Rep. Obey is 'Point Man' for U.S. Education Funding
By Joanne M. Haas
In the last 32 years, U.S. Rep. David Obey has carved a Capitol Hill
reputation as a tough, direct negotiator and vocal, respected legislator
inspired by the late Sen. Robert La Follettes Progressive beliefs
of workers rights, educational access and fair taxation.
|  I think in the long
run, the most important money is money you invest in teacher training
and smaller class initiatives. Federal money ought to go where
the research says it will do the most good.
----------------
Rep. David Obey |
Never one to mince words, Wisconsins longest-serving congressman
representing the 7th District said he doesnt pretend
to be an expert on quality education. But he does understand the role
of government dollars in providing a solid classroom experience.
I think in the long run, the most important money is money you
invest in teacher training and smaller class initiatives, Obey
said. Federal money ought to go where the research says it will
do the most good.
Key appropriations role
Once the chairman of the House Appropriations Committee when the Democrats
were the majority party, Obey now serves as the committees ranking
Democrat. The committee decides funding on discretionary programs in
the federal budget, and the ranking member is typically that partys
leading voice on budget issues.
Obey also serves as the ranking Democrat on the Appropriations Subcommittee
on Labor, Health and Human Services and Education which funds
those federal agencies. And as the ranking Democrat, he also is the
ex-officio voting member for the 13 appropriations subcommittees.
I am the point man when it comes to getting resources of education,
he said. Sooner or later ... it comes to me.
An example of this position of power is the $350,000 earmarked for
math and science training for teachers through the Wisconsin Academy
Staff Development Initiative. Obey, in the last two years, has helped
provide about $1.3 million for the initiative, which sponsors seminars
for teachers throughout Wisconsin.
And in 2000, Obey was able to get $45 million included in the federal
budget for a Small Schools Initiative to assist 500 high schools land
grants to assist in either reducing school size or creating smaller
learning centers within the schools.
The kids who do the best are the ones who are the kids in classrooms
of a decent size with well-trained teachers. The more you can do to
help increase the professional development, the more you can do to help
the class, he said.
However, he added, the greatest variable in all of this is parents
who provide a home supportive of their childs academics.
Grew up in Wausau
Born in 1938, Obey grew up in the Marathon County community where he
lives today Wausau. While Obey was finishing his college degree
at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, his father lost his job with
the 3-M Company.
That scared me because I had no idea how much help I would get
from home in finishing my education, Obey said in a biography
carried on his congressional Web site. And that experience burned
into me the conviction that access to education ought to be based on
how much you are willing to learn and how hard you are willing to work,
not on how many dollars your family has in its bank account.
Obey finished his bachelors degree and went on to do graduate
work at UW-Madison in Soviet politics under a National Defense Education
Act scholarship. He was planning to become a teacher of Russian and
Chinese politics. But that changed when he was elected to the Wisconsin
Assembly in 1962, where he served until his election to Congress in
a 1969 special election. He has been re-elected ever since by the voters
of the 7th District, covering portions of the central and northwestern
regions.
It all comes down to money
Obey believes talk is cheap unless its backed with bucks. This
was never more apparent than during the recent months as President Bushs
education package was debated and negotiated.
Obey recalls with some disgust Bushs publicity coup regarding
the administrations education authorization bill, packed with
testing and assessment requirements labeled bold measures to reform
the nations schools. Dismissing the advertisements as rhetoric
and nonsense, Obey said too many followed the medias
misdirected focus, missing the most important fight
on the appropriations bill.
The administration was getting away with public relations murder,
Obey said in January, days before the official bill signing ceremonies.
They were selling Bush as the education president because of his
authorization requests, most of which in the end he didnt get.
The irony here, Obey said, is Bush also was proposing to substantially
slash what we had provided for education programs in the last five years.
The president wanted to substantially reduce the federal investment
in education which over the previous five years had grown about
14% a year.
Obey, who also was the House Democrats chief negotiator for those
last five budgets, added this wasnt an easy task since it came
at a time when the Republicans were trying to abolish the Department
of Education.
The bipartisan appropriations package known as the Labor-Health and
Human Services-Education Appropriations Bill unveiled in December
to the applause of Bush provided the Department of Education
with an increase of $6.6 billion, or 16%, over what Congress had earmarked
the year before. While the number-crunching to determine the specific
allocations nationwide are ongoing, that increase in general terms means
$32.9 billion for elementary and secondary schools nationwide for 2002-03.
In 1996-97, the amount available was $14.6 billion.
Posted February 1, 2002