Sunday, February 22, 2015

I Love the Government, and it Loves Me (You Too!)

There are many who believe that the 2012 tax cuts are having desired effects.  Our governor and many legislators are gleefully shrinking government, proudly touting that they are saving taxpayers' dollars.  They live in a world of "drink less milk," pull yourself up by your boot straps, absolutes, and black and whites.  This is not my world. 

Unknowingly, I spent my entire adult life preparing for my son.  Throughout college and my first career I worked with children and adults with disabilities.  I earned a master's degree in education, and taught for five years.  When he was born so early, so inconceivably small we knew there was a possibility he would have issues.  But he was strong, he was healthy, and we knew we could take whatever came our way. 


Danny's diagnoses unpeeled like an onion his first year of life.  Danny was diagnosed with spastic, quadriplegic cerebral palsy, septo-optic dysplasia, and cortical vision impairment.  Just as we would get used to one diagnosis, we would get hit with another at the next appointment.  As we prepared for his feeding tube surgery when he was 15-months, I finally broke.  I wept for the life I thought we would have, I was tormented by the unknowns of the future, and I struggled to accept the reality that my life was never going to be the one I imagined.  There were a million questions, a million versions of Danny's future, and I wallowed.  Mightily.  For about five minutes.  And I stopped.

There is not a life lived that could have prepared me more for Danny.  I have known, worked with, and loved hundreds of people with disabilities.  All roads led to Danny.  While this life is unanticipated, it simply is.  I could wallow or embrace.  I could lie and say  we were able to embrace this uncertain future on our own, but that is simply not the case.


Aside from the very emotional aspects in learning that your child has a significant disability, there are practical matters to consider.  What therapies are best?  What equipment do we need?  How do we get him to eat?  In walked a team of professionals from Infant Toddler Services of Johnson County.  Their constant, compassionate, professional home services have been instrumental in Danny's achievements.  Danny received physical, occupational, and speech therapies.  He saw a dietician and teacher for the visually impaired.  I cannot imagine where we would be without their support, expertise, and guidance.  All of this was possible through Tiny-K, a state and federally funded program that operates through local infant and toddler services.  These are our tax dollars at work.

I have often reflected on our personal experience when thinking about the current tax policy and subsequent cuts to state services.  There are many in leadership who expound on government waste and excessive government spending.  They proclaim we are spending more than ever, and use ridiculous phrases like "a reduction of an increase".  It's as if faceless boogey men are hiding behind curtains, burning tax payer dollars.  That is not what I see. 

I see Kim, our vision teacher, teaching Danny as a nearly blind infant, to recognize our faces.  I see Linda and Harrietta, amazing friends, caring for adults with physical and intellectual disabilities in their homes. I see other friends, too many to name, working tirelessly and lovingly, as teachers and administrators in our schools.  There are no bogey men.  There are only hard working, honest people fixing our roads and bridges, teaching our children, inspecting our food and water, presiding over our courts, patrolling our streets, and serving our elderly and disabled.  They work everyday for the common good, and their good work is being undone by a failed tax policy that benefits a privileged minority.

Lest you believe this is entirely emotional, "We are the World" diatribe, let me supply some facts.  The Kansas Board of Regents reports that every dollar invested in higher education results in almost twelve dollars of economic activity in the state of Kansas. Infant Toddler Services' research concludes that for every dollar invested, seven is saved down the road. High school dropouts are sixty-three times more likely to be incarcerated than college graduates.  Melissa Rooker, State Representative, reported at the Mainstream Coalition forum on February 17th that if you counted every conceivable dollar spent on education, it would total around $13,000 per student.  It takes over $25,000 to house a prisoner.  Their refusal of Medicaid expansion will cost $2.6 billion dollars from 2013 through 2022.  We are missing the big picture.  We are not looking to the future.  We live in a state governed by a narrow vision of prosperity and we are on the titanic.  Spoiler alert: it sinks.

My family's need for government funded services was certainly not expected.  We planned, received excellent health care, and made good choices.  We simply drew the preemie card.  We are all one fall off of a ladder or a premature baby away from needing help.  I would argue that none of us can live safely and happily in the limited government bubble.  We all want good roads, demand safe communities, and an education system that allows our children to reach their highest potential. These are core responsibilities of government.  We should value public servants and celebrate institutional knowledge with a single-minded focus on providing quality services.  They are professionals who are able to work toward our best interest and remain unmotivated by profit.  These services are valuable, necessary, and save tax dollars in the long run. 

Our communities deserve it.  Our families need it.  Our children are worth it.

Wednesday, February 11, 2015

It's a Dirty Game

Even if you don't care about teacher negotiations, this is just a little glimpse into what's the matter with Kansas (It had to be said.  It's a low hanging fruit that I'm picking early, and won't oft repeat.  Except when I'm at a loss for words with all the shenanigans.) 
Every year, school districts around the state sit at a table with teachers and negotiate contracts.  This is handled locally, as it should be.  Each district has unique characteristics and needs that require attention and discussion.  Over the last eighteen months, the group that represents teachers, KNEA, the group that represents school boards, KASB, the group that represents superintendents, KSSA, and school administrators, USA/KS, worked very hard on a compromise that would guide these negotiations.  All parties that are involved, knowledgable, and invested in the process agreed on certain terms, and a K-12 School Efficiency Commission regarded this compromise as the best outcome to guide future negotiations.  Slam Dunk, right?

Wrong.  Enter Dave Trabert and the Kansas Policy Institute (KPI).  I'll go into more detail in a future post on KPI and Mr. Trabert. 

Dave Trabert (and some billionaire pals from Wichita) wrote a minority report (not the movie, but maybe just as spooky) that significantly limits what can be negotiated.  This diminishes local control of the issues and does not serve the parties involved well.  This report became a bill - HB 2034.  All of the groups involved in teacher negotiations provided testimony opposing this bill.  The ONLY person that provided testimony in favor was Dave Trabert.  Who is a politician to believe?  All of the people with education, expertise, and investment in the process or a Koch paid lobbyist?
I won't keep you in suspense.  The committee went with the lobbyist.

That's right.  Our legislators ignored all of the professional parties involved - the ones that represent hundreds of hours of work in compromise and all seek to improve education for Kansas students, and agreed with a generously funded Wichita think tank with zero experience advocating for students.  Their goal with this bill is to limit collective bargaining power for teachers, but in doing so impedes the districts' rights to negotiate as well.

This is our government at work, Kansas.  What can you do?  Email your legislator and let them know you support compromise and teachers in our great state!

For more reading:

Friday, February 6, 2015

A Minute for a Difference

A Minute for a Difference

Living a life takes a lot.  Sometimes just living takes all you have.  Since Danny was born, I feel we have been in survival mode.  The last three years have been a blur of doctors' offices, therapy appointments, and sleepless nights.  Not to say it's been bad - it has been the absolute best three years of my life.  Danny has given me the opportunity to love more fiercely and fearlessly than I ever thought possible.  The last three years have had one, singular purpose.  Danny. 

Danny has recently started going to school at the Instructional Support Center through the SMSD.  It has been such a positive experience for Danny and our family.  He is in love with his teachers and therapists, has new friends, and we have already seen numerous improvements and changes.  The major impact it has had on my life is I have a few hours sans Danny.  In addition to not having sinks full of dishes and being occasionally caught up on laundry, it has allowed me to look outside our immediate circle of concern.  Apparently, just because you go into survival mode, the world does not stop spinning.

While I have been surviving, things have been happening.  There have been positive developments.  For example, there is a store near my new house that sells exclusively pie.  and cookies.  Boulevard is going to start using cans!  Hooray!  However, much of what is happening in Kansas is...well, awful.  Our governor and many in the legislature are following a path of tax reduction destruction.  They do not believe that our government has the responsibility to provide core services.  They are not acting in the best interest of all Kansas residents, but pursuing a fatally flawed ideology that favors the very few. 

The trouble is - the people driving our current policy are pretty good at it.  A little sneaky, too.  If you see any one particular bill without much context, it doesn't seem like a big deal.  A bill to move elections to November?  Straight ticket voting?  Change the retirement age of judges?  Changing the school formula?  No big deal, right?  Nope, nope, nope.  Big deals.  These are really big deals.

When I taught fourth grade, my mantra was simple - A little goes a long way.  You need to study for a test?  Study in the car on the way to and from school.  You have a friend that is feeling blue?  Ask them if they want to swing.  You want to save the Earth?  Recycle your papers.  We can all do a little, and the cumulative efforts will be great.  I just want to do my part.  A minute for a difference.  What would happen if we all took a minute to occasionally email a legislator, kept informed, and voted our conscience?  Naïve?  Oh, for sure.  But what else can a gal do?  

I'm no expert.  I will fake it until I make it.  I just feel like if I don't do this I'm going to end up in a tent city outside the capitol wearing a sandwich board.  It is too cold for that, plus Danny has some pretty particular sleep needs (have I mentioned that he has diffused lavender oil at bedtime and sleeps with a sleep mask?  Spa Robeson up in here).  Also, I don't want to fill up my Facebook feed.  It really is just about the cute pictures of Danny.  I just feel compelled to do my part and share information.

Dan recently reminded me of this quote by Margaret Mead:

"Never underestimate the power of a small group of committed people to change the world. In fact, it is the only thing that ever has.”

I cannot think of a more compelling reason to try.

Signed,

Pollyanna