Wednesday, March 21, 2012

A Paradigm Shift for Wisconsin, and Perhaps the Nation



Wisconsin has always been a progressive state - we sent a man racing on horseback to ensure that Wisconsin was the first state to ratify the 19th amendment of the U.S. Constitution which granted women the right to vote in 1920, and soon after established Wisconsin’s chapter of the League of Women Voters.  Long before that, the Grand Old Party (GOP) was founded on March 20, 1858 - only ten years after Wisconsin became a state - in Ripon, Wisconsin, where the term Republican was coined as the name of our nation’s anti-slavery party. The progressive values espoused by these actions are broadly indicative of the values of the people who populated Wisconsin during the settlement of the western U.S. and strived to create a state where hard work, mutual respect, and democracy became the cornerstones of our social fabric.

After living out west for nearly a decade I can attest that being from Wisconsin carries certain responsibilities because others have the highest expectations of us. Specifically, Wisconsinites are known coast-to-coast for receiving a top-notch public education and possessing an unmatched work ethic. To be from Wisconsin means something, at least it used to.

The state’s motto says it all - Forward - yet here we sit, stationary at best, and perhaps even moving backward to a state of old fashioned English-like rule, like that which the pilgrims fled from in the first place, where politicians legislated morality based solely on the religious beliefs of the rich and powerful. The GOP has shifted radically in this direction over the past few years, leaving behind truly conservative values in favor of radical oppression of women and their children, minorities, and the poor, overt voter suppression designed to silence and disenfranchise these same demographics, deceptive legislative practices, and outright law-breaking, particularly as it relates to campaign finance and election laws. The GOP’s platform has swung radically to the right, and Democrats are engaged in an ongoing battle with them over who might be right, or perhaps correct, on any number of issues, and together, but separately, they pass legislation that satisfies no one, and provides no real solutions to our current problems - all the while, both sides are accepting money, donations, and gifts from lobbyists who have cheapened our statehouse to nothing more than a shell. In the end they are all the same: bought and paid for by corporate and special interests who are in no way representing you and me, the electorate of Wisconsin. 

Meanwhile, here we sit, the electorate as real people, with real problems and no real hope for a solution on the horizon among all the bickering, to which there appears to be no end in sight. By real people and real problems what I am talking about is hungry children and homeless families. Real people who are unemployed and struggling to make ends meet to ensure their families have enough to eat and a place to live, not to mention equitable and affordable health insurance and access to high quality healthcare. Families who send their children to failing and desperately underfunded schools, without any other option for the education that is now nearly always required for gainful employment. People who are living in communities with a rapidly deteriorating physical infrastructure and who are further subject to a caustically eroded social fabric. And that’s just here in Wisconsin.

Clearly we have failed, as a government, as a state, as a society, and as humans. Just one hungry child in Wisconsin is one too many - and this holds true for all of our failures, particularly as it relates to homelessness, hunger, education, and community safety. As a state, as a society, as human beings, it is incumbent upon us to do better, to demand better, of ourselves and our neighbors, our elected officials, and our government. So long as our politicians, on both sides of the aisle, continue to be bought and paid for by special interests they will never live up to these expectations, and there can be no new and innovative solutions to resolve the issues that have spiraled out of control over the past 20 plus years, particularly the largest social injustice issues of hunger, homelessness, healthcare/health insurance, and unemployment.  Current estimates for political advertising in the 2012 election season eclipse $32 Billion - can you imagine how many families that amount of money could feed instead?

By providing all Wisconsin residents affordable and equitable access to real health insurance (not some discount program with limited services) and the highest quality healthcare the state resolves two issues with a multiplier effect that ripples throughout our social fabric. First, it is consistent with our humanitarian values to ensure every resident of our state has equitable and affordable health insurance and access to high quality healthcare, and it further rises to the expectation that we must do better for ourselves, and demand more of our government if we are to live up to the values our state was founded upon. Second, it removes a substantial burden and cost for employers doing business in the state. By providing health insurance and healthcare to every single resident, the state’s employers no longer have to pay for benefits, nor employ personnel to negotiate and administer workplace programs related to health insurance. This includes public schools, colleges, municipalities, and your neighborhood manufacturer - you want to talk about job creation, do you?  

The job creation aspect goes a long way to resolving hunger and homelessness - and I am not talking about dirty, dangerous mining jobs or minimum wage box-store jobs that people are admittedly grateful to have, but fall short of providing the income necessary to support Wisconsin’s families. We are talking about modern manufacturing careers, high-tech biotechnology careers, and other high-demand, high-wage industry sectors that provide safe working conditions, and wages that are sufficient to support Wisconsin’s families.

The other part of the jobs equation is a workforce that supports innovation and creativity to ensure Wisconsin’s firms can compete on a global scale with the quality and value today’s global consumers demand. Wisconsin can only live up to employers’ expectations if our education system produces graduates who are work- and/or college-ready without remediation. Current data indicates that more than 50 percent of incoming freshmen at public universities require remediation in Mathematics, Reading, or Writing - and more often than not, in all three subjects. Cost savings that schools realize when the state provides health insurance to its residents aren’t enough to resolve the problems within our schools, though it goes a long way under the direction of a visionary leader who recognizes that ALL children can learn, and learn at high levels when exposed to consistently high-quality instruction structured around clear, high standards and powerful, thinking curriculum.

This requires a paradigm shift in education where teachers are constantly challenged to find new and better ways to deliver instruction, empowered with the resources and professional development necessary to implement meaningful, evidence-based changes, fairly compensated, and revered like the professionals they are when students demonstrate academic gains. Furthermore, teachers whose students aren’t being successful must be supported by school leadership, and frankly the entire community, as they grow into effective teachers or other professions. Protecting the comfort of adults at the expense of our children can’t be tolerated any longer; teachers must live up to the awesome responsibility they have been charged with: to help raise other peoples’ children. Or they must find a new line of work.

With health insurance and healthcare off the table, and the resurrection of a first-class educational system in Wisconsin that feeds a high quality workforce to attract employers and create jobs, our state can easily resume the long-standing practice of collective bargaining. To be effective though, collective bargaining must be revisioned to ensure that every unionized worker is as good as the union’s best worker, and that unions discontinue the practice of protecting all members at any cost - when a worker isn’t performing to adequate standards and expectations they cannot continue to be granted union protections from discipline and termination. By charging the state’s unions with the responsibility of revisioning collective bargaining in Wisconsin within this framework, Wisconsin’s worker’s rights are guaranteed to be protected and worker quality becomes unmatched - like it once had been.

The only real question is “are we human enough to do this?”  To set aside our religious and political differences and demand the changes necessary to ensure no resident of Wisconsin goes hungry or homeless, or is without access to health insurance or healthcare, or is unable to get a good, family-supporting job. It’s not as hard as you think:
1 - Forbid all lobbying of Wisconsin’s politicians, in and out of our statehouse, under penalty of criminal law assessed against both the lobbyist and the politician. We must demand that our legislature answer to the electorate, and no one else, especially not corporate personhoods.
2 - Transition to a part-time, volunteer legislature that only conducts actual legislative business (sorry Aaron Rodgers, and Lactococcus lactis the state’s official microbe), with no time wasted on honorariums and other pomp and circumstance.
3 - Require any politician, PAC, SuperPAC, or any other political or social special interest group that wishes to clog our air waves (tv, radio, internet) with advertising donate $5 for every $1 spent to Wisconsin’s chapters of SecondHarvest/Feeding America. There is just no excuse for the excessive spending when there are hungry people in our state.
4 -Simplify our state’s tax code so every single resident and corporation based in Wisconsin, or having a physical location in Wisconsin, pays a flat tax rate on every single dime they earn, along a scale from five to 25 percent based on the previous years’ income, without deductions or loopholes of any kind. This is what human(e) people mean by shared sacrifice.

Now, if only I ran the zoo…

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