacher Organization spent $8,000 for desks
for children at Hawthorne Elementary School.
"We spent it over two years," she said. "Our parents
feel we have to go out and beg and borrow and do whatever we can to supply
us with the basics."
PTO is funding necessities
"We provide funds for field trips for the kids, assembly money, language
arts funds. We're getting down to funding necessities," said Finman, who,
with her husband, has two elementary age children.
The Finmans got involved after going through last year's
budget cuts and realized the pain of revenue limits was here to stay.
Fighting to save one program meant the loss of another, she said. Programs
that benefited her older child no longer exist for her younger child and
will likely never return.
Finman also is among those lobbying state legislators
for changes in the revenue cap formula to address the cost-of-living increases,
such as the increasing cost of fuel.
"Sooner or later, it is going to catch up with you,"
Finman said of state districts not yet hit with Waukesha's budget crunch.
But convincing the population without children in school
can be a tough sell when a tax referendum is at stake.
She cited a letter from a district taxpayer who said
all he expected from the public school system was to teach how to make
change from a dollar.
"Let's hope he doesn't want a doctor or nurse," she
said. "They (students) are the future. They will be the people in charge
of this world. They will be the people in charge of us."
'Huge public relations problem'
Board member Danielsen agreed and said the referendum and budget issues
posed a "huge public relations problem."
Many people do not understand that local school budgets
are driven by mandates and funding policies created in Madison, Danielsen
said.
Waukesha's state representative is Assembly Speaker
Scott Jensen who, during his January 3 inauguration address, emphasized
his goal to "lower the tax burden that punishes . hard-working families
and drives so many seniors out of our state." He also pledged, in the
same speech, to transform the education system to create the best work
force in the world.
But Danielsen and others, who see Jensen's pledges as
support for private school vouchers, also said Waukesha is already seeing
parents moving into other districts where community support for public
schools is greater.
"If we don't pass this referendum, we will be the cheapest
in Waukesha County. Is that what we want to be known for? The schools
with the least amount of support in the county?" Danielsen asked. "We
can all stand around and hoard our money and have no streets, no schools,
and what is going to be the quality of life?"
Eighth-grade language arts teacher Larry Nelson, a 25-year
veteran of the district and chair of the local education association's
political action committee, said the referendum may be a critical factor
in determining the future direction of the community.
If the referendum goes down, Nelson said, so will the
city's efforts to revitalize the community at large and its downtown.
"I see both the city and the district at a crossroads.
If we lose and we cut all the programs, there will be an exodus from the
schools," he said.
And that in turns means an exodus from the community,
a loss of property values and the quality of life in Waukesha.
"Wisconsin has always been rated as having the best
schools in the country," Nelson said. "Revenue caps will stop that from
being the case."
Resource page on school
district revenue controls
Posted February 27, 2001