[Local-Maine-Schools] Fwd: MPBN/School Consolidation Reporting
egrover at u98.k12.me.us
egrover at u98.k12.me.us
Fri Feb 29 22:41:05 EST 2008
Gail,
I remain in awe of the personal committment and intelligence of those
like you who are so dedicated to preserving the quality of education
here on the island. Remarkable rebuttal. I will be interested in the
response it generates.
Thanks for your seemingly endless vigilance,
Ellen
Quoting Gail Marshall <gmarshall at wildmoo.net>:
> A letter I sent to Maine Public Radio after hearing the report I link
> to in the article. The comments I refer to are towards the end of the
> clip.
> I hope you find it useful.
> Thank you,
> Gail
> (BTW, Like many of you, I am a long-time dues-paying member of the station.)
>
> Begin forwarded message:
>
>> From: Gail Marshall <gmarshall at wildmoo.net>
>> Date: February 28, 2008 9:54:24 PM EST
>> To: cbeck at mpbn.net, kshortall at mpbn.net
>> Cc: Hannah Pingree <hannah at pingree.com>, Dennis Damon
>> <dsdamon at panax.com>, Ted Koffman <koffman at coa.edu>
>> Subject: MPBN/School Consolidation Reporting
>>
>> Mr. Beck and Mr. Shortall,
>>
>> I am disappointed by AJ Higgins' decision to include in his Maine
>> Things Considered February 28th report of the Kids Count study,
>> Governor Baldacci's unsubstantiated assertion that the school union
>> amendment to the school consolidation repair bill furthers the
>> interests of only superintendents and school administrators and
>> stands in the way of providing children "scholarships and
>> technology to compete in a global economy."
>> http://www.mpbn.net/asx/ 080228kids.asx
>> Has anyone in your organization investigated whether or not there
>> is any factual basis to the 'oft-repeated assertion by this
>> administration that school unions cost more than other forms of
>> governance? If you have found any data that goes beyond bald
>> assertions, I would appreciate seeing it. The Department of
>> Education's inveterate statistician, David Silvernail, testified to
>> the Education Committee that there is no ability to establish a
>> causal relationship between governance structure and cost. Gordon
>> Donaldson, professor of Education at UMO, has repeatedly studied
>> this issue and found no correlation. IF there are higher costs in
>> a school union, Dr. Silvernail opined it is more likely because a
>> higher percentage of Unions are in more prosperous regions of the
>> state and they spend more money on instruction. In the elementary
>> school in my town of Mount Desert we are fortunate to be able to
>> appropriate and spend far more than the wholly inadequate EPS
>> system prescribes. We spend it on French for K-8, special
>> education, gifted and talented programs, counseling, art, music,
>> physical education, sports, technology, including laptops down to
>> 4th grade, small class sizes and so much more. Further, it is our
>> municipal taxpayers, not the state, who tax themselves and pay for
>> it all.
>> Last year this same administration asserted that the consolidation
>> bill would save $32 million dollars in the first year. Their
>> assertions were never adequately vetted. There are no savings on
>> the horizon.
>> They said there would be no "cost-shifting" between towns forced to
>> consolidated. It was demonstrably false at the time of the
>> utterance. Circumstances everywhere have borne that out.
>> They said combining disparate teacher contracts would not be very
>> problematic. Having already done that in a collegial, not a forced
>> setting, I know better. But really, anyone without a rocket
>> science degree could have correctly guessed "false".
>> They said there would be no loss of local control and yet they
>> attempt to supplant local decision-makers with advisory boards and
>> then declare "regional' the new "local."
>> They said bigger systems can manage money better, and yet the State
>> is bleeding red ink which will soon precipitate cutbacks in state
>> education aid staff members of DOE call "brutal". That will
>> really leave Maine's kids disadvantaged unless we inefficient
>> little towns can bail them out by picking up the tab (again). And
>> the biggest school system in the state, Portland, shocked its
>> citizens with major overspending last year.
>> Wouldn't you think that by now a reasonably prudent news
>> organization would take what they say on this subject with a grain
>> of salt?
>> I have been very disappointed by the caliber of reporting on this
>> issue by MPBN from the beginning. Rarely have I heard more than
>> drive-by reporting that usually highly correlates to Department of
>> Education press releases or Governor Baldacci's pronouncements. I
>> have an independent perspective because I have been involved in
>> this debate since the beginning. But the broader implications of
>> this for my trust in MPBN's reporting is troubling. How nuanced and
>> vetted is the rest of the reporting I hear on issues about which
>> I have no independent knowledge? How can I maintain confidence
>> that it is any less superficial and slanted?
>> Before MPBN further prejudices your listeners against school Unions
>> with quick and dirty sound bites, I invite you to do a little
>> investigative journalism. Visit us in Union 98 on Mount Desert
>> Island, the home of the proponents of the amendment. Our school
>> Union already functions the way we are proposing the Legislature
>> permit us and others to coalesce. You might learn that we and our
>> colleagues in other Unions are not the reckless spendthrifts we
>> have been made out to be, that with our superintendents and
>> administrators we have the best interests of our children at the
>> center of or work, and that we do a pretty fair job of it.
>> Thank you,
>> Gail Marshall
>> PS: Before you come to visit, you might check out our website that
>> is a reliable clearinghouse of news and information about school
>> consolidation. http://mdischools.net/
>>
>>
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