Proposed Changes To Wisconsin’s K-12 Governance

Alberta Darling & Dale Kooyenga, via a kind reader (PDF):

2014 marked the 50-year anniversary of the war on poverty. Since 1964, taxpayers spent over $22 trillion to combat poverty.1 Little, if any, progress has been achieved. The trajectory is not favorable towards the poor and lower middle class and few would argue the federal government has made significant progress to win the war on poverty. The same 50-year-old programs are inflated with additional spending and new programs are consistently introduced, but the effectiveness of the original programs are rarely evaluated. President Dwight Eisenhower famously warned of the buildup of a military industrial complex – for good reason – but few have foreseen a poverty industrial complex. There is a presumption in this nation that all we have to do is appropriate more money to address a problem, but over time we see no correlation between government money spending and the alleviation of poverty. Unfortunately, and ironically, areas that have received the most federal and state funding in the form of welfare have eroded relative to the areas that have received less attention from government.
Two-thirds of the incarcerated African-American men came from six zip codes in Milwaukee and it is no coincidence that those zip codes are also home to the greatest density of failing schools and the highest unemployment in the state.2 The policies we are advocating for seek to provide new tools to deal with a reality no one should accept. From new and innovative educational models, to free market policies that will allow for greater economic gains, the residents of Milwaukee County deserve better and more opportunities.

There is always a danger of oversimplifying a complicated problem, but there is also value in breaking down a 50-year-old paradigm and questioning the approach from a fresh perspective. We know the current expensive, overly complicated web of government programs are not working. The success stories predominately come from individual members of the community and not-for-profits that are entrenched in these communities that are more judicious with the limited resources they have.

The ideas put forth in this report are about new opportunities. The initiatives in this paper will not cost any taxpayer, at any level of government, a single cent. The ideas represent unleashing individuals, not unleashing government spending. The policies introduced are based on the belief that individuals want to work, as work is part of our human DNA. No one wants to be in poverty and no one wants to be dependent on the government. Race, sex, income, handicap, age or a litany of other characteristics does not change our belief that we were all created equal and that everyone has the ability to contribute something to our community.