Monday, April 1, 2013

Critique of Scott Walker’s Destructive Policies Aimed at Milwaukee | Larry Miller's Blog: Educate All Students!

Critique of Scott Walker’s Destructive Policies Aimed at Milwaukee | Larry Miller's Blog: Educate All Students!:


Critique of Scott Walker’s Destructive Policies Aimed at Milwaukee

Walker loves Milwaukee? We’re not feeling it
By John Gurda March 29, 2013 Milwaukee Journal Sentinel
It hasn’t been this bad since the 1950s. You have to go back more than half a century to find a time when Wisconsin’s highest elected officials were so antagonistic to the state’s largest city. Then, it was a rural bloc kept in power by skewed legislative boundaries. Now, it’s a Republican bloc that has manufactured the same advantage. The results are identical: legislation, passed or proposed, inimical to the city’s best interests.
The previous low point in city-state relations came in the years after World War II. Reapportionment, normally done once a decade, had not been addressed since 1921, a result of the Depression, wartime and political resistance.
Years of urban growth had shifted the balance of population to the cities, but not the balance of power. Although 55% of Wisconsinites were city-dwellers by 1950, most of the state’s legislators lived in rural areas. Bayfield


Alan Borsuk Gives a Chimerical Account of MPS Leadership

On March 24th Alan Borsuk wrote a column in the Journal Sentinel called “Signs hint at possible changes for Gregory Thornton, Milwaukee School Board.” I submitted the following letter to the editors but they chose not to run it.
Dear Editors,
On March 24Alan Borsuk once again churned the rumor mill about MPS leadership (“Signs hint at possible changes for Gregory Thornton, Milwaukee School Board”).
This weekly column would better serve Milwaukee Journal Sentinel readers with some serious investigative journalism about the Milwaukee education landscape.
Here are some places to start:  Report on the lack of transparency and public input for the City of Milwaukee