May 3, 2011 will be a critical day for the future of Franklin Township Schools. In my opinion, the loss of 81 teachers, the elimination of art, music and PE from the elementary schools and the elimination of bus transportation will be devastating for the children of Franklin Township. The issues surrounding this referendum are very complex. My goal in the coming weeks is to use this blog to outline the issues and identify a long list of reasons to vote in support of the referendum.

Wednesday, March 23, 2011

South Creek Elementary Teacher Win Coveted Award

Hi Everyone!

This is two messages sent out in one week… but this one is short and quick (unlike the previous 4 messages).

Since I’m headed out on Spring Break to watch my Freshman daughter perform in her national show choir competition in Orlando, Florida… a trip the parents paid for, not the taxpayers… and since this could be the last time these kids have this type of opportunity if the referendum fails… I wanted to get in one more message before I leave.

Here is some fantastic news to share with all of you that should make all of Franklin Township proud…

South Creek Elementary’s Jennifer Monday Wins the Armstrong Educator Award, a Coveted Award from the Indiana University School Of Education

Jennifer is considered a leader in her school and in our district.  She serves as a grade level representative from her school for district-wide curriculum development work in mathematics and has been trained to be a writing coach for her peers.

And, get this, as a show of appreciation from the Franklin Township community  toward Jennifer for her dedication to our kids… if you vote NO to the referendum, she loses her job because she is on the 85 teacher cut list.

I am actually at a loss for words… and that is rare!

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By the way, as a side note, I failed to mention there will be no more librarians in any of the Franklin Township Elementary or Intermediate School libraries if the referendum fails.  The school system won’t be able to afford it.

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Have a great remainder of your week and a safe Spring Break!
   
Geoff Horen

Monday, March 21, 2011

Why Vote YES If You Don't Have Kids In The Schools?

Hello everyone!


Before I begin with this week’s topic, I wanted to quickly reference an email I received last week regarding the public outcry about “building all ‘them’ schools”.  A reader asked me to point out that at all times with all construction projects undertaken by Franklin Township Schools, the PETITION OF REMONSTRANCE Process has been in place prior to the construction of any new school building.  Public notice was always given (by law) to allow the public to protest any project and, generally speaking, the public never raised an issue to question or stop the construction of any school related facility.  There was a group that raised concerns about the next round of school projects after the construction of the stadium (and rightfully so).  They were invited to participate on a committee during that next round of school projects as a result of their concerns, thus the Remonstrance process worked effectively.


I have a simple goal for today’s message - to make an argument why people without children in Franklin Township schools should vote YES for the referendum.  While I’m at it, I’ll take a shot at convincing Franklin Township families who send their children to private schools to support the referendum as well.  Seems simple, right?  Okay, I know it won’t be simple since 70% of Franklin Township's 34,000 residents have no children in the schools.


I have legitimate reasons to consider… and I think some of you might just listen based on the fact that I have received several emails that say – “I am against the referendum, but I have some questions for you…”  So, let’s get into why it’s in your best interest to vote YES… even if you don’t have a child in the schools.

TRAFFIC, TRAFFIC, TRAFFIC.

This is an easy one, so I will quickly throw it out.  I know many of you won’t initially consider this a reason to spend tax money and vote YES… until the referendum doesn’t pass and you try to drive anywhere in Franklin Township during the morning or middle afternoon hours of the day.  Then, you will be yelling and screaming!  Don’t say you won’t because I promise there will be a line of you at the podium at the first 3 school board meetings telling the schools they need to do something about this traffic.  I sat on the School Board for 4 years – I know – and I’d bet on it today! 


8,945 students… all have to get to school… all have to get home.

Did you know... most of those students get transported by 62 different buses that each hold up to 84 students... and they currently run 3 times a day in the morning and 3 times a day in the afternoon.

Have any of you, kids or no kids, ever driven anywhere near Franklin Road between Southport and Edgewood in the morning and afternoon at the start or end of school?  It has sometimes taken me 20 minutes to get out of the high school parking lot just with the students who drive… can you begin to imagine if all the buses were gone and the parents had to line up car after car to get their kids?  As my daughters would say, “OMG!”  That means “Oh My God” for old people who don’t text 24 hours a day!

Have any of you ever done the seemingly simple task of kindergarten pick up and drop off… at any of the Franklin Township elementary schools?  At Arlington Elementary not so long ago, there was a need for a police officer every day because the long pick up and drop off lines would cause big delays on Arlington Avenue… creating massive amounts of backed up traffic.  This was only for a couple of Kindergarten classes!  Multiply this by more than 10 times at each school based on the number of kids at each grade level when this referendum fails.


Think about the quality of life adjustment the lack of busing will present to all Franklin Township residents.  I’d very strongly consider the impact of this on your family.  You have absolutely no idea of the scope of infrastructure problems that will ensue on our roads.

By the way, a quick notes for parents of Franklin Township Students considering a NO vote…

Let’s talk a moment about the cost of taking your kids to school.  I’m not even talking about upset bosses and lost work hours.  I’m talking true hard costs for dropping off and picking up 180 times a year.

You know what, I’m not gonna tell you.  I’ll let an 8th grader named Bailey explain it to you.  And, before you ask, this is a true story.

Bailey’s Mom stopped to top off her gas tank the one night last week because she found the price of gas “down to” $3.33 per gallon.  When she got back in the car, Bailey had figured out the miles per gallon her truck got (15.26 miles per gallon).  She told Bailey if she missed the bus it would cost her 1 gallon or $3.33 to take her to school and drive back home.  So, Bailey said, “How much would it cost you to take me every day?”  Her Mom said “About $5.00 per day x 180 school days, so about $900.00 per year.”  Bailey then asked how much the referendum was going to cost.  I’m not making this up… it’s an 8th grader asking this question, folks.  Her Mom said it was going to cost them about $38.00 per month or about $456 per year.  So Bailey says, “So if you vote yes, it is going to save you $444.00 a year.”

Take a look at your own hard costs and consider the impact on you.

ART, MUSIC & PHYSICAL EDUCATION IN THE ELEMENTARY SCHOOLS

People that vote against this referendum would struggle to make the argument they care about the elementary school age children in Franklin Township.  If they did, they’d make sure this referendum passed so Wanamaker Elementary and Acton Elementary schools could remain open for their communities.  They’d make sure all of these kids could have the opportunity to take Art, Music and Physical Education.  They’d vote YES to make sure class sizes remained reasonable.  They’d make sure 81 teachers’ jobs wouldn’t be lost because as informed voters they’d understand the impact to kids of all ages in all of the Franklin Township schools.  The truth is… the people that vote against this referendum don’t value the role of the schools as they relate to the quality of the community they live in, or more importantly, they don’t understand the impact of this referendum on the quality of life in their community.


How many of you (no matter what your generation or your age) had the opportunity to take Art Class, Music Class and Physical Education Class in elementary school?  I’d venture to say almost all of you had art, music and PE. 

I know this… before current Franklin Township resident Barbara Fengya was a teacher in the Science Department at FCHS for many years… and before she more recently was the Director of Secondary Education Curriculum for Franklin Township Schools… she was an elementary student in Franklin Township in 1951.  That year, Mrs. Seal and Mrs. Nard taught dedicated Art and Music classes.  According to Mrs. Fengya in a conversation we had just this past week, she can remember them vividly all these years later. 

Come to think of it, I can remember my art and music and PE teachers in Elementary School as well.  As a matter of fact, Cindy Huffman, the current PE teacher at Wanamaker, was my PE teacher.  So, for “at least” the last 60 years, Franklin Township schools have had these dedicated programs at the elementary grades. 

Does anyone really believe it makes sense to regress 60 years and take those early opportunities away from the kids in Franklin Township?  People opposed to the referendum must not mind.

HOME VALUES

Here’s where what goes around comes around for those who vote against the referendum.  This vote affects all Franklin Township residents, and fortunately those who vote NO are not immune to the repercussions of a failed referendum.  If you have no sense of “the greater good” and contributing to the education of the future citizens and leaders of your community, then let me get to the first thing that will impact you… home values.

Before I do… I digress briefly.  (Sorry, I know, I’m easily distracted today!)  Do you think our public schools aren’t worth the money you are being asked to pay for this referendum?  Here’s a list of the universities our current top ten high school seniors are either attending or have been accepted to:  Yale University, University of Notre Dame, Northwestern University, Brigham Young University, Indiana University, Purdue University, and the University of South Dakota.  Now you tell me what type of leadership and economic impact these young people will have in your Franklin Township community years from now if they were to choose to move back and raise their families here (like many of you have)?  Will these be the kind of schools they will want their kids to be taught in years from now?  Are you setting an example of a community that cares about all of its children… a community that wants its kids to come back and raise their families in Franklin Township?  Or, do you just care about what’s in this for you right now?   

Okay, now back to the topic I was leading into… your home values.  Up to 15% of the value of a home is determined by the quality of the school corporation within which it sits. 

Think about why so many of you moved to Franklin Township.  Great community… Nice neighborhoods… Good schools…  Close to downtown Indianapolis… Many other important amenities close by.

Now, here’s what happens when a NO vote takes place.  Class sizes get bigger.  Kids lose opportunities to have classes in the arts at all age levels.  As these classes are taken away, good parents who want those opportunities for their children will get fed up.  Caring parents will want their kids in school environments where they will have exposure to art, music and PE like every other elementary age kid in this state… and they will want reasonable class sizes… so they either move altogether or put their kids in the local private schools.


“The Bubble”

Don’t get too excited private school parents thinking this growth is great for you… because now you lose “your bubble”.  What is that?  It is the reason one of my very best friends sends his kids to private school as he explained to me.  He feels that paying the tuition to have them in private school keeps them away from some of the negative elements of public schools… some of the bad seeds or the distractions that public schools have inherently in each classroom (after all public schools are there to serve ALL kids, regardless of their cultural or socio-economic conditions).  So, when the loving parents of the marginally behaving kids decide to send their kids to your private school classrooms, your bubble begins to burst.  Your class sizes grow and you have some lesser performing or lesser attentive kids in your kid’s classrooms than what you might prefer.  The end result - all of that private school tuition you pay becomes diluted because your kids get less attention than they did before.  As my friend said, “It only takes one or two challenging kids added to a class.”  All of this happens because instead of supporting the referendum and keeping the public school kids where they are so you can “protect” your private school environment… you said you don’t want to pay additional taxes to support the public schools your kids don’t go to.


The funny thing is that some of you private school parents will eventually decide it isn’t worth the private school tuition you are paying because you no longer have your protected “bubble” and the advantages you previously had with smaller school sizes, such as greater participation opportunities for your kids at the private school, so you’ll decide to send your kids to public school… then wish you had the bus transportation, smaller class sizes, art, music and PE for your young kids.  How ironic will that be?
So, to quickly recap and predict the future… 81 fewer teachers, schools closed, programs cut and the trends of rising test scores we’ve become accustomed to now reverse.  You see, the schools hands are tied and they just aren’t able to be quite as good as they once were.  More parents then move their kids to other schools… instead of “urban flight” I’ll call it SUBURBAN FLIGHT.  What’s left is a declining school system in both performance and even in behavior.  Lower performing students in larger classes lead to lower graduation rates and lower graduation rates lead to higher crime rates.  More kids get left behind.  Now this community gets to foot the bill of more tax dollars required to increase police presence, service the judicial system and contribute to government assistance programs so we may help those that we consciously chose not to properly prepare in our schools so they could help themselves. 

Most importantly, new families considering Franklin Township as a potential home see the performance of the schools slipping… they see a community that doesn’t value education because it voted down 2 referendums… and they observe higher crime rates – then they simply choose not to move their families into the homes available in Franklin Township.  They think their kids will have better OPPORTUNITIES elsewhere in communities that care about their schools and value education.  Now, homes sit on the market even longer than they are today.  Home values diminish even further.  All of you in the older generation and those of you without children decide you are ready to sell your Franklin Township properties, but you and your families cannot get the value you believe the home is worth.  Why?  Because your NO vote for this referendum set off a chain of events in Franklin Township that started this community on a downward spiral. 

Need a real life visual example?  IPS is my example… with no disrespect intended to anyone.  URBAN FLIGHT  took place because as socioeconomic conditions deteriorated in certain areas, many residents with the financial means available chose to send their kids to better schools, which led to declining enrollments, lesser student performance and lower home values for those who remain.   Just because one is urban and Franklin Township is suburban means nothing… and it also has nothing to do with the efforts and caring of professional teachers, whether it be at IPS or in Franklin Township.  Most teachers do everything within their power to reach and help kids.  Just know this downward spiral can absolutely happen as a result of this vote and it can happen rapidly.         


Let’s play this out a bit further… what type of housing then gets built in Franklin Township to meet the lower socio-economic conditions the market demands?  Higher density housing gets approved and built, which leads to more crime and even more traffic… yes, more traffic than will be created with 8,945 children being taken to school and picked up from school every day throughout Franklin Township.


What’s In It For Me?

I mentioned in an earlier message the concept of it takes village to raise a child.  In prior generations, there was a high value placed on education.  Many years ago, back in 1838, Horace Mann published six principles that he believed to be the foundation to sustain the American way of life.  Here are the first two; (1) the public should not remain ignorant; (2) education should be paid for, controlled, and sustained by an interested public.

Well, are you part of the interested public or part of the ignorant public?  When you say, “I can think of better ways to use my money than to give it to the schools”, I think about these emails I’ve received in the last week:

There’s an 83 year old man in Franklin Township who sent me this message last week: 

I feel strongly that this MUST pass. I am 83 years old and you might wonder why I'm interesting is seeing this pass. Well, to start with I have two grand-children in the Township system. A grand-daughter at Acton and a grandson at Middle East. I can't imagine that any parents or grandparents could oppose this referendum. But for those others with no close ties there are many reasons why they should support this. I live in a condo association of 140 units, not one child to be seen.  I have worked out what this would mean for a condo such as mine and it only amounts to $89.00/half.”

Here’s a message from another Franklin Township Resident:

I guess I feel people who don't vote yes this time around should stop and think about their own budget.  If the main bread winner of the family was to loss their job for one reason or another, what would average person do?  We first would drop the "Extras" in our lives; i.e. dish, high speed internet, cell phones, going out to eat, and peanut butter and jelly instead of steak.  We would use our savings to pay our debt. Eventually, down size to a cheaper living situation.  We might even look at family to help us in our time of crisis.  I guess I feel that Dr. Bourke is doing just that.  He has cut the extras out of the budget, used the rainy day fund to keep our schools open to maintain status quo for our students, and has given us a choice to down size and risk losing valuable assets to commercial investors (ie. Charter schools) or ask our family for help.  I guess I feel I am the family.  I chose to make Franklin Township my community to raise my children, therefore this community is my family.  I gave tough love with my vote the last time, but the cuts in the budget have shown the willingness to attempt to make amends to the Financial issues, and now it is my turn to step in and help by supporting the referendum to keep the school status quo to prevent my family from losing a valuable asset -a strong foundation of our youth who will lead us in the future. I would do no less if the school district was my own family (child, sister, brother, or parent).  This is why I am voting yes this time around.

Before I give you a few more faces of those who will be impacted by this referendum vote below, I’ll pose a final question for you to think about.  Where is our society going?  Those of you who won’t vote for this referendum are likely the same people who will place blame on these young kids for not caring and not contributing to society.


You have a chance to be a role model.  You have a vote that could make sure kids continue to have tremendous educational opportunities… but only when you invest in them and lift them up by providing the opportunities can you fairly hold them accountable.  Don’t you dare come complaining about the troubled youth and deteriorating neighborhoods and home values when you make the decision to vote against schools and directly harm kids!


The schools are the hub of the Franklin Township community.  Youth sports leagues already pay higher fees to cover the costs once absorbed by the tax payers for the use of our schools.  “Pay to play” has already been created and is in full swing… and I am one of many paying $170-$180 for each sport my youngest daughter plays.  Parents are already bearing the burden of these tough times, so extra-curricular activities are not what you are paying for with a YES vote.  You certainly aren’t paying for my older daughter’s high school show choir because I wrote the checks totalling $1,800 to give her that opportunity… an opportunity you very well may be taking away from her with a NO vote as the high school show choir directors are casualties of this referendum and the program may no longer exist.


Please just think of the impact of your vote before you cast it. 

WHO’S BEING AFFECTED… MORE PROFILES OF THOSE WHO WILL SUFFER THIS WEEK: 

Cherie Whitacker, FTMS East & West - Health / PE Teacher of 19 Years

Another one of the 85 teachers on the cut list, Cherie started her career in Franklin Township and hoped to end it here, but out of fear has started back to school concerned she is going to have to make a career change if the referendum is voted down.

Marci Atkins, CIP Instructional Assistant, Thompson Crossing Elementary

Marci is currently an instructional assistant (and also a licensed teacher).  She had hoped that the experience in Franklin Township would lead to a classroom teaching position, but instead in the three years that she has been an employee in Franklin Township Schools (she is also a resident in Franklin Township), her health insurance costs have quadrupled, she no longer get paid for any holidays, and if the referendum fails she will not have any health insurance at all.  She makes a very low hourly wage to work with “the most challenging and wonderful students in our schools” (her words).  She is also a parent who, like any of us, has to have health insurance. If this referendum fails, what will she do?  This is just to let you know that it is not only great teachers that are being impacted.  And also, don’t tell me all we have is a bunch of overpaid people working for our schools.

Karie Cook, Proud Mom – I’ll let Karie share her message in her own words below:

“I moved to this township because of the school system.  So, I completely understand the importance of our children.  My youngest daughter came to Franklin Township with a C, D average.   
Within one grading period at Thompson Crossing, taught by the awesome young teacher, Mrs. Huff, my daughter earned A’s and B’s for the first time!  Oh did I mention, my daughter has medical issues and that grading period she was absent 14 days!
We have been in the township for three years now and my youngest daughter is still earning A’s & B’s.  Both my daughters are active in sports and music. Also, they both are almost always on Honor Roll.  They both benefit greatly from the programs offered by our township.”

Register To Vote – Time is running out!

Voter registration ends April 4th… Register online at:   www.Indianavoters.in.gov

Have a great week!
   
   

Tuesday, March 15, 2011

Franklin Township Referendum Message 3.14.11

 
Hello everyone. 
This paragraph is my weekly disclaimer for new readers:  If you are getting this email, it is likely because you asked to be on my mailing list or I knew you to be a Franklin Township resident and I thought you’d like to be informed on some things you might not know related to the School REFERENDUM vote in May.  My name is Geoff Horen and I am a past Franklin Township School Board Member (2004-2008).  These days, I’m just a Dad of two girls… one who cheers, plays basketball and softball in the 7th grade… and the other who is a show choir girl as a freshman in high school.  In the coming weeks, I am going to write a series of emails focused on different issues surrounding the referendum vote.  They will be polite, but they will not be politically correct.  Quite honestly, I will share the reality of how we got here and what happens if this referendum does not pass.  I will also address the reasons why some may not support the referendum.   I understand I may not ultimately gain any new friends from these emails, but that’s okay.  In my 4 years on the school board, if I learned anything, I learned that you can try to do the right thing and still make a lot of people upset.  So, if at any time you don’t want to get these messages any longer, just drop me an email and I will quickly remove you from the list.  Conversely, if you want me to add someone, get me their email as well or have them send me a short note.  By the way, I send a message out each Monday called my Monday Motivation.  You may see it come through later in the day.  I send that out to about 1,000 people, some of whom are already receiving it on this email list.  It is easiest for me to send these out in the same email system, so just delete the other messages if you don’t want to be “motivated”… and watch for more of these Referendum messages in the weeks to come.
This is Message #2 being sent today.  If you missed a previous message, fell free to drop me a note and I will send it to you!

Today’s message begins with a review of the response I received from all of you to Message #1 last week.  I expected a decent amount of response, but I received far more than expected.  If you replied to me, please know I have read it.  Also, please know if you don’t get a direct response from me, I promise I will be addressing your questions or concerns in this message or a future message in the coming weeks.  Unfortunately, I’ve got to make some money to feed my kids and this referendum writing gig I’ve created doesn’t pay any bills! 
The most important thing last week’s response told me was that this issue of the referendum on May 3rd is very complex and different issues are important to different people.  There are many moving parts to the referendum.  Transportation, tax caps, funding per student, the state’s role in this mess, classroom performance, losing great teachers, class sizes… I can’t even begin to name all of the topics touched upon by readers.  I received countless questions on various topics and I also received a number of opinions.  It was very insightful and it’s given me much to respond to and write about in the coming weeks.  People in Franklin Township clearly are interested in this issue, but many are uninformed or just a bit misinformed.  I know that the school corporation has held countless meetings, but a lot of the information is missing a large segment of the FT population.  That is to be expected at some level, and that is why I’m personally taking the viral, online approach to reach those who might be hiding!  Please help me find those in hiding. 
As you read these messages, please share them with others.  People have to be informed in order to understand what they are voting on, which means having a place to ask their questions and get answers.  Send those questions to me.  If people do not understand, then they will not vote – or they may not vote to do the right thing!  And, if they don’t vote, you get the honor of driving your kids to and from school for 180 mornings and afternoons a year… waiting in long lines of traffic, listening to the same songs over and over and over with your kids!    
One of the emails I received this past week was from a very nice woman who said, “I’m giving you the opportunity to ‘win’ my vote for May and help me to understand this whole referendum and how it ‘should’ work for our kids.”  So, now that I know there are open-minded people who want to understand, I will begin today’s message with the continued goal to give you information and plenty to think about… all in an effort to help you make an educated decision in May.
INTERSTATE WALLS AND SCHOOL BUILDINGS
How often do you drive on Interstate 465?  Whether you drive on the west side, the northwest side, or even here on the east side of the city just north of Washington Street - we’ve all observed the miles and miles of concrete walls put up maybe 15’-20’ tall along either side of the highway.  Millions and millions of dollars spent.
Did anyone ask you whether you wanted those walls constructed?  After all, you are taxpayers and those were taxpayer funds used for the construction of those walls.
Who do the walls benefit?  Well, I’ve thought long and hard about that.  I’ve come up with 2 groups of people that receive benefit.  The people that chose to build or purchase houses close the existing highway who now are protected from the noise (didn’t they know full well they’d hear the highway when they moved in?)… and the people who got paid to design, construct and install the walls.
I’ve been told the walls were constructed because the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has some sort of designated noise level that was being exceeded by the growth in traffic on the interstate, so the walls became a requirement.  I don’t know if it is true, but if so that’s interesting!
Franklin Township has also has had an issue, but the EPA wasn’t involved.  Instead of a growth in highway traffic, we had a growth in the number of students… incredibly rapid growth, by hundreds of students every year.  In the case of Franklin Township, we did not build walls for noise on the highway.  We built schools.
So, let’s talk about that. 
Let me take you back to the early 2000’s, when FTCSC (Franklin Township Community School Corporation) built the Kitley Intermediate School  that could house 1,200 kids… and almost immediately that school was full of the 5th and 6th graders – to the point portable classrooms were installed outside the building a year after the place was opened.  At the same time, Thompson Crossing was being constructed… and we were out of classroom space throughout many elementary schools in the township almost as quickly as Thompson Crossing was built.  Actually, in fairness, some elementary schools were busting at the seams while some had a bit of capacity, but school populations weren’t balanced properly based on excessive growth on the east side of the township.  And, finally, at yet about that same time, the only middle school at the time (now known as FTMS West) had a slew of portable classrooms sitting outside its building because of overcrowding.  I need to make sure I don’t forget to specifically mention the portable classrooms at Wanamaker Elementary and Arlington Elementary, because there were actual assigned times for kids to use the bathrooms in those buildings based on overcrowding and too few bathrooms for the student population.  Oh, I forgot to mention the high school, where growth was becoming such an issue that an entire second high school was being discussed.
Why did we have such problems regarding where to put those kids?  Certainly it was just the school corporation wasting money… correct?  That’s what I’ve heard several times in the reply to my first email message last week.  If I’d quote, I believe the common phrase would be “If they’d just quit building all of them schools.”
Well, unlike the walls around the interstate, our school system HAD to build places to house the kids that came by the hundreds, year after year.  Here’s a statistic:
Enrollment grew by 2,598 students from 2000-2007.  It was an enrollment increase of 46% in seven years.  We were the fourth fastest growing school corporation in the State of Indiana in that time period.  When the previous administration initiated the last major construction project, no one could foresee the impact of property tax caps because they weren’t even a consideration.
Read that again.  Our enrollment increased by 46% in seven years!  And, they came at all ages.  In my time on the board, we were seeing huge growth in the elementary school grades and they were increasing at a rapid rate each year.  Then, this crazy thing happens – those elementary kids grow up – so they move on to our intermediate schools, then our middle schools and finally our high school… so we had to plan ahead and make sure we had a place for them.  There was not one mention of a property tax cap when those projects were considered and approved.
Now, I know many might think since a house can be thrown up in 4 months, what’s the big deal about building a school?  Well, Rome wasn’t built in a day… or so I’ve heard… and it takes about 3 years to get a school built and ready for kids from the first conversations to opening the doors.  So, imagine sitting in a room in 2004 and looking at the landscape in the township.  Portable classroom trailers at many buildings and no end in sight of new construction in the township.  Hindsight may well be 20/20 for some of you, but we had to plan ahead with what we knew and continue to act.  So we did… and we did it very responsibly.
We spent many evenings and many hours (away from our own kids I might add) talking to architects and construction managers and reviewing school designs and projected costs.  We looked at firms that had already created real buildings (already in use) - we didn’t add to our cost for customization… so we used cookie cutter schools and we didn’t recreate the wheel.  We looked at buildings that had the most cost effective price per square foot and asked if they would meet our needs, which they did.
We ended up partnering with companies we’d never before used in Franklin Township and we built the most cost effective schools offered in the marketplace.  From these efforts, we ended up with the new South Creek Elementary, the new Edgewood Intermediate, the new Middle School East and the new Freshman Academy.  If you go back to the minutes of school board meetings in those days, I promise you that in the minutes will be conversation after conversation about cost and efficiency and meeting our educational needs. 
Ask me why we didn’t just build another Kitley Intermediate replica when we added the second 5th grade / 6th grade building?  We didn’t because we could build the Edgewood Intermediate that you see in place today at a better price point.  Ask me why we didn’t just replicate the Thompson Crossing Elementary we just completed?  We didn’t because we found a building design and floor plan for South Creek that was a bit smaller and far more cost effective.  As a brief side note, we were so conservative that we built the elementary gym at South Creek entirely too small (in my opinion).  It was a mistake with good intentions, but it was a mistake.
You see, this is a large part of what infuriates me about this referendum process.  People form opinions based on things they don’t know anything about.  You can’t just say we shouldn’t have built those schools.  YES, we should have and we absolutely did the right thing.  Knowing what we know today about the recession and the absolute halt to the building industry, it might have changed a few things, but not too many.  We still can’t fit all our middle school kids in one building.  We still can’t fit all our intermediate kids in one building.  We still couldn’t fit all of our high school kids in a building without the Freshman Academy… and the only reason Wanamaker and Acton Elementary schools would be closed is because we cannot afford to staff the buildings to keep them open if this referendum fails, so by combining the two elementary schools into one building, we can eliminate the support staff and administrative staff of an entire school building and achieve the savings the accompanies such a consolidation.
I understand you didn’t ask for the highway walls.  I understand everyone doesn’t jump up and down at the cost of new buildings to educate our kids.  But seriously, how important is education to this community?  These kids are our future.  We have a great thing going and I will bet most of you do not even know the educational successes FTCSC is experiencing.
Did you know our school district recently won the Lugar Education Patriot Award because of the efforts Franklin Township School Corporation in the areas of academic achievement and career preparation?  Franklin Township was only the 3rd school district in Indiana ever to receive that award.  
How did that happen?  Well, Dr. Bourke, our Superintendent, assumed leadership of the district in 2006 and by July of 2007 he assembled a new administrative staff that was much smaller and highly focused on results.  They poured over all of the data available and they changed programs.  They worked with the outstanding teachers in Franklin Township who spend their days with your children and grandchildren… and in working together they made Franklin Township a district that ranked 2nd in growth of Mathematics scores and ranked 4th in growth of English / Language Arts… all in just 2 years.
In the spring of 2010, the gains made by Franklin Township Students exceeded the state average in every single content area and at every single grade level.  Do you realize how difficult that is?   They achieved this through creating a focus on a core curriculum, implementing assessment systems to make sure kids weren’t being left behind, they made decisions based on information that came from the assessments… and they supported the instruction taking place in the classroom.  They implemented a K-12 writing initiative.  They implemented an online student information system where parents could see their kids grades, they implemented a new K-6 math series, they differentiated learning to help kids who struggled in the traditional classroom structure, and they implemented a professional development plan that gave teachers the mentoring and support structure to help one another, which in turn allows them to better help their kids.  As a side note, they did all of this while offering incredible opportunities for kids at all age levels in the arts and various extra-curricular activities.  In short, they offered opportunities we as adults only wish we could have had at their age! 
Right now, the performance of Franklin Township schools exceeds most other schools in the state of Indiana, in spite of the per student funding rank of #306 out of #349 school systems.  Franklin Township Schools are ranked as High Growth and High Achievement school systems in the State of Indiana’s rating system.
And… in case you failed to notice... just this past week on Wednesday, March 9th, the Indiana Department of Education named its prestigious list of “Four Star Schools”.  Out of 1,808 schools in Indiana, they named 188 schools as “Four Star”… and 2 of your Franklin Township schools were named to the list.  Congratulations to South Creek Elementary and Kitley Intermediate schools!
Ironic isn’t it that these 2 school buildings… both buildings that people complain about having been built in recent years because they are newer and added to the debt service… these are the schools recognized by the Department of Education as among the state’s very best schools for our children.
So, FT schools really aren’t like the walls on the interstate… because you as Franklin Township Taxpayers get to decide what happens with your tax dollars here. 
You need to understand very clearly that what you are voting on in the referendum on May 3rd is not the buildings themselves, but you are voicing your support for what is going on inside the buildings every single day with the kids of Franklin Township.  These kids will be your future leaders.  They will be the ones who will be making decisions that will affect you when you get old and somebody has to take care of you (and me)!
You don’t want to pay for buildings and buses and debt and so on?  I get it at some level… but I find it extremely ironic that I, as an “almost” 40 year old man, have paid all of my working life into a social security program that funds the retirement of seniors… a program that I will most likely never see a dime of because it will be bankrupt… and I have never once complained about doing so.  Yet, I hear so many in Franklin Township say “I don’t have kids in the schools and I shouldn’t have to pay for them.”  I thought people of my parent’s generation and my grandparent’s generation wanted more for their kids.  I thought they valued education and saw the benefits to the community.   What am I missing? 
I will end with one final topic.  I’ve recently seen the list of 85 teachers who will lose their jobs. 
It sickens me.  There are a lot of great teachers on this list and a lot of great people who give themselves to your kids.  Over the course of the next few weeks, I’m gonna tell you about a few of them and they don’t know I’m doing it.  If teachers get mad at me for doing this, I apologize in advance.
Curtis Holland, FTMS East Middle School Tech Ed Teacher
Mr. Holland has taught kids in our township for 28 years.  The Technical Education program will be eliminated at the middle school level, so this man’s career will be cut short in Franklin Township… not because he isn’t doing his job well - he is… but because your vote will be that a Tech Ed program at the middle school level isn’t important enough.  Now tell me, how many kids benefit from what used to be Industrial Arts and now is Technical Education?  Do you have any idea what these kids are learning to do with computers in the technical fields prior to high school?  Did you get the opportunity to take a class like this in the last 20-50 years?  I know the answer is yes.  So, why shouldn’t your kids? 
Brian Dunn, FCHS Creative Writing and 9th Grade English Teacher 
You should see the email this teacher sent the parents of the cross country and track kids he coaches after school every day.  The email was forwarded to me by a caring parent who is so upset at the idea of losing this great young teacher.  I hear his creative writing class is fantastic… oh well… sorry, that will be gone with your NO vote.  Do you know what he said to the parents?
I also have a bit of bad news to share. As I expected, my name is unfortunately on the RIF list for the 2011-2012 school year. 85 other teachers and I confirmed the news Friday at 3:00 PM that if the referendum does not pass we are most likely out of jobs in Franklin Township next year… As bad as this news was to take on Friday, it was my XC and track family that raised my spirits after I checked the list… I'm not sure outsiders can ever really understand how special this program is to me, the other coaches, fellow alumni, and the boys. Sometimes we say we're like a family and it's never felt as true to me as it did on a rainy Friday… As you can well imagine, I want more than anything to stay in Franklin Township as a teacher and coach.”
Two teachers… one very experienced, one on the younger side… the loss of both would greatly impact our kids.  Yeah, you’ll be able to save some money, but what is the education of our kids’ worth to you?
That’s enough for this week.  Just know every week you are going to have a face to put to this vote because I am going to put the faces in front of you.  This referendum vote is about people… primarily kids and teachers… not buses and buildings as some of you will make it out to be.  Your tax dollars are paying for a product, but the product is the STUDENTS, not the buses and buildings.  The buses and buildings are the tools used to help improve your product... the STUDENTS.
Have a great week!  And, send me your emails… I’m ready for the questions and I am ready for the hate mail!

Franklin Township Referendum Message 3.7.11

Hello everyone. 

If you are getting this email, it is likely because you asked to be on my mailing list or I knew you to be a Franklin Township resident and thought you’d like to be informed about things you might not know related to the School REFERENDUM vote in May.  My name is Geoff Horen and I am a past Franklin Township School Board Member (2004-2008).  These days, I’m just a Dad of two girls… one who cheers, plays basketball and softball in the 7th grade… and the other who is a show choir girl as a freshman in high school.  In the coming weeks, I'm writing a series of emails focused on different issues surrounding the referendum vote.  They will be polite, but they will not be politically correct.  Quite honestly, I'll share the reality of how we got here and what happens if this referendum does not pass.  I will also address the reasons why some may not support the referendum.   I understand I may not ultimately gain any new friends from these emails, but that’s okay.  In my 4 years on the school board, if I learned anything, I learned that you can try to do the right thing and still make a lot of people upset.  So, if at any time you don’t want to get these messages any longer, just drop me an email and I will quickly remove you from the list.  Conversely, if you want me to add someone, get me their email as well or have them send me a short note.  By the way, I send a message out each Monday called my Monday Motivation.  You may see it come through later in the day.  I send that out to about 1,000 people, some of whom are already receiving it on this email list.  It is easiest for me to send these out in the same system, so just delete the other messages if you don’t want to be “motivated”… and watch for more of these Referendum messages in the weeks to come.
  
As I begin these messages, since this is such a complex issue, I will start by sharing a bit of a history so people understand the dynamics of the funding problem.

In my opinion, there was a very short era in our school system in the early 2000’s where there was some overspending in areas that might not have been entirely necessary… and my frustration at the time was that the overspending was taking place when there were other needs such as getting kids out of portable trailers used for classrooms.  We had experienced so much growth year after year with families moving into the township that we didn’t have enough classrooms for kids, so our school administrators were doing what they needed to do – they were building schools and trying to find places to put kids.  As we placed $4.3 million dollars in the direction of the stadium, it became the face of the problem and a source of frustration for many.  It was not because the facility didn’t need an upgrade… it did… just not to the point of gaining mention in Sports Illustrated.  This frustration was one of the reasons I considered running for the board in 2004 – I felt some of the priorities were out of whack. 

Now, having expressed my frustration with those events that took place more than 7 years ago, and to be fair they really only took place for a short period of time, we need to really put this whole perceived overspending in a proper perspective.  Understanding these facilities get a tremendous amount of use by our students and our community yet today, in my personal estimation, our township schools at that time overspent by about 5 million dollars between the stadium, some excesses at the Administration building… and I will also throw Thompson Crossing Elementary in this category because of the inordinately large square footage for an elementary and the nice, but unnecessary, cherry wood wall paneling and doors.  Everyone’s number could be different, and your overspending number may not even be as high as mine, but I am being overly critical to make a point.

To place this potential overspending in context, we have a total of $308,484,544.00 of total debt service at this time.  This is based on all the construction of our schools over the last several years, all of which is a direct result of all of the growth our township has experienced.  My overly critical 5 million dollar waste number is somwhere between 1% and 2% of the total “current” debt service.  Now, you may choose not to believe that, but given what I know from having been there and involved in the details, this is my assessment.  In my business, I would be pleased to experience only 1% to 2% waste.  All in all, I think Franklin Township administrators have been a very good steward of the tax dollars. 

Take into account that our total assessed valuation for Franklin Township is currently $1,715,166,186.00 and a challenge emerges.  The 1% property tax cap presented by Mitch Daniels and passed by the State of Indiana has reduced the amount of dollars the school system has available to pay the debt service for all of our growth.  The assessed valuation number is 50% of what it was and this is killing Franklin Township schools.  The fact is without a referendum there will be no dollars left to pay for bus transportation after we pay the annual portion of the debt service on the $308 million described above.  To cut through all of the numbers, just know that Franklin Township lost $9.7 million dollars in funding annually because of the 1% tax cap in the CAPITAL PROJECTS FUND, which facilitates buildings and funds the debt, etc.  The loss of that $9.7 million annually means we barely have enough dollars to pay our interest on debt service from the schools constructed… and that fund is also supposed to also cover the utility bills for the school buildings.  Oh, by the way, the law says we have to provide transportation for some types of students (IE – Special needs, etc.).  Since we will not be getting enough money to have a Transportation Fund, we will now be paying for that transportation out of our GENERAL FUND, which is already 3.1 million underfunded.  Are you getting the idea yet?

So, when someone tells you it is a dirty trick for the schools to cut bus transportation and they cannot do that… the reality is they will HAVE TO… not because they choose to but because they will have no money to fund it without a referendum being passed.

So, should you get mad at our current Superintendent, Dr. Bourke, for this?  NO.  How about getting mad at the current school board?  NO. 

Who should you get mad at?  Well, I think Franklin Township should be furious with the state legislature and our Governor for their approach to funding education.  If the state house wasn’t so crowded with union people protesting, I’d suggest a Franklin Township day at the state house where residents go to express their frustration.  However, at this point, I don’t think it would even get noticed.

I will tell you what did get noticed… the lawsuit Franklin Township Schools and two other school systems brought against the State of Indiana for unfair funding.  The state tried to get the case thrown out, but a judge reviewed the case and sided with the schools that there is a valid concern on behalf of the school systems… so the case moves forward.  That is a very big deal and should let you know there is an issue.

Our school administration cannot control the 1% tax caps.  Our school leadership cannot control the dollars the state distributes unevenly and unfairly per student across the state.  Our school system had no control in getting only 75% of new student funding each year for years because we were being penalized for being a growing school system.  We were one of the 3 fastest growing school systems in the state for several years, but only got 75 cents on the dollar for each new student we received… so you can imagine the funding impact that has had.  How does Franklin Township, a growing school district for years and years, rank 306 out of 349 school systems in Indiana in terms of funding per student?  How is it that if we were funded the same as IPS in per student dollars, we would have $26 million more to work with and we wouldn’t be talking about losing 81 teachers and all of the programs that will be lost?

To the state’s credit, they are working on adapting the funding formula so it does a better job of having the money follow the student.  But, the compliments to the state stop right there.  Did you know that as part of the funding formula the State of Indiana uses to determine what money schools get per student, there are grants being given to school systems whose base level of funding per student was reduced?  They are called Restoration Grants and school systems get this because the funding formula changes dropped the dollars per pupil they get.  So, follow me here… the state says you as a school system have been getting too much money for years, so we are giving you less money per student… but we feel bad for giving you less money so we are going to give you a Restoration Grant to make up lost funds.  That’s interesting.  Does Franklin Township get that?  NO.  Ask me why.  Because we were already so poorly funded as a school system and the State was already giving us so few dollars per student as a school system that our funding levels couldn’t drop with the changes the state made… so we don’t get the extra dollars offered by a Restoration Grant because we weren’t getting sufficient dollars in the first place.  It is sickening. 

Along these lines, did you know that for each of my years on the school board… and it may well still be going on in some form… we could not get our funding sent to the school system in a timely manner.  So, do you know what we had to do?  We actually had to “get a loan” each year and use taxpayer dollars to pay interest on that loan while we waited on the taxpayer dollars to arrive.  Can you fathom that?

It is an immensely broken system.   

I could go on and on… and I will in the weeks to come on various issues.

But the point for today is this… quit blaming the Franklin Township School Board.  Quit blaming the Franklin Township School Administration.  Don’t think about blaming the teachers.  It is not on any of them.  Talk to your legislative representatives about the funding per student issue.

Let’s be clear - property taxes will increase - but, let’s be accurate.  They will not increase to the levels they were before the 1% tax cap.  Since 2004 when I was elected to the school board, I've watched the State of Indiana fund public education less and less… and while doing so they have pushed the decision making and the burden to the local communities.  Essentially, they have pushed decisions down to the local level through insufficient state funding… then they have allowed the communities themselves to fund the added expense to make up the difference.  

I have no problem with local control.  I believe it is the right thing to do.  Let the communities decide how their money is spent in their local areas.  I have no problem with the referendum… as long as the proper information is presented and people understand WHY the money is needed.
  
Then, if a community such as Franklin Township votes against this again and places little value on education, the Franklin Township community will get exactly what it deserves.

You need to really start talking to your friends and neighbors about this right now.  Feel free to forward these messages to anyone who might listen.  If not, let me tell you what is going to happen.  People will be apathetic.  They won’t come out and vote and they won’t make a point to go and get registered to vote.  You can be sure the opposition will come out and vote against it.  They did the last time the referendum failed.  So, for years to come, you will have the pleasure of sitting in 30 minute lines dropping your kids off for school each day… and another 30 minutes picking them up.  Another Dad told me last night it will be like waiting to get out of a parking garage for a Pacer Game or a Colts Game… two times every day for an entire school year!  Don’t think this won’t also impact the residents without kids in school.  If you live near a school in Franklin Township… and how can you not live near a school… this is gonna impact you!

There are 8,945 students in the Franklin Township School System.  That's a lot of potential YES votes if people are informed and they decide to do something about it… if they stop blaming the stadium and if they stop blaming school leaders for issues beyond their control.

Finally, I was at my high school daughter’s show choir competition this past weekend at North Central High School.  I was sitting next to a Dad from Ft. Wayne Carroll High School.  That school had come to a show choir competition hosted by Franklin Central the previous week.  He was so complimentary of our school and facilities.  They really enjoyed their time at FC.  Here’s the funny part of the conversation.  He said, “Man, that stadium is huge.  How much did it cost?”  I told him 4.3 million.  He said, “Oh, that’s not bad.  We just completed a $9 million dollar field house project for our school system.”

So, please keep things in perspective.  At least we aren’t Ft. Wayne!  We may have been the first to build a big athletic oriented facility, but there have been many, many schools since who have followed in recent years with monstrous athletic facilities… Warren, Carmel, Westfield and Franklin Community to name a few… oh, and obviously Ft. Wayne!

Have a great week everyone!

Perception Is Reality (Written On 2.21.11)

One of my favorite phrases is the following:

“Perception is reality.”

It’s unfortunate that this is the case, but in all aspects of life, it is very true.

Years ago in Franklin Township on the southeast side of Indianapolis, the school board approved the construction of a 4.3 million dollar football stadium.  The majority of residents were furious at the time… and still today that decision made many years ago resonates with every education funding issue in Franklin Township.  The school system has a second referendum in May up for public vote (the first attempt failed) and without support for this referendum, 81 teachers will lose their jobs and all bus transportation in Franklin Township will go away.  Yes, back to the days my grandparents talked about walking 5 miles to school with no shows… uphill both ways!  Or, more likely, a bunch of furious parents will all be dropping off their kids at exactly the same time and traffic jams will ensue the likes of which have never been seen in Indianapolis.

Do you know the number one reason this referendum may not pass?  And I quote, “Because if ‘they’ (they being the schools) wouldn’t have wasted the money on that stadium, we wouldn’t need this money today.

Is that true?  No.  Most people have no idea the state funds education today and that Franklin Township is ranked around #306 out of 349 schools in funding per pupil.  Most people don’t know that Franklin Township has been getting inadequate funding for years based on the fact that they have always been a growing school district and the school funding formula from the state has always been unfair to growing school systems.  Most people don’t even know that all schools don’t get the same amount of money per child.  Most people don’t know there are seven different funds for schools and you can’t just take money out of one fund to pay for another. 

Perception is the stadium sits there, so the schools don’t need any money because they could have used that money to pay teachers. 

Is it true?  No.

So what does this have to do with anything?

Well, if this referendum fails, then my freshman daughter likely loses her show choir director.  You see, forget his incredible job performance and forget the countless hours spent helping kids outside of school.  Forget the fact that this past weekend, when they had a show choir competition at Ben Davis High School, he arrived at about 7:30am to prepare for the competition and the buses got back to the school after 1:30am on Sunday morning… so he probably left around 2:00am.  Ignore the fact that he has dedicated weeks to the kids during the summer and invested ridiculous amounts of personal time to help these kids.  He just doesn’t have enough years of service.  So his job will go away and he will likely be replaced with a more tenured elementary education music teacher who will shift to the high school.  This will be possible because Franklin Township will no longer have music, art and physical education in the elementary schools if this referendum passes.  What is wrong with this picture?  And this is not in any way being critical of the current school administration... they are in a "no win" situation and I have great respect for them.

So, here is my musically inclined daughter who has given up sports to pursue her love of music, along with about 100 other musically inclined kids active in show choirs at Franklin Central… who will no longer have the opportunities they have today.  Add to these kids another 400 kids who participate in the other high school choirs and the orchestra that will also be a casualty of the referendum, and you have now just affected 20% of the high school age kids in Franklin Township.  This is just one example of one segment of the student population that will be negatively affected, not to mention every elementary age student who will not have art, music or PE.

Why?  Perception about the waste created by the construction of a football stadium built almost 10 years ago.

The continuous improvements our society has made over the years are incredible, but somewhere along the way we have lost our priorities.  I’m not a big Hillary Clinton fan, but her concept years ago of it takes a village to raise a child… that has some merit.  A community should support the education of its kids.    

So do me a favor this week if you would… the next time you are forced to make a decision of any significance, please take the time to gather information and get the facts for yourself.  You just may never know the true ramifications of an uninformed, emotional decision. 
   
Have a great week everyone!