Monday, June 30, 2008
School Choice: Is Milwaukee still state-of-the-art?
Governor Bobby Jindal of Louisiana is set to sign the nation's fifth voucher program into law, allowing impoverished students in under-performing New Orleans public schools to leave for other options. The NOLA program's legislation looks designed to avoid many of the failings of Milwaukee's program: it borrows certain elements of our program, building on Milwaukee's strengths, yet limits our deficiencies.
For example, NOLA has learned from us that supply and demand are insufficient accountability mechanisms. Voucher recipients in New Orleans will be required to take the regular state standardized tests, including the graduation exit exam, and school level testing data will be reported to the public annually. In addition, private schools in Louisiana are overseen by an advisory committee of school representatives who advise the state school board on standards. The board approves new private schools and discontinues approval if a private school is not maintaining its standards. By having access to school performance data, parents will be able to make better informed decisions. They will also be able to rely on the added level of accountability provided by the state school board and its advisory committee.
Anticipating that a program designed to allow parents to "vote with their feet" will find parents actually doing so, the New Orleans program provides that students who find themselves in unacceptable choice schools have priority in transferring to another participating school. This not only helps parents feel comfortable about taking the risk to change schools, it also avoids the problems that have been experienced in Milwaukee when a school fails mid-year and leaves students with no other options.
Further accountability comes in the form of a probationary period for those schools failing to comply with the statutory provisions requiring a healthy audit. During the one-year probation, the school will not be permitted to enroll additional voucher students. If the school has not come into compliance by the end of the probationary period, it will no longer be eligible to participate in the program. This requirement protects students and taxpayers alike and avoids situations like those in Milwaukee where a school finds itself closing its doors due to unexpected financial problems.
New Orleans' new program also reflects the lessons that parents cannot be empowered without information and shopping for schools is difficult. In addition to testing students and reporting the results, choice schools in New Orleans will be required to inform each family about all school rules and policies, including academic and disciplinary policies, prior to their enrollment. Schooling information will be obtained not only from the schools, but also from the state education department, which determine voucher eligibility as a first step. Once a student has the voucher in hand, he or she can choose from among the participating schools, which will hold a simultaneous enrollment period.
Parents who are shopping for schools in Milwaukee have to call or visit schools individually to gather any schooling information, limiting the number of schools in competition for that student. In New Orleans, schools will compete amongst themselves for the limited pool of voucher recipients during the mutual enrollment period. In this way, the NOLA program encourages schools to market themselves directly to these parents, likely giving New Orleans parents opportunity to obtain more complete information than Milwaukee parents.
Finally, unlike Milwaukee, the NOLA program is designed to ensure public schools compete for students based on school performance. It does this in two ways. First, it grants eligibility only to those students enrolled in an under-performing public school (and new Kindergarten students). Current private school students cannot receive vouchers. Secondly, it provides additional money on top of the voucher amount for special needs students. Thus, the playing field is more level as the private schools' disincentive to accept special needs students is reduced, while the focus of the parents' choice is squarely on the relative performance of the schools. In Milwaukee, parents cannot consider school performance, as no such data on individual private schools are available. Furthermore, one of the biggest complaints about Milwaukee's program, from both sides of the issue, has been that the voucher amount does not cover the entire cost of educating special needs students.
While the New Orleans' program looks promising from a policy design point of view, it is obviously too early to tell whether implementation will be successful. If it is, Milwaukee's 18-year-old program just may have been replaced by an updated model.
Thursday, June 26, 2008
Questions we need to ask after the Coggs Center incident
- This incident should serve as a wake-up call to state and county elected officials regarding the dysfunctional nature of the state-county relationship when it comes to human services. The two entities are supposed to be partners, but seldom act that way. In this case, the state gave the county little notice before announcing the new benefit, despite knowing full well that the county can't adequately handle its existing food stamp caseload, let alone a surge of thousands of new applications. In the rush to announce the availability of the benefit, did the state genuinely try to coordinate, to jointly plan, or to say "hey, can we give you a hand?"
- Citizens and policymakers need to be aware that each and every day, hundreds of desperate people face significant challenges signing up for benefits at the Coggs Center. For years, Milwaukee County has experienced big problems in serving the tens of thousands of residents seeking eligibility determination for food stamps, Medicaid and child care. As a result, benefits regularly are delayed for those who are eligible, and the challenges involved in obtaining them often jeopardize both health and employability. Both the state and the county have known and admitted this, but neither accepts accountability; instead, the state blames the county for not administering the programs effectively, while the county blames the state for grossly underfunding a mandated service. Meanwhile, the problem never gets fixed.
- It is certainly legitimate to question why the emergency benefit was made available by the federal government and/or the state to anyone who met income and residency criteria, regardless of ability to prove hardship due to flood damage. The answer likely lies in the desire to err on the side of quickly getting food assistance into the hands of those who truly needed it, as opposed to preventing fraud. Nevertheless, despite the probable good intentions of those making this decision, it is unfortunate that the impression left with the public is that all food stamp benefits are similarly easy to obtain by those who may not be eligible, and that further anecdotal ammunition has been provided to those who argue that safety net programs are wasteful and unnecessary.
- In the wake of Hurricane Katrina, planning was initiated on the state and local level for emergency situations in which thousands of uprooted and otherwise desperate people would need to seek and obtain critical food and health care benefits. Does this incident tell us we are not prepared for a true natural disaster in this essential area of emergency response? Should we be questioning whether we would have similar challenges providing mental health, drug/alcohol and disabilities services in a true emergency?
Perhaps the worst outcome of this week's Coggs Center incident would be its casual dismissal. Instead, this incident must be viewed as a potential symptom of a much larger problem - an overwhelmed social services infrastructure in Milwaukee County that is badly in need of apolitical attention from both state and county policymakers.
Wednesday, June 25, 2008
Wisconsin leads in great places to work
Does having happy employees make a difference to the economy? According to the Great Place to Work Institute, the firms on the list of 100 Best Places to Work have outperformed the S&P 500 every year since 1998, with some years seeing double the return of the S&P.
One explanation may be that employees seem to value training and professional development opportunities, which are frequently cited by employees in "good" companies. An atmosphere in which risk-taking is encouraged is another aspect that makes employees happy and may help the bottom line.
If the prevailing corporate culture in Wisconsin is different than in other states, that could help bolster our economy during a national recession. It's something to think about when policymakers are faced with decisions that impact employers.
Badger Mining Corporation, Berlin http://www.badgerminingcorp.com/
Kahler Slater, Milwaukee http://www.kahlerslater.com/
Runzheimer International, Rochester http://www.runzheimer.com/
Cascade Asset Management, Madison http://www.cascade-assets.com/
Among medium companies (251-999 employees):
ACUITY, Sheboygan http://www.acuity.com/
Stark Investments, St. Francis http://www.starkinvestments.com/
4imprint, Inc., Oshkosh http://www.4imprint.com/
In addition, Wisconsin had three companies on the 2008 "100 Best" list of larger firms:
Johnson Financial Group, Racine http://www.johnsonbank.com/
Robert W. Baird, Milwaukee www.rwbaird.com
S.C. Johnson & Son, Racine http://www.scjohnson.com/
Tuesday, June 24, 2008
Zilber effort shows signs of avoiding philanthropic pitfalls
Replicating a successful model
Funders who only support flashy, innovative strategies (some of which are sure to be on the wish-lists written in response to Eugene Kane's most recent column) end up throwing short-term money at long-term problems, never supporting proven strategies. Zilber seems interested in replicating the New Communities Program, a community development strategy shown to be effective in 16 Chicago neighborhoods. This could allow Milwaukee to learn from Chicago’s experience and hit the ground running.
Building local support and rejecting one-size-fits-all solutions
The Zilber Neighborhood Initiative presumes that different neighborhoods have different needs. The initiative’s consultant, Susan Lloyd, explains that the aim is “providing long-term support in a flexible way so that efforts can be fashioned to what individual areas need and can do.” Though time will tell how closely Zilber follows Chicago's New Communities Program, that model emphasizes involving neighbors in planning, coordination by neighborhood-based lead agencies, and tailoring solutions to unique characteristics of each area. The Chicago program used 14 neighborhood-based agencies to lead locals in structured community planning processes. Three thousand people across Chicago participated in creating quality-of-life plans for specific neighborhoods. As the program website explains, it was designed to “strengthen communities from within.”
Meeting strategic objectives
If the Zilber Neighborhood Initiative follows the New Communities method, it will likely generate a roadmap of clear implementation objectives. Community visioning processes in Chicago addressed issues in the following categories: physical, family, economic, social, and government.
Collaborating and leveraging funds
Philanthropy works best when not in isolation. The Zilber Neighborhood Initiative so far has preached collaboration as an element in both the programming – with multiple nonprofits expected to work together – and the funding. A true measure of success will be whether the initiative successfully meets its goal of using the initial $50 million investment to catalyze corporations, foundations and philanthropists to give at least $150 million in additional gifts.
A long-term commitment
Long-term timelines prevent a negative scenario in which programming is expected to be successful immediately, with no plan to sustain the efforts. Zilber envisions a ten-year effort -- a lifetime in the philanthropic world -- allowing for the planning efforts that are often necessary for long-term success and sustainability.
Managing for results
At this early point, little information is available about the initiative's plans for financial management, program evaluation, organizational capacity-building, and cultural competency, elements that will be key to successful implementations. Zilber's openness in welcoming the community's ideas for how to spend his own money has the ring of good P.R., while also having the potential to help Milwaukeeans to feel engaged in and invested in the project's success. It would be a good sign if research-proven methods (best practices) carry weight along with the wisdom of local residents, to avoid the danger of funding well-intentioned intervention methods that studies show are ineffective.
Joseph Zilber’s willingness to invest $50 million in Milwaukee neighborhoods is impressive in and of itself. It will be equally praiseworthy if his bottom-up, replicated strategy continues on a path of smart philanthropy and resident engagement.
Monday, June 23, 2008
Financing Milwaukee's innovation pipeline
This breakthrough is welcome news not only for its potential health benefit, but also for the economy of the Milwaukee region and the state of Wisconsin, which has historically done a poor job in translating NIH grants to economic gains. A national study released this week confirms an above-average level of NIH dollars flowing into Wisconsin but a below-average return on those dollars in the form of new business activity.
Universities aren't alone in their use of public dollars to spur innovation. Local governments are beginning to delve into the innovation investment game. One recent example is the City of Milwaukee's approval of a $225,000 forgivable loan to C&D Technologies to develop a new line of lightweight lithium-ion batteries. These city funds would mix with federal dollars to finance the development of this new product line for military use.
Other cities are also creating funds that directly invest in innovative private companies. New York City and its partners have created the $2 million NYC Seed fund which will invest up to $200,000 in nascent NYC-based tech companies to aid them in the development of new ideas and products. Click here for information on other cities that have created similar funds to boost innovation and entrepreneurship.
In the past, the public sector's role in economic development has largely been to set the stage for growth (solid infrastructure, educated workforce) and then get the heck out of the way (streamlined regulation). This mindset is slowly changing. Today, public dollars are used directly to fuel innovation and economic development.
As with any investment, there is risk. However, with adequate due diligence and strategic focus, the investment of public dollars into research and development projects can be a calculated risk with a potentially large payoff to metropolitan economies.
Wednesday, June 18, 2008
Milwaukee has 46th worst traffic congestion in US
The neat thing about the scorecard is that the travel time index is computed for each hour in the day. Can you guess when Milwaukee is most congested? Between 5 and 6 pm on Fridays, of course, like about everywhere else in the nation.
The scorecard also ranks the nation's worst bottlenecks. Our worst, US45 southbound at Highway 100, ranks 1,530th nationally and is congested 16 hours per week with an average travel speed of 19 miles per hour when congested.
The good news? We have only 4% of the total congestion of the worst city, Los Angeles. (LA's travel time index is 1.45.)
Wednesday, June 11, 2008
Applications now accepted for Norman N. Gill Civic Engagement Fellowship

Tuesday, June 10, 2008
PPF survey: Child care providers in a tough spot

The findings fit with the results of our recent parent survey, which found parents do not demand certain markers of quality, such as accreditation.
The result is that providers looking to make improvements, such as obtaining accreditation, are in a tough spot: the improvements are costly and they will have a hard time passing the costs onto parents.
Which begs the question, Do policymakers value high-quality care enough to provide financial incentives to providers for making improvements? At the state level, so far the answer has been "no."
Coverage of the report is in the June 6 Business Journal.
Friday, June 6, 2008
Planes, Trains and Automobiles
A recent article in USA Today cites at least a dozen cities that are building or planning rail systems that would connect airports to downtown areas, adding to the 10 that currently exist. Those plans are being driven for the most part by a desire to provide convenient alternatives for potential airport users.
Another recent article on Governing Magazine's web site discusses the value of airport rail links from an economic development perspective. The article notes that airports are becoming high end business centers in many metro areas, and that the users of such centers demand services that are accessible without use of a car.