More thoughts about school funding

January 10, 2016

Our post Paying for our schools–competition saw some diverse comments the other day.

One point that was raised was that our local school boards are self governing.

I may be under a mistaken impression in that I believe that the curriculum and testing regimens are dictated by the state and that locally we have no choice but to do what they say.

I hope that one of our readers can fill us in on this issue.

If it turns out that we have little control locally when it comes to curriculum then I ask the question again.  Wouldn’t we be better off if we determined what and how to teach on a local level?  Would that not create a situation where homeowners decided which school district to live in (and pay taxes in) based upon their individual perception of the quality and value of the education being offered?

Another comment suggested that with local control we might have to give up the state and feral funding that we now receive.  The state and national governments get their money from us.  If they stopped taking it from us we would not have to depend upon them to “give” us own money back through funding.

Let’s keep up the discussion.

We deserve better

Brutus


A few suggestions for city council

January 8, 2016

Put us on a road to fix our economic problems.

  • El Paso has the 5th highest property taxes of the nation’s 50 largest cities
  • According to a December 8, 2015 El Paso Times article:
    • The economies of El Paso and Las Cruces are performing poorly compared to many other cities across the country, according to the latest Milken Institute Best-Performing Cities rankings.El Paso’s economy ranked No. 121 on the list of 200 large metro areas, compared to No. 53 last year — one of the biggest drops among 200 large metro areas, according to the 2015 rankings released Tuesday.

 

 Stop the luxuries and fix our necessities.

It is absolute madness to consider building a downtown arena when our streets are crumbling.  We have facilities that are good enough, not great, but what we can afford.  Bring the quality of life bonds back to the voters to see if they still want to spend the money in light of what they have seen coming out of the city.

 

Build trust.

We have city representatives that helped to create the mess at the city.  Now they are lying to try to cover up their complicity.  Matters that the public deserves to know about are hidden in executive session.  The city frequently does what it can to frustrate open records requests by stalling and improperly redacting documents.

 

Work with us.

The El Paso Independent School District central office is on land that it leases from the city.  The city wants the land.  We are told that moving the central office will cost us in excess of $40 million.  This does not have to happen.

 

Face up to nature.

The city has assigned the responsibility of managing storm water to our water utility.  They avoided a tax increase by moving the costs out of the city’s general fund and making the water utility increase our bills.  Now we have a utility that seems to think that by spending our money they can solve the problem of water running off the mountain.  We are spending money to fight nature.

 

Stop the Brio.

The Mesa rapid transit corridor is a failure at this point.  Bus ridership is down even after spending $27.1 million on the system.  The Brio stops are expensive, unnecessary, and inconvenient.

Next the city wants to spend $35.1 to build a Brio Alameda rapid transit corridor.  If the goal is to provide more frequent service the city would do better to add more regular buses to the routes.  The regular buses can stop at our current bus stops giving them a definite advantage over the Brio buses that stop only at the much further apart Brio stops.

Each Sun Metro passenger costs us about three dollars.  Average revenue per passenger is 54 cents.

We subsidize Sun Metro with a 1/2 % addition to our sales tax.  That should bring over $41 million to the system this year.

The massive expansion of our public transit system that they are executing may make sense eventually.  In the mean time we have necessities that need to be paid for.

 

Buy local.

Relations between local suppliers and the city are horrible at best.  Purchasing is unfair to the point that many local vendors will not even bid.  The city cancels contracts with vendors that are performing well just because someone at the city wants to give the money to someone else.  Purchasing issues requests for proposals that are expensive to respond to and after getting legitimate responses cancels the procurement.

We deserve better

Brutus

 

 

 


Paying for our schools–competition

January 7, 2016

Most of us that live in El Paso pay almost half of our property taxes to a local school district.  Whether you live in a home that you own or a rental property, you are paying school taxes.

This post is not meant to argue that schools don’t need to be paid for.

Why is it that we pay for our schools through property taxes though?

Is there some other source that could be used?

The original purpose of public education was to develop citizens.

Now we hear about education training children to satisfy the needs of business.

Several alternatives to property taxes exist.

Without regard to how we might change how we pay for schools, shouldn’t we first return control of our schools to our local governments?

If education is in fact a large component of the environment that businesses need, wouldn’t we be better off if we created an education environment that featured competition and differentiation?

Wouldn’t  the free market reward those school districts that produced effective workers and shun those that did not?

We deserve better.

Brutus

 


Crawl before you walk

January 3, 2016

Well we are now hearing that the El Paso Independent School District is going to gear up for a bond election in November of 2016.

District officials are saying that the Ysleta bond process taught them a few things.  They plan to place far more emphasis on a citizen advisory committee.  We should also expect to see our state senator visiting campuses to educate the 18 year olds in the district about their responsibility as citizens to register to vote and then vote at the bond election.

Few of us will dispute the fact that some of the schools are in sad shape.  We will be told that others need to be expanded so that smaller schools can be closed.

In the past we have been told that a consultant’s report indicated that it will take about one billion dollars to make the changes.

We should encourage the school board and the administrators make their bond requests of reasonable size.  The citizens of El Paso are living through the disastrous situation where they gave the city $420 million for quality of life bonds and the city engineering organization was overwhelmed with their new work load.

The district also has a history of promoting specific bond projects (I can think of two high schools) and then using the money for something else.

We deserve better

Brutus


El Paso — Affordable Steps to Renewal — #7 A Voice for the Commons

December 30, 2015

This came in from Jerry Kurtyka:

EL PASO – AFFORDABLE STEPS TO RENEWAL

# 7 A Voice for the Commons

Earlier, before my life went into the cosmic Cuisinart last summer, I wrote about “The Commons” as a social matrix – law, education, moral norms, family relations, social capital, government, finance, physical infrastructure, care for children, the aged and ill – in which a private business economy is embedded and without which, there is little productive activity other than barter. If you think of the city as a Maslow Pyramid, then the business that you think you built by yourself is sandwiched a couple of layers up from the bottom and a couple of layers down from the top of that pyramid. That social “sandwich” contains the Commons and I want to lay out some ideas here about how we can tap into it as a source of renewal. But first we have to protect it.

We need more Commons people here to create and nurture an active Commons while there is still time and before it is sequestered into private hands, like the stadium has already done sequestering a part of our tax base – the HOT – into private hands under the oxymoron of a “public/private partnership.” Wherever you look, you will find that these pseudo partnerships offload risk and costs to the Commons while keeping the profits in private hands, i.e., trickle-up economics. This is happening all over the world now, fueled by an elite donor class that seemingly owns governments at all levels, thanks to a dumbed down electorate and their surrogates, like our previous city manager and council. Don’t be fooled by the Koch brothers’ capitalism-free-markets narrative that is only a cover story for what is really going on as more and more of our public spaces – physical, social and financial – are privatized. What do you think the Transpacific Partnership is about? Only clueless saps have to actually compete in a marketplace; the donor elite has learned how to avoid competition by paying off government to tilt the table in their favor. When the SCOTUS ruled that corporations are people, the rest of us became a little less human.

So, can we give a voice to our Commons people and what they might tell us versus the official “Field of Dreams” narrative now embraced by our city leadership? What would that voice say? What initiatives could we undertake to counter the real agenda going on under our noses? Below are a few ideas and suggestions of my own:

  1. Thought leadership – establish a local independent policy think tank to vet city initiatives and to run an alternative leadership training program – Cities 101- that would train public servants and private sector leaders in sustainability principles, urban design, systems thinking, cross-cultural understanding, change management and capacity-building; a sort of un-Chamber of Commerce. I mean, Six Sigma hasn’t exactly worked as a change strategy for city hall unless you believe the current CM and his credibility is waning lately. Even Cortney Niland doesn’t believe him anymore! UTEP can’t do this for us, either; Natalcio is too baked into the local power elite and Foster is her boss on the Board of Regents (Hunt was earlier). UTEP does not have enough independence, though there are good scholars at UTEP who could do this but they won’t now. UTEP isn’t Berkeley.
  2. Encourage an independent and adversarial local English language daily paper by pressuring businesses to pull their ads from the EP Times that has become the de facto PIO for city hall and its Borderplex bosses. What a great opportunity for some of UTEP’s journalism grads to undertake versus selling their souls to the local drive-by media. Combine this with a citizenship education initiative so we get at least as many voters to turn out for an election as do for a mariachi festival. La Fe and the Library would be my choices for the right people to run the latter.
  1. Localize the food and fiber industry. Implement a local closed-loop farming and fiber industry here as part of a resiliency strategy. Link this to the water issue:
  • Encourage a permaculture organic food industry here by having the school districts purchase produce from it as a cooperative. There is a built-in local market of 100,000 meals per day to counter the toxic nacho and slurpy diet our kids currently eat. It would keep our food money circulating locally, too. The alternative is our current water-hungry agriculture like cotton, pecans and alfalfa, but even some of that could stay here as commercial linen produced for the thousands of hospital and hotel rooms here.
  1. Skip the vanity projects. Focus on qualitative growth and design. I found this quote on the website of the Center for Ecoliteracy and it resonates with me: The notion of “growth which enhances life” is what is meant by qualitative growth — growth that enhances the quality of life. In living organisms, ecosystems, and societies, qualitative growth includes an increase in complexity, sophistication, and maturity. Unlimited quantitative growth on a finite planet is clearly unsustainable, but qualitative economic growth can be sustained if it involves a dynamic balance between growth, decline, and recycling, and if it also includes the inner growth of learning and maturing. Beto O’Rourke and Martin Parades are correct on this point: El Paso is the American face of Mexico, the Big Burrito, so take advantage of it. It is a business and military, not a tourist destination and it doesn’t need a soccer team or trolley. Stop obsessing about identity because “It’s all good” only makes city hall look dumber than it already is. We do need:
  • Green trade corridors that keep the polluting, unsafe Mexican trucks off of our roads;
  • Quality infrastructure in our roads and bridges; filled potholes and faultless flushes instead of RBIs;
  • High-speed (300 MBS) ubiquitous broadband like Google is now building in Austin and Kansas City;
  • Let Loop 375 be the constraining edge that we now infill, subject to Plan El Paso;
  • Protect the mountain slopes from development on both sides north of Transmountain Road and make El Paso a national example of environmental protection and open space, perhaps the one thing we could do well on that stage.
  1. Leverage opportunities for government functional consolidation and transparency:
  • A consolidated city-county IT and data communication authority could leverage its purchasing power to muscle carriers into providing us better cell and data service (El Paso is ranked worst in the top 50 US cities); a total fiber network linking all public facilities including schools and local NGOs;
  • Open Data not Open Records. Have the city make its entire electronic data base of emails, phone calls, financial reports and public safety incidents open to searchable online public access. Encourage scholars to analyze this data and make recommendations for operational improvement. There should be no expectation of privacy in city hall in the post-Wilson era;
  • Change the city charter to a strong mayor format with a COO vs the current CM structure and a powerless mayor. Let’s face it, after ten years the CC has failed to figure out how to work with a CM, so scrap it and give us back accountability. The CM is the one major point-of-failure in city hall and CC hasn’t a clue what to do about it.
  1. Create an economic space for private enterprise instead of crowding it out with public employment entitlements:
  • Freeze public salaries for five years to enable the private sector to catch up with the overly-rich pay and benefits of city and county employees;
  • Stop city pensions; convert existing vested pensions to annuities; offer 401Ks like business does now; no healthcare promise for retirees who will have to rely on Medicare like their private sector counterparts;
  • Return the city to a 5-day work week like the rest of the El Paso pickup truck economy.
  1. We need a local Tea Party – the Tequila Rebellion – that will organize candidate slates who promise to endorse a “Contract with El Paso” that commits to:
  • Fiscal responsibility (pay-as-you-go) financing and transparency;
  • Limit executive session to what the law requires, not because discussion might embarrass someone or give the city attorney heartburn;
  • Deconstruct the welfare state here that floats too many donor class boats; start with HACEP and its welfare hatchery tax-credit projects;
  • Screw the DTEP tax leeches (you-know-who) and make them redevelop their vacant buildings or demolish them;
  • Endorse strategies #1- #6 above. Too bad the Shaplites sold out to Woody World and didn’t do this here. They could have made themselves immortal instead of irrelevant.

OK, will all of that make the Big Burrito a place urban hipsters and retirees will flock to? No, but it’s not a donor class welfare program, either, and that might keep us from eventual bankruptcy and preserve what is left of our Commons. Also, it might make the average Jose and his family a little more prosperous in the next generation.

NEXT and LAST – #8 Theories of Change