Category Archives: Legislative

House Leadership Press Conference at 2:30pm TODAY

UPDATE, now looking like the press conference is more likely between 3 and 4pm. Note, as a House event, we have no control over this one.

The Minnesota House leadership is holding a press conference about Crosswinds and Harambee at the Capitol today at 2:30. Please meet in the Capitol Rotunda at 2:15 to join up with other families, students, and teachers. Now is the moment! Come to the Capitol if you can. Bring your signs.

Please spread the word.

The House is very upset at the manipulations of the Senate against Crosswinds. Let’s help them make a strong showing!

Last Chance to Save Crosswinds, SUNDAY 11am

The legislature did NOT include Crosswinds in the education omnibus bill, dooming our state-of-the-art $26M east metro integration magnet school to lie empty and disbanding our fine teaching staff and families. We are coming together one more time to ask legislators and the governor to do everything possible before the legislative session ends to continue this important integration magnet program.

Please join us TODAY (for most of you), Sunday at 11am, in the State Capitol just outside the Governor’s Office. Students from theater and orchestra will be present, Mr. Bass and some parents will hold a press conference. We need to ask for action to save Crosswinds.

See our press release for more details.

Looking to the Education Omnibus Bill

As you probably heard this evening on the news, the Minnesota House defeated the bonding bill, HF270. Until yesterday, the language supporting the Perpich takeover of Crosswinds was part of this bonding bill. Both the team working to get Roseville support for Harambee and the team working to get Perpich support for Crosswinds are now focussed on getting this supporting language into the education omnibus bill (HF630/SF453).

The education omnibus contents will be determined by the Education (E-12) Conference Committee which may meet later tonight or tomorrow. In any case, we are down to the wire. Now would be a great time for calls asking your legislators to support Crosswinds and Harambee in the education omnibus. They will be there late into the night tonight, and all weekend. But the sooner you call the better. Make sure to leave a message if their staff does not answer the phone, make it very clear you support the Perpich plan to govern Crosswinds.

The members of this conference committee are Senators Wiger, Torres Ray, Stumpf, Johnson, and Dahle, and Representatives Marquart, Mariani, Brynaert, Morgan, and Urdahl. If any of these folks are your own legislators, please make an extra effort to call them tonight expressing support for Crosswinds and Perpich.

We also had stories in the Pioneer Press and the Woodbury Bulletin growing out of our press conference yesterday. The facts are a bit dated since this is now moving so swiftly, but it was very good to see the coverage.

Thanks for all that you are doing to keep our schools serving future Minnesota students!

EMID Families Press Conference at 2:30pm TODAY

Sorry about the short notice, but if you can get to Crosswinds at 2:30pm this afternoon (5/16), please do! After a press conference there, a number of families will also be heading to the capitol. The session ends Monday and the Crosswinds situation has not be resolved! We need to demand the legislature take action to allow Perpich to run Crosswinds. The Crosswinds program must be preserved!

We have learned that some Washington County area state senators are demanding the House strip its bonding bill of Crosswinds related language. They want EMID to run the school for another year if District 833 is not allowed to take the building for its own use. We know that can’t work and we need to let the press and our legislators know how important it is to support Perpich and Crosswinds NOW.

Please join us at Crosswinds. If you are available later in the afternoon, please come to the capitol as well.

16 May EMID Families Press Release (PDF)

Write your Representative in support of Perpich!

The Perpich-Crosswinds language is now part of HF270, the House bonding omnibus bill. That bill is expected to come up for consideration on the House floor this week. Please write your State Representative today to ask for their support. If you are unsure of who your Representative is, please visit the “Who Represents Me” page at the House to find out. Also ask your friends and family members statewide to write to their Representatives. Here is a sample of what you might say:

Dear Representative _________,

I am writing to ask you to support HF270, which is likely to come to the House floor this week. Sections 32, 33, 34, 51, and 52 of this bonding omnibus bill include important language that allow the Perpich Center for Arts Education to take on governance of the Crosswinds Arts and Science School. It is vital, in these days of diversifying demographics, that this important integration program remain open and continue to serve as model for Minnesota. Crosswinds shows that the achievement gap can be closed. It shows that choice can lead to integration with a student body comprised of 50% students of color, 50% receiving free or reduced lunch, and 26% receiving special education services.

As all of Minnesota’s communities are struggling with the biggest achievement gap in the country, I know you want Minnesota to be a leader in education. I know you want children in our community to have the opportunity to practice successful global citizenship, through the innovation that comes with integration.

I urge you to support the Crosswinds language in the bonding bill and to oppose any amendments to that language when it comes to the floor. Please help preserve a model that works for Minnesota.

Thank you for your service to our community,
_______

Please forward this sample letter to friends, relatives, coworkers, anyone you can contact, who would support the effort to keep Crosswinds available in Minnesota.

Our hope is that Perpich, by keeping Crosswinds open, can share the lessons learned at this successful “lab” school with communities statewide. Crosswinds was built with state funds, we believe it should serve as a model for the whole state.

Perpich-Crosswinds bill heading to the Minnesota House floor

The Perpich-Crosswinds bill is now headed to the floor of the Minnesota House, but it looks a little different than it did a few weeks ago.

Two weeks ago the House Capital Investments Committee took our stand alone bill (HB592) and made it a part of the House bonding omnibus bill (HB270). It was added to the bonding omnibus bill because the office of Minnesota Management and Budget (MMB) determined that any changes to the use of Crosswinds would mean a change in the intent of the bonds that had been used to build Crosswinds, and as such these changes needed the approval of three-fifths of the legislature. Since bonding bills require a three-fifths vote and this had become a bond-related question, we are now part of the bonding bill in the House.

This morning the House bonding omnibus passed the House Ways and Means committee and was sent on to the House floor for consideration. Unfortunately, it will probably wait there until all the other budget bills have been considered before it gets a vote. This means that we probably will not know the fate of Crosswinds in the Legislature until the very end of the session.

Another change in the language makes it very likely that even once the Legislature finishes its work, the final decision will return to the EMID Board. New language in HB270 allows the EMID Board to give Crosswinds to either Perpich or District 833 (South Washington County) “for use as an east metropolitan area integration magnet school.” Furthermore, if EMID wants to do anything other than that with Crosswinds, it must sell the school building “for an amount at least equal to” the cost of acquiring the land and building the school. (HB270, Sec. 51.) These provisions make it possible that both Perpich and District 833 will be coming back to the EMID board this summer for a decision.

The bottom line for now is that things are looking very positive for a Perpich takeover of Crosswinds for next school year, but we are far from done with this task. Stay tuned! We will need your voice raised and your concerns shared with your legislators as this matter heads to the House floor. And we will need you to contact your EMID Board members when and if this matter returns to their domain.

P.S. Though far less controversial, we should note that the Roseville-Harambee provision is also now part of the same HB270 bonding bill.

Impact of the calendar on MCA testing

One of the things EMID families have learned to take with a large grain of salt are MCA test results. Even though now-Commissioner Brenda Cassalius was once our Superintendent, she has done nothing to reform the MCA testing calendar that so disadvantages year-round schools like ours. The MCA is still administered within a calendar-year window, and our kids have had roughly six weeks less time with their teachers when that window rolls around each year. This means that comparing our scores with schools that use a typical calendar is not very meaningful.

This year we have seen a number of efforts by other school districts to reform MCA testing calendar policies, or their own school calendar policies, to adjust for much smaller deviations from the norm. For example, just today Tim Post ran a story on MPR about rural districts worried about the impact of snow days on their MCA scores.

Officials in the Morris School district pushed some of testing in May back by a week to give students and teachers time to catch up after the disruptions of several snow days and late starts.

“A week matters,” Morris High School Principal Craig Peterson said. “Five more days of instruction matters, it matters for our kids.”

Such efforts show just how nervous school officials can get around the results of MCA tests.

Other districts have been trying to get the legislature to allow earlier school start dates in order to boost test scores.

The Le Sueur-Henderson School District has taken an approach similar to St. Peter’s, discussing the possibility of changing the calendar, but holding off on making any firm plans or asking for community input.

“If you look at our calendar, we have used the same one for a long time,” Hanson said during a recent school board meeting. “We have the problem of finishing the semester after students get home from their break. If we started school earlier, it would also give us two weeks more to prepare for state testing. What we’re looking for is how we can use that time best for our students to learn the best and get the best instruction.”

A study by Education Next in 2010 shows the impact missed education days can have. They point out that decision makers often overlook the contribution of time to standardized test results.

One implication of this oversight is that accountability systems are ignoring information relevant to understanding schools’ performance. Year-to-year improvements in the share of students performing well on state assessments can be accomplished by changes in school practices, or by increases in students’ exposure to school. Depending on the financial or political costs of extending school years, those with a stake in education might think differently about gains attributable to the quality of instruction provided and gains attributable to the quantity.

All of these concerns are about schools missing days or at most a week or two of instructional time before testing. Now recall that EMID schools are at a six week deficit when the MCA window rolls around. Six weeks. Our students are still in the midst of their third quarter when tested, while traditional schools are well into the fourth quarter during this statewide testing window.

As families, we have understand that Crosswinds is a great school because we see the results with our kids. We know they are learning, and in other tests that measure individual student growth we have even seen data of the achievement gap narrowing. We realize that the MCA test results do not show Crosswinds in the best light, but we don’t let that worry us. However, as some of this data is shared with legislators with the intentionally misleading comparison with traditional calendar schools, there is a danger they will leap to the conclusion that Crosswinds is underperforming. Nothing could be further from the truth.

The truth is that Crosswinds is doing a great job, but that job cannot be accurately reflected in a standardized test which is administered six weeks earlier to Crosswinds students than to everyone else. Let’s hope that legislators understand the data they are being shown.

EMID Board meets Wednesday 3/20

The EMID Board will get an update on the progress of legislation to allow Perpich to take over Crosswinds at its next board meeting, this Wednesday (3/20), 5:30pm at Harambee.

The board packet agenda also includes a discussion of EMID employee placement and resolutions on unrequested leaves of absence for staff.

Some families who have been present for hearings at the legislature plan to share observations with the board during the open forum.

This will also be an opportunity for families to catch up with Sue Mackert, of Perpich, who will be providing the board with an update.

While we expect this board meeting to be relatively drama-free, it is important to realize that the board has, as recently as two months ago, changed its agenda dramatically during the meeting itself. Until the Crosswinds situation, in particular, has completely resolved, it is important for as many families as possible to attend board meetings and witness their actions.

Perpich-Crosswinds bill passes House Government Operations committee unanimously

The Perpich-Crosswinds bill in the House (HF592) has passed its second committee with flying colors, getting a unanimous vote from the House Government Operations committee this afternoon. The unanimous support of the Government Operations committee follows an all-but-one win in the Education Finance committee, demonstrating the depth of the bipartisan support for Perpich and its plan to take over governance of Crosswinds.

Many EMID families witnessed the meeting, which started at 12:30pm and didn’t get to our bill until nearly 4pm. The committee had a huge workload and plenty was still on its agenda even after our bill. While waiting we heard the committee pass bills for a statewide health plan for schools and an anti-bullying initiative that demanded schools create a healthier more respectful environment. Many of us realized that the things we’d been saying in our testimonies for Crosswinds would apply equally to some of the other bills being heard. Much of that testimony has been gathered in a packet that we are sharing with each committee. Please write to testimony@emidfamilies.org if you would like to add your voice to this packet.

The depth of our bipartisan support is probably why the only effective tactic of opponents in Washington County has been to stall, especially by preventing any hearing in the Minnesota Senate. Sen. Torres Ray has tarnished her reputation as a defender of integration by refusing to give our bill (SF530) a hearing in her Education Committee. This has been especially disappointing since she is sponsoring SF711, the bill to implement the recommendation of last year’s integration task force, in the Senate. However, this past Monday even Sen. Torres Ray told Crosswinds activists “the bill will have a hearing in the Senate, if not in my committee, then in Sen. Wiger’s [Education Finance subcommittee].” Now we have to hold her to that commitment.

Meanwhile, the House bill was referred on to the Capital Investments committee to discuss an issue of state bonding and make sure that the use Perpich intends is close enough to the intent with which the Crosswinds facility was built. We expect that hearing next week, but it is not on the schedule yet. It may be heard along with the Harambee bill (HF833) which also awaits a hearing in Capital Investments.

Please join us in attending the upcoming EMID board meeting at 5:30pm on Wednesday 3/20 at Harambee. We must make sure the board understands the incredible strength of the Perpich proposal in the legislature and does not simply hand the Crosswinds facility to South Washing County schools in April. A number of issues have been raised in the legislature which put South Washington’s claim to the building in doubt, and it should be a very interesting board meeting as the EMID board comes to grips with what has actually been happening in Saint Paul.

Hearing for Crosswinds on Friday at 12:30pm

Yesterday the Perpich-Crosswinds bill in the House (HF592) was passed out of the House Education Finance Committee and referred on to Government Operations. The hearing at the House Government Operations Committee will be at 12:30pm on Friday (3/15) in the Basement Hearing Room of the State Office Building, 100 Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Blvd., Saint Paul, MN.

While spoken testimony will be limited to the presenters of the bill, written testimony is welcome from all. We will compile a packet of written testimony for the committee (and future committees). Please send your written testimony to testimony@emidfamilies.org by Noon Thursday (3/14, tomorrow!).

If you prefer to send emails to committee members, there addresses can be found on the Government Operations Committee page.

Also remember that we are still awaiting our first hearing in the Senate. We still need letters and calls to go to Sen. Torres Ray (651-296-4274) who is refusing to hear SF530 in her Senate Education Committee. Please ask for a prompt hearing in the Senate, time is running short!