Friday, February 6, 2015

A Matter of Priorities


I just finished reading the February 5th update from Representative Brian Best and as usual, I couldn’t let a couple of his comments pass without responding. 

First let me preface my comments by saying that I fired off a rather angry email a week or so ago to Representative Best when the House of Representatives supported the Governor’s education increase of 1.25% for next year.  I pointed out to Representative Best that he and the House Republicans has just voted to raise property taxes statewide by $16.3 million as almost half the school districts in the state would be on budget guarantee which is all paid by local property owners. So you can imagine my surprise when I read his comment below from this weeks update concerning the state of Iowa increasing the gas tax to pay for roads and bridges:

“Generally, however I am in favor of increasing the gas tax by 10 cents.
This is a tough decision for me because I believe we already pay a lot in taxes. That said, our infrastructure issues need to be addressed, and this is truly the most practical way. Without action, I feel I would be supporting tax increases in another form when counties are forced to bond and property owners then take on the full brunt of the levy.”

I think what Representative Best meant to say was that he didn’t want to support increasing local property taxes AGAIN by not supporting the 10 cents a gallon gas tax.  Don’t get me wrong, I’m fully in support of increasing the gas tax to fix our roads and bridges as we sorely need that in rural Iowa, but it makes me wonder why he is so concerned about raising local property taxes in this case but yet didn’t seem very concerned when it came to raising taxes instead of adequately funding public education?

The other comment that appeared in this weeks update concerned the investigation into the new state prison.  I don’t know if you have been following this story but the new prison in Fort Madison has been delayed because of problems with the geothermal heating and the smoke detection system.  They are at least a year behind on the $165.5 million facility that will hold 800 inmates.  I’m not a prison expert so I don’t doubt that Iowa needs a new prison. What really caught my eye concerning the prison is that the ongoing cost to Iowa taxpayers in this new (not quite ready, behind schedule) prison is estimated to be $40,598 per prisoner per year!  Yet the Iowa House of Representatives can’t seem to find enough money to pay more than $6,445 per student for education next year?

I guess its all a matter of priorities…what’s the old saying, “You can pay me now or you can pay me an additional $34,154 per year later?”

Monday, February 2, 2015

Attendance Center Rankings


Dear Audubon Parents and Guardians,

I’m writing to make you aware of a new state website that provides Iowans a snapshot of how our public schools and school districts are performing in two areas: student proficiency rates and growth toward college and career readiness.

This website will enable users to look up this information for any public school or district, including ours. You may find the new website, http://reports.educateiowa.gov/acr, a good source of information.

The website was developed by the Iowa Department of Education as a first step in meeting a requirement of the 2013 education reform law. This law requires the Department to evaluate and rank schools based on their performance on nine specific measures and to post this information on its website.

This evaluation system is under development, and we expect to see a more complete system this fall. According to the Iowa Department of Education, the system will be rolled out in phases this year and next year. It’s important to note that the new website available now does not represent the complete evaluation system. Instead, it represents the performance of each public school and district on two of the nine measures required by the law:
  1. ·       Student proficiency rates: The percentage of students proficient in math and reading in grades 3-8 and 11 based on state assessment results. Iowa’s definition of “proficient” means performing at a basic level. Proficiency does not necessarily put students on the path to college and career readiness.
  2. ·       Growth toward college and career readiness: The percentage of students who met a growth target needed to be college and career ready. The Department has worked with our state assessment developer to link the Iowa Assessments to the college and career readiness benchmarks defined by ACT. The growth measure sets an expectation that all students will make progress each year and will be ready for college by the end of 12th grade.

     The other seven performance measures are: Attendance rates, parent involvement, employee turnover, community activities and involvement, graduation rate, college readiness, and closing achievement gaps.

We believe this information can complement conversations in our community about our work to provide students a great education. However, student performance data only tell part of the story about how our schools are doing. To get the full story, I encourage you to stay connected with our schools as much as possible. Thanks for all you do for our kids.

Sincerely,
Brett Gibbs, Superintendent