Improving education must be the top priority
Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel Editorial:
What's needed is a regional response, which should include more involvement of businesses outside Milwaukee County in MPS and other school districts' programs, more collaborative efforts such as the Kern Family Foundation and the Greater Milwaukee Foundation's Lead the Way program and a debate on what fundamental changes need to be made at MPS and other troubled districts, including whether to change their governing structure. Such a debate should be considered for other local governments, the idea being to make them more manageable, more accountable and more in control of their own affairs and budgets.
Businessman Sheldon Lubar of the Greater Milwaukee Committee put his finger on the problem early in the discussion: "You cannot reach the levels that I think all of you want to see us reach if you have a dropout rate of 50% of your high school students."
Milwaukee Mayor Tom Barrett said one of his biggest surprises after taking office was the need to improve work force development. "If there's one issue where I would love to take this community and shake it by the shoulders, it is how important education is in this world economy now," he said.
Milwaukee County Executive Scott Walker talked about breaking up MPS into several districts; Waukesha County Executive Dan Vrakas argued for the need to reduce health care costs, the single biggest driver of government and school district costs; state Rep. Jason Fields (D-Milwaukee) talked about the politics of changing the educational system.
"This issue has been occurring for the last 20 years, but nothing's been done about it," Fields said. "If I sit at this table and we all agree that we need to do something, when we leave this room not a damn thing will change, and those black kids, kids in my neighborhood and my community, will still be in the same position."
That needs to change for the sake of giving those kids a reasonable chance at a better life but also for the sake of southeastern Wisconsin's ability to compete in the global marketplace.
Posted by Jim Zellmer at July 29, 2007 6:39 AM
Subscribe to this site via RSS/Atom: Newsletter signup | Send us your ideas