February 7, 2012

Downriver Election Results – Flat Rock School Board (Final)

Downriver Michigan Election Results

Downriver Michigan Election Results

Downriver Michigan Election Results

Flat Rock School Board (Final)

Incumbents (both unopposed, both elected): Amy Carter – 1377, Frank Hamet – 1151

Partial Terms (2 positions/winners, 3 candidates): Michelle Engelbert – 1196, Cathy Kamin – 1088, Sean Ryan – 864

Congratulations Amy, Frank, Michelle, and Cathy!

Millage Renewal

Yes – 1804

No – 717

Other important election results

State House of Representative (District 23): Pat Somerville – 15,742, Deb Kennedy – 13, 657

State Senate (District 7): Patrick Colbeck – 55,109, Kathleen Law – 42,961

Congratulations Pat and Patrick!

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Visiting Downriver Fix Michigan Center

Downriver GOP Campaign Center

Downriver GOP Campaign Center

Last Friday I attended the grand opening of the Downriver Fix Michigan Center. The opening of this Downriver Michigan GOP campaign headquarters officially kicks off the election cycle for our area of Southeast Michigan.

For voters in Michigan it also kicks off a period of anxiety, frustration, and possibly some tinge of hope still for our great State.

Our whole nation has been in turmoil and economic distress for several years now. However, Michigan has consistently managed to top the charts on all the wrong lists–unemployment and foreclosure to name a couple important ones.

Our politicians’ decisions can be traced to the core of most of our economic woes and challenges in mounting a recovery.

I enjoyed seeing the regular MI GOP faithful at the opening of the campaign center, but to be honest it’s not enough of what Michigan needs.

We need to do things differently in this election. We need to grab the energy and enthusiasm of new people. Not the political “center,” but the core of American idealism. We need people concerned about their families, their communities, and their nation. We need people who expect their politicians to serve them and those values, not their personal aspirations (or worse, their personal paycheck).

That’s who I hope will show up to lead the Michigan GOP efforts in this critical election cycle.

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Michigan Budget Update: Education Funding Still in Jeopardy

Michigan Education v. PoliticsMichigan is still without a viable balanced budget. However, the State only shut-down briefly before a continuation was past. A mixed blessing?

This debate and process is certain to be the single biggest impact to your children’s education in the next several years. Why?

You probably already know that K-12 public education is in the cross-hairs to take a $218 per pupil cut. However, what you might not realize is that this might only be the first of many years of declining funding if systemic problems in the Michigan budget system are not addressed.

I have parsed through the news to highlight some different arguments and deeper concerns in the Michigan budget. Hopefully, this will give you a clearer insight into the various debates and where we might be headed.

Obviously, all of the local school districts are closely monitoring this budget process. Most surrounding districts are trying to assure parents of a positive outcome in the schools, but the reality is that many are in the same spot as this Crestwood Superintendent:

“We budgeted very conservatively but we cannot sustain a cut of $218 per student without deep cuts to programming mid-year. A $218 cut would reduce our revenue by approximately $750,000 and we would have to absorb it from January to June,” VanValkenburg said.

I spoke with Superintendent Russ Pickell on Friday and he assured me that Flat Rock Community Schools Administration and Board of Education did anticipate some of the worst-case scenarios. And many of the adjustments we saw at the beginning of the 2009-2010 are in anticipation of leaner funding from Lansing in the 2010 State budget.

I am still concerned about the actual cuts hitting the books. As it seems they almost assuredly will.

Preliminary committee budgets continue to contain the $218 per pupil cut to K-12 public education. This cut has been the most contentious of the proposed budget balancing cuts, but still hasn’t left any of the budget proposals to date.

The Michigan Education Association continues to fill the galleries and take their arguments to the editorial pages. Will it be enough?

Here are some of the systemic budget constraints that are being cited as challenges in resolving this budget impasse:

  • Constitutional requirement to pass a “balanced” budget
  • Term limits (contributing to inexperienced leadership and legislators)
  • Proposal A, a 1994 reform dramatically redesigning public school funding

Many are beginning to support the argument that Lansing is simply lacking competent leadership to manage the economic crisis.

This can be a real problem if we as voters simply walk into the polls without carefully considering our decisions about our future representation.

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