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(R) Allen, Janet F
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« July 2007 | Main | September 2007 »

August 31, 2007

See what happens when you try what Sandy advocates?

Those of you that read the Laconia Daily Sun are quite familiar with Dr. Leo Sandy's column most every week.  Short version: a Peace and Justice kind of guy, not exuberant about religion or nationalism (champions for a one world government via the UN), he advocates lots of talk and non-violence to solve ALL problems.  Violence is so passe; war is just so uncivilized.

Sure thing, dude.  'Splain this one (emphasis mine):

Thai PM Frustrated 

He’s made good will gestures. He’s made concessions.

He’s reached out.

But the jihadis keep slaughtering people indiscriminately.

What’s a military-installed prime minister to do?

BANGKOK (AFP) - Thai Prime Minister Surayud Chulanont said Wednesday that separatists fighting in Muslim-majority provinces have refused to take up his offer to launch peace talks.

Check one - Let's talk! 

“As of now, there has been no progress on starting negotiations, because that would require the agreement of both sides. So there are no talks for now,” he told reporters.

“My government is still adhering a policy of non-violence, but cooperation from the people is crucial,” he said.

Check two - non-violence! 

Since Surayud took office following a military coup last year, he has made a series of peace gestures to the militants fighting along the southern border with Malaysia.

Check three - keep trying! 

But the violence has only escalated since the coup, and the government has deployed thousands more troops and paramilitary forces to the region.

Go figure.

(Hat tip: Jihad Watch.)

MY hat tip to Little Green Footballs

Background:  the Thai military overthrew the civilian government a while ago as it became alarmed / frustrated over the continued violence and that government's inability to bring peace to the southern region of Thailand as radical Islamofascists continued attacking unarmed Buddhists and Christians.  They installed a new Prime Minister who was supposed to "fix" the problem.

The above is probably a model for what these peace centers are pushing for with the PM trying to act 

As one can tell, I think quite little of the "Peace Centers" (see here too).  IMHO?  All of the peace talk does not much more than disabling oneself from being able to defend oneself.  Talking can be useful, and can be the right tool, but only at the right time.   However, limiting yourself to only one tool all the time is a recipe for disaster, as we see in the above Post from LGF.

Money Phrases:

  • require the agreement of both sides - The Peace folks, like Dennis Kucinich, always seem to skip over this point. If only one side is willing to talking, peace is not going to arrive any time soon.  Neville Chamberlin, any one?
  • But the violence has only escalated since the coup - When a person, or a set of people, wishes to have something to which they are not entitled, sees that the owners of what they desire will not defend themselves, why not do what is working?

The Peace folks never seem to grasp one enduring fact: people are not good by nature  and are not going to always look out for the best interests of others.  In fact, many only think of themselves and what they want.  And will do what they want to get what they want.

The result of ignoring basic human trait will not bridge a gap to peace; history shows us that the final reckoning will only make things worse (having mentioned Chamberlein, think of how things might have been different if the rest of Europe had stood up to the Nazis in the runup to WW II?).

Never forget that old adage: a conservative is a liberal that got mugged. 

The apology was given...to whom?

From the Meredith News (subscription required) of August 16:

Laliberte steps into bigger shoes at M'boro Central School

[snip] 

Laliberte has already learned the hard way that the spotlight shines a little brighter on the captain's chair. In a recent interview on the budget process in Gilford, Laliberte erred on several factual points regarding the committee's origin. The meeting was video taped and found its way to the Internet via GilfordGrok, an activist Web site in his hometown.

Laliberte stands by the opinions of the process he had expressed in the meeting, the true focus of the discussion. However, he freely acknowledges that his facts were not straight on the history of the committee or its origins. Upon learning of the errors, Laliberte contacted Superintendent Michael Lancor to acknowledge the mistake and apologize.

[snip] 

So when does he apologize to Dick Hickok, Chair of the Gilford Budget Committee, for getting it so wrong so badly? 

August 30, 2007

Review time...

chalkboard
.
Let's review.

Dale Dormody also has expressed interest in a seat on the committee.

Of course he has. Why wouldn't he? It's starting to like like that, without his efforts, the committee might actually achieve something that benefits everybody- the taxpayers, those who worship the environment, and those of us who respect the will of the voters. We couldn't have that now, could we? Why, that might bring change to his beloved local government and its culture-- maybe even bring a look at the new "free" library project-- you know the one being built for the town department his wife heads up...

It's funny how a guy like me gets a bum rap of being "against" everything, and the causer of dissention and partisanship, while someone like Dale Dormody is right there actually gumming up the works. Just look at the history of it all...


Schools get their report cards - Gilford passes

It looks like Gilford's system is working!  The dreaded NCLB yearly reports came out and the summary report on the Elementary, Middle School, and High School came out alright. I think parents out to look at the summary reports for the schools (here) and review for themselves how they believe each school is working with respect to their expectations and how they think that the school is meeting their childrens' needs.

However, at the district and school levels, Gilford did do better than some of the surrounding areas.

Districts in need of improvement:

  • Alton
  • Gilmanton
  • Laconia 
  • Winnisquam Regional

However, I'd be remiss if I didn't say that I noticed how many kids in each were below Proficient with respect to skill levels.  As a lay person, I take the word "proficient" to mean "meets minimum standards".  Now, I am open to be corrected by those that know more than I with respect to the technical definition of proficient, but it still tells me more work is to be done.  That said, the percentage of kids below Proficient is troubling.

I would also be remiss, since I posted about WRSD here and here, if I didn't mention the article in the Daily Sun about WRSD.

You know, if I was buying a product that I could not get anywhere else but the quality was not up to my standards, and I was going to be charged more for it, I'd be a tad ticked.  In effect, that seems to be what almost happened to taxpayers of of the Winnisquam SAU.

Private sector?  The vast majority of the time time, the mantra is improved quality at lower cost.  Or lose the job as consumers can go elsewhere. And routinely, one puts in the time needed to get the job done whether you own the business or you work for the business.  You have to keep your skills up (sometimes by the employer and a lot of times not) or find yourself replaced.  That's the effect of globalization - there is no choice.

That's why this rubbed me the wrong way.  From the Daily Sun:

Meanwhile Brenda Lawrence, president of the local teachers union called the Winnisquam Teachers Association, said she and her fellow faculty members were buoyed about the generally upward trend of scores across the district.

It is always nice to see success, even if at times, in what some might consider small victories. And that is goodness.

...we're making steps towards the ultimate goal, which is to be district without any Schools in Need of Improvement".

Which I, and probably most parents and taxpayers, expect as a minimum.  Perfection?  No, but meeting expectations?  Meeting standards?  That is accountability. 

Lawrence said the results also point out that when voters turned down a proposed pay raise for teachers at last week's Special school District meeting they did not comprehend the whole picture.

I keep hearing this same mantra over and over again from those that lose elections.  How come those that lose hardly ever say "hey, maybe we screwed up...maybe we have to be better and show better"?   And at this point, it cannot be all laid at the feet of the "quality" of the kids in the classes.  I know that there is variability (heck, most of us have been in "good" classes as well as the "monster" ones), but with the passage of four years, the teachers must step up to the plate and acknowledge their role in not meeting standards.

I believe that the citizens did understand and did comprehend the picture - they just didn't agree that the School Board rated a pass for not doing their job multiple times in a row.  Being taken over by the State may well have played a role too! 

Why pay more to those that are not meeting expected standards?  Show a good product and I believe that people will pay for a quality service / product, sometimes a lot more.  However, people hate paying for those things that don't.

"I think the public is misinformed, so our (the union's) goal this year is to help the public understand what's involved and what the job of a teacher is like, what we do to help students," she said. 

Do I know the specifics, every nitty-gritty, of teaching kids?  No, but I do know quite a bit about creating and deliverying highly technical materials to adults - I've done it for years professionally so I may know better than most. I've even taught at the college level.  But I believe that most people do have a really good grasp of the overall teaching process.....one doesn't sit in a class for at least 12 years and not pick a few things up. 

"We analyze test scores, we do evaluations, we adopt lessons to meet each student's need... And all those hours, we're not paid for.  People are taking extra courses and taking a lot of different active workshops to help analysis test scores - and that's all on our time."

You know something - that's the job.  That's what you signed up for and if you have been in the business for a while, you know the expectations.  And it is a business, or teachers would be doing it for free.  Hey, I don't write code for free even though I love doing so - it is a business too!  I'm held to a given expectation that I can solve my customers problems with creative solutions and that my code works.  In other words, I have to produce a positive outcome, or move on to something else.  I study on my own time and take part in "stuff" (outside of work) for skill building and do a lot of "traveling" on my free time to boot.

Most of us do the same thing as you, Ms. Lawrence.....stop trying to hit us over the head with it.  It is rather irritating.

August 29, 2007

Energy Committee - On?

UPDATE: I see in the Citizen this morning that a name is now being added (I think):

Dale Dormody also has expressed interest in a seat on the committee.

I thought it a bit weird that Dale would take the time and put up the argument of taking the Energy Committee philosophy 180 from Doug's, and then not sign up for it.  Perhaps more interesting times are ahead!

------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 

I had a post ready a few days ago that was entitled "Somebody turned off the Energy....zzzzz" as an article in the Citizen a while ago was reporting:

Little interest in Gilford energy committee

Though the proposed formation of an energy study committee made headlines, the town has reported that when it came time to fill the seats on the committee there was a lack of interest.

Town Administrator Evans Juris informed the Board of Selectmen that only two applications for appointment to the committee have been received, with only one other inquiry aside from those. Only Doug Lambert and Patrick McKenna have been the only two who have submitted applications seeking energy committee appointments.

This news did not elicit a sympathetic response from the chair.

"Then there won't be a committee," said board Chair Alice Boucher, after being asked what would be done if no more applications came in. "If it is important then I think people would apply."

As you may have remembered, Article 30 was being pushed by Everett McLaughlin and was passed by a wide margin (Yes 1183  N0 630). 

Seems like Gilford residents, having appeased their inner conservatism (ha-ha!) went back to the SUVs.

Juris suggested to the board that the concerned members of the community who spoke from various perspectives on the issue might have created a false impression of great interest in the community.

Or seeing it become a divisive committee after Dale Dormody decided that Doug's take on the whole philosophy was all wrong, just decided to yawn?


Well, it seems that the switch was turned on - there is interest in the Energy Committee after all.  The Laconia Daily Sun is reporting that Chan Eddy, Howard Epstein, and Gino Crecco want to join with Doug and Pat McKenna (who was on Meet The New Press here) in seeing what can be done in town.  That's five now - that should be enough for the Selectmen to approve a new committee, right?

Good for them!  (Slyly) Besides, I'd love seeing a couple of white windmills up on the ridge generating free power for the town....

Umm, by the way, did I miss seeing a name trying to get on the list?
 

August 25, 2007

Citizen Editorial - 9/25/07

Looks like Doug and I were not the only ones.  In today's Citizen:
Much ado over what?

The latest dust-up over who takes the minutes for the Gilford Budget Committee smacks of a cheap shot.

On Wednesday Chairman Alice Boucher of the Gilford Board of Selectmen told the weekly meeting that the Budget Committee should take responsibility for keeping its own minutes and not rely on the Selectmen's Office secretary to do so. Boucher called the change justified because some on the budget panel had been critical of the way Sandra Bailey was keeping the minutes.

What is puzzling about this affair is that word of any dissatisfaction with Bailey's skills came as news to the other two selectmen and Budget Committee Chairman Dick Hickok.

Moreover, Hickok was clearly caught off-guard by Boucher's announcement. If there was a problem of consequence, why didn't the chairman of the Board of Selectmen pick up the phone and call Hickok to discuss her concerns and possible ways to resolve them?

Boucher's suggestion that the Budget Committee designate one of its own to keep the minutes is ludicrous. Every member of the Budget Committee needs to be able to concentrate on the meaning of what they are hearing, to pose questions and to offer pertinent comments. It is not right that one of the committee members be reduced to being a stenographer — that's not why the voters send them there.

If it ends up that the Selectmen's Office secretary stops taking the minutes, the committee will have to hire someone to do the minute-taking.

Maybe she she just doesn't like the blog folks.... 

 

August 23, 2007

History repeats itself - with good reason

I commented earlier upon the Northfield Education Committee's stance on the Winnisquam School Board's lack of following the deadlines necessary, resulting in the special election. Well, the School Board got spanked - they lost  by a vote of 229 to  155 (with only 384 out of 7,000 - 5.5% turnout - really a need for SB2!). Once again, voters listened and agreed with the Budget Committee / NEC and voted against the teacher contract..

What was interesting were some of the comments that were reported in the Citizen and the Sun (not online):

"No one in the private sector is getting these kinds of raises," said Gretchen Wilder, a Northfield resident who has been a vocal opponent of both the contract and the special meeting called to ratify it.

I love context, and was glad to see that someone provided some:

Speaking against the district's position that the raises were needed to keep pace with other area school districts and presenting his own research about teacher turnover rates and pay scales, Northfield's Kevin Waldron said many more of Winnisquam's teachers have bachelor's degrees as opposed to master's degrees and the pay scales would necessarily be lower.
"We're actually in the middle, which is not a real bad place to be," said Waldron, saying that a starting teacher's pay of $29,000 in the district ranks 83rd of the 160 school districts in New Hampshire.

and this:

"More money does not make them better employees," said Northfield's Greg Hill, who said he disagreed with nearly everything Tryon had to say. "Better education and training make them better."
"I don't mind paying for good results," he said, citing his research that showed 32 percent of Winnisquam graduates went on to four-year colleges while 85 percent of Bow's graduates did so. "We should increase pay scales in March and give raises for master's degrees only."

I liked this contrast:

Cost: Officials estimated it would cost $377, 584 in fiscal year 2008

School Board Prep: We knew there was money left over [from fiscal year 2007] and $200,000 was spent on nonbudgeted items," said Gorrell.  "They knew they were coming before the voters but they chose to spend the $200,000 anyway and not return it to the voters," said Gorrell to applause.

The Math: the WRSB would have only had a $177,000 gap to make up if they had shown some fiscal frugality. Of COURSE that hurt their cause - it showed that the WRSB had a disregard for taxpayer's hard earned money.

"I think it's a big deal. It adds to the sense the school board is not a good steward," said Gorrell.

Now, for the flip side:

"We're very disappointed for our dedicated teachers," said School Board Chair David Foster who was on the negotiating committee and is also a Northfield resident.

Well, you folks messed up, big time.  Trying to engender sympathy for others due to your bad performance didn't play well before and probably isn't playing well now.  Besides, most understand that those in charge have to accept responsibility for the results, or lack thereof, of their actions.  Trying to powderpuff shows a lack of foresight; trying to pin it on the "mean" voters is disingenuous.

And more from the WRSB

What the people have done is an attempt to chastise the nine school board members, but they punished 150 teachers," said Ellen Barry, who heads the Winnisquam Regional Teacher's Association.
She said she thought the voters were "justifiably upset and angry" that the issue did not come before them last March but declined to discuss any details of the negotiations or why the deadline was not met.

Well, when one is in charge, your actions and decisions have consequences.  You are responsible for overseeing the educational activities under your wing.  Thus, you are responsible for what happened to the teachers, not the voters. 

Look folks, admit you screwed up, things didn't go your way - own up to it, apologize, and then try again.  Sour grapes doesn't look good on anyone. 

Oh yeah, THE card was played:

As to the immediate future, Barry said the students will receive the education they deserve but she can't guarantee any of the extras.

Yup, the card.  After all, it's not about the children after all. 

"I've already spent my money at Staples [on student supplies] " she said. "It's on my credit card. Now I just have to find a way to pay for it."

Join the club, ma'am.  I've bought expensive computer equipment in advance of when I should have...it teaches you not to count your chickens before they hatch.  A sideswipe once again at the voters doesn't help your efforts. 


 


 


Of all the things to go after...

...the taking of the BudComm notes was the last thing that I would have thought would have topped the "to-do" list of a Selectman....especially making it more difficult (Citizen).  Junk cars (Sun) - maybe.  So what will be the next thing?

I've seen Doug at a loss for words only once - this makes twice ("I see no good reason behind this, other than, I don't even know").  Frankly, I studied the report twice - I just don't get it.  She certainly threw Connie and Gus a curve out of no where too.  I bet the stunned look on their faces would have been quite the sight.

Now, the swipe at the blog ("I'm sure some of them take it for their blog anyway.") - sure, I take notes, and will take better notes this year (I hope) but mine are for my purposes only and not to be the official notes.  I'll admit it - I have biases and my notes may well show that.  Whether or not Alice likes this blog (doubtful) or another website (maybe) is immaterial.  What exists, does, and no amount of wishing will make it go away any time soon.  OTHER things might force that issue, but not that.  And setting up live streaming or MP3 recording - hey, that's a part of the normal political life nowadays.

The thing that I thought was strange was her insistence on the fact that the RSAs do not require that the Town provide a transcriptionist or secretary.  True enough.  Yet, if one has to be brought in, there will be an expense in some fashion to the town.  While Sandy may be a payroll expense, I thought that it can be standard practice for "comp time"?  And even if not, either the expense is a payroll or a 1099 one - take your pick.  So while the meeting may get video or audio recorded, an official note taker should still be present. There WILL be a cost to the town (as Dick Hickok has made plain).

I will echo Doug here - c'mon Alice, who are those that are complaining about Sandy's note taking?  I may take my own, but that in no way means that I am dissatisfied with the product that Sandy churns out.  Nor have I EVER heard anywone on the Budget Committee say even the slightest negative thing about the notes.

Or is that statement mere political posturing (yes, I do say, at times, what others will only think)? For by making that statement, Alice has painted ALL of the BudComm with a negative brush in this regard, for who can tell who has said what?

Frankly, I think the whole idea is nuts. 

Oops - just one - before he was elected to the Board.  From his Best Practices document (on which I commented):

More official information about the budget committee proceedings should be available online - including voting records for each member, summaries of department budgets and committee recommendations, and a balanced presentation of any issues that are disputed. Meeting minutes are not enough - as they are lengthy and unfocused.

Now, to be trite, his campaign was all about "tone" and civility.  Guess it could be said he threw a bomb to start this kerfuffle... 

 

 

 

Inquiring minds want to know...

Alice Boucher
.
To Selectman Alice Boucher:

Would you please identify those voices you hear in your head? Thank You.

In two recent episodes here in Gilford, Select Board Chair Alice Boucher has raised questions based upon her claims to have heard from certain people in town asking her to take a particular position or stand on an issue that seems contrary to what conventional wisdom might hold.
.
First, when the Energy Committee was proposed, based upon the suggestions of the Carbon Coalition (the authors of the statewide movement and Warrant #30 appearing and passing at March's Annual Town Meeting), Boucher voiced opposition, as noted in the Citizen
Boucher added that some of the residents she had spoke with on the topic expressed similar opinions on keeping the committee's focus broad.
Sure they did. Who would want the TOWN and SCHOOLS to look at saving energy? Undoubtedly, the people Boucher supposedly spoke with want the town to dictate to the people what THEY should do, right? Sure they did Alice. Really, other than public employees directly affected and Dale Dormody, defender of all things government in Gilford, who could possibly take such a position? Isn't everybody concerned about doing all we can to save energy and prevent added pollutants from going into the environment? Why wouldn't we include the town and schools?
.
And now, out of the clear blue sky, Selectman Boucher says certain people don't want the town secretary taking the minutes of the Municipal Budget Committee's meetings anymore. Michael Kitch, reporting in today's Laconia Daily Sun writes
Boucher said that she had heard that members of the Budget Committee were critical of the minutes taken by Bailey.
Again, I openly challenge Selectman Boucher: Other than Dale Dormody, who was not on the MBC last session,

NAME ONE BUDGET COMMITTEE MEMBER THAT IS CRITICAL OF THE WORK SANDY BAILEY DID WITH THE OFFICIAL MINUTES. PLEASE ALICE... WE'RE WAITING!!

In case you're wondering why I know the voice in Alice's head is Dale Dormody, recall that as a candidate, he submitted a "Best Practices" document where he called the minutes taken by the Budcom as "lengthy and unfocused." He further called for them to be changed in other correspondences and utterances as well.
.
I'm sure you're thinking the same thing that I am-- WHY ON EARTH WOULD WE WANT LESS DETAIL IN THE OFFICIAL RECORD OF OUR GOVERNMENT? What kind of person could possibly be opposed to having MORE information, instead of LESS?
.
Color me baffled. At least I'll understand better when Alice answers my questions. Oh, and for the record, my recollection of last year is that the work of Ms. Bailey was praised by members of the Budcom on several occasions.

 

Another tax cap proposal? Seems to be breaking out all over!

Today's Laconia Daily Sun had an extensive article:

Lovett proposes spending cap for Meredith 

Miller Lovett, who with Colette Worsman cast a dissenting vote when the selectmen adopted the 2007 budget, is proposing guidelines to control governmental spending.

[snip]

...In particular, he recommends "calculating the tax dollar increases from new construction and using that for new costs due to population growth" and ensuring that "the maximum average tax bill for propertyies with no new improvements will not exceed a cost of living index." 

It seems that one of the Selectmen over in Meredith is proposing an "informal" cap on spending.  I applaud Miller Lovett and his efforts to protect taxpayers.  The only reason why I put it as "informal" as Meredith, as here is Gilford, there is no City Charter to formalize a tax / spending cap.

However, the idea that Selectmen can do the same thing holds a lot of merit. Limiting the growth in spending by the Town and School District by a specific inflation rate bumped up only by taxes supplied by new building (residential or commercial) - it seems reasonable.  To no one's surprise, I am a proponent of the idea "Why should government spending effectively be unlimited where ordinary families are limited?" 

I wonder if our Selectmen and School Board would seriously consider such a voluntary spending limit.  

August 22, 2007

Following the law...to the letter

Today's (8/22/07) Citizen reported that the Gilford School Board has decided to better fall follow the Right To Know Law - RSA 91:

Gilford School Board to change nonpublic meeting process

The Gilford School Board is pledging to modify the procedure it follows for going into nonpublic session after being challenged by the news media.

I'm quite sure that the dustup of the Moultonborough Study Committee and Derek Tomlinson and Sue Allen may have added to the  "push" to change their process, but I bet it was the Meadows Advisory Committee where Sue Allen was challenged by the Citizen reporter  ("I'll give you a letter.") that sealed this deal.  Often when flashlights are used and questions asked, processes change.

School Board Chair Sue Allen and Superintendent Paul DeMinico made the pledge during Monday's School Board meeting. Allen said that, in the future, given the added focus on the state's Right-to-Know law, the board would be sure disclose the reasons for entering into nonpublic session, counter to what occurred at its last meeting.

Good thing - after all, it is the law. 
[snip]

But Attorney Paul Fitzgerald, who represents a number of local school boards, including Laconia, said that boards must give a reason for the nonpublic session, whether it be by citing a letter that corresponds to an exemption or simply paraphrasing the exception itself.

"The vote has to specifically identify the reason under the Right-to-Know law to enter into nonpublic session," said Fitzgerald.

Frankly, it is my opinion that any public Board, Committee, or sub-group of either should resort to non-public session only if necessary and not just because they can.  As publicly elected or appointed officials, all attempts possible should be made to do the public's business in public. 

It should make no difference what that business may be.  It may well put officials in a bad light, reflect badly on a policy, whip up public opinion or anger over a bad decision, or tick off friends or spoil future activities. But that's why they were elected - to make the hard decisions in public.

It may be a late decision, but I appreciate it - thank you. 

August 21, 2007

The nutty professor - the racket exposed?

Before starting blogging, I used to write a lot of Letters to the Editor.  More than a few of them were in rebuttal to Dr. Leo Sandy of Plymouth University. Anyone who reads the Laconia Daily Sun has seen his columns talking about his Peace philosophy (and it general anti-Western stances).

Given that the title was "The Peace Racket", I had to read this article to see what it said. Now, I have a conservative traditionalist outlook on life (no surprise, right?) so when I saw that the article doesn't necessarily contain rebuttals to the usual claims and lack of results (as I asked Dr. Sandy - "how come Peace Activists have been able to solve ANY war, and why don't we see them actually over there just talking to the terrorists?")  but speaks to the underlying foundation of the movement, I thought others might enjoy learning something too.  The author, Bruce Bawer, has done quite the job in researching and bringing up some "inconvenient truths" about what seems to be nothing more than a grant sucking indoctrination racket whose sole purpose is to bite the hand that feeds it.

The Peace Racket
by Bruce Bawer

An anti-Western movement touts dictators, advocates appeasement—and gains momentum.

If you want peace, prepare for war.” Thus counseled Roman general Flavius Vegetius Renatus over 1,600 years ago. Nine centuries before that, Sun Tzu offered essentially the same advice, and it’s to him that Vegetius’s line is attributed at the beginning of a film that I saw recently at Oslo’s Nobel Peace Center. Yet the film cites this ancient wisdom only to reject it. After serving up a perverse potted history of the cold war, the thrust of which is that the peace movement brought down the Berlin Wall, the movie ends with words that turn Vegetius’s insight on its head: “If you want peace, prepare for peace.”

This purports to be wise counsel, a motto for the millennium. In reality, it’s wishful thinking that doesn’t follow logically from the history of the cold war, or of any war. For the cold war’s real lesson is the same one that Sun Tzu and Vegetius taught: conflict happens; power matters. It’s better to be strong than to be weak; you’re safer if others know that you’re ready to stand up for yourself than if you’re proudly outspoken about your defenselessness or your unwillingness to fight. There’s nothing mysterious about this truth. Yet it’s denied not only by the Peace Center film but also by the fast-growing, troubling movement that the center symbolizes and promotes.

Call it the Peace Racket.

We need to make two points about this movement at the outset. First, it’s opposed to every value that the West stands for—liberty, free markets, individualism—and it despises America, the supreme symbol and defender of those values. Second, we’re talking not about a bunch of naive Quakers but about a movement of savvy, ambitious professionals that is already comfortably ensconced at the United Nations, in the European Union, and in many nongovernmental organizations. It is also waging an aggressive, under-the-media-radar campaign for a cabinet-level Peace Department in the United States. Sponsored by Ohio Democratic congressman Dennis Kucinich (along with more than 60 cosponsors), House Resolution 808 would authorize a Secretary of Peace to “establish a Peace Academy,” “develop a peace education curriculum” for elementary and secondary schools, and provide “grants for peace studies departments” at campuses around the country. If passed, the measure would catapult the peace studies movement into a position of extraordinary national, even international, influence.

The Peace Racket’s boundaries aren’t easy to define. It embraces scores of “peace institutes” and “peace centers” in the U.S. and Europe, plus several hundred university peace studies programs. As Ian Harris, Larry Fisk, and Carol Rank point out in a sympathetic overview of these programs, it’s hard to say exactly how many exist—partly because they often go by other labels, such as “security studies” and “human rights education”; partly because many “professors who infuse peace material into courses do not offer special courses with the title peace in them”; and finally because “several small liberal arts colleges offer an introductory course requirement to all incoming students which infuses peace and justice themes.” Many primary and secondary schools also teach peace studies in some form.

Peace studies initiatives may train students to be social workers, to work in churches or community health organizations, or to resolve family quarrels and neighborhood disputes. At the movement’s heart, though, are programs whose purported emphasis is on international relations. Their founding father is a 77-year-old Norwegian professor, Johan Galtung, who established the International Peace Research Institute in 1959 and the Journal of Peace Research five years later. Invariably portrayed in the media as a charismatic and (these days) grandfatherly champion of decency, Galtung is in fact a lifelong enemy of freedom. In 1973, he thundered that “our time’s grotesque reality” was—no, not the Gulag or the Cultural Revolution, but rather the West’s “structural fascism.” He’s called America a “killer country,” accused it of “neo-fascist state terrorism,” and gleefully prophesied that it will soon follow Britain “into the graveyard of empires.”

No fan of Britain either, Galtung has faulted “Anglo-Americans” for trying to “stop the wind from blowing.” If the U.S. and the U.K. oppose a dangerous development, in his view, we’re causing trouble—Milošević, Saddam, and Osama are just the way the wind is blowing. Galtung’s kind of thinking leads inexorably to the conclusion that one should never challenge any tyrant. Fittingly, he urged Hungarians not to resist the Soviet Army in 1956, and his views on World War II suggest that he’d have preferred it if the Allies had allowed Hitler to finish off the Jews and invade Britain.

Though Galtung has opined that the annihilation of Washington, D.C., would be a fair punishment for America’s arrogant view of itself as “a model for everyone else,” he’s long held up certain countries as worthy of emulation—among them Stalin’s USSR, whose economy, he predicted in 1953, would soon overtake the West’s. He’s also a fan of Castro’s Cuba, which he praised in 1972 for “break[ing] free of imperialism’s iron grip.” At least you can’t accuse Galtung of hiding his prejudices. In 1973, explaining world politics in a children’s newspaper, he described the U.S. and Western Europe as “rich, Western, Christian countries” that make war to secure materials and markets: “Such an economic system is called capitalism, and when it’s spread in this way to other countries it’s called imperialism.” In 1974, he sneered at the West’s fixation on “persecuted elite personages” such as Solzhenitsyn and Sakharov. Thirty years later, he compared the U.S. to Nazi Germany for bombing Kosovo and invading Afghanistan and Iraq. For Galtung, a war that liberates is no better than one that enslaves.

His all-time favorite nation? China during the Cultural Revolution. Visiting his Xanadu, Galtung concluded that the Chinese loved life under Mao: after all, they were all “nice and smiling.” While “repressive in a certain liberal sense,” he wrote, Mao’s China was “endlessly liberating when seen from many other perspectives that liberal theory has never understood.” Why, China showed that “the whole theory about what an ‘open society’ is must be rewritten, probably also the theory of ‘democracy’—and it will take a long time before the West will be willing to view China as a master teacher in such subjects.”

Nor has Galtung changed his tune over the decades. Recently he gave a lecture that was a smorgasbord of wild accusations about America’s refusing to negotiate with Saddam, America’s secret plans to make war in Azerbaijan, Nazis in the State Department, the CIA’s responsibility for 6 million covert murders, and so on. Galtung called for a Truth and Reconciliation Committee in Iraq—to treat America’s crimes, not the Baathists’.

Galtung’s use of the word “peace” to legitimize totalitarianism is an old Communist tradition. In August 1939, when the Nazis and Soviets signed their nonaggression pact, the same Western Stalinists who had been calling for war against Germany did an about-face and began to praise peace. (After Hitler invaded Russia, the Stalinists reversed themselves again, demanding that the West help Stalin crush the Third Reich.) The peace talk, in short, was really about sympathizing with Communism, not peace. And it continued after the war, when Stalin’s Western supporters whitewashed his monstrous regime and denounced anti-Communists as warmongering crypto-fascists. “Peace conferences” and “friendship committees” drew hordes of liberal dupes, who didn’t grasp that their new “friends” were not ordinary Russians but the jailers of ordinary Russians—and that the committees were about not “friendship” but deception, exploitation, and espionage.

The people running today’s peace studies programs give a good idea of the movement’s illiberal, anti-American inclinations. The director of Purdue’s program is coeditor of Marxism Today, a collection of essays extolling socialism; Brandeis’s peace studies chairman has justified suicide bombings; the program director at the University of Missouri authorized a mass e-mail urging students and faculty to boycott classes to protest the Iraq invasion; and the University of Maine’s program director believes that “humans have been out of balance for centuries” and that “a unique opportunity of this new century is to engage in the creation of balance and harmony between yin and yang, masculine and feminine energies.” (Such New Age babble often mixes with the Marxism in peace studies jargon.)

What these people teach remains faithful to Galtung’s anti-Western inspiration. First and foremost, they emphasize that the world’s great evil is capitalism—because it leads to imperialism, which in turn leads to war. The account of capitalism in David Barash and Charles Webel’s widely used 2002 textbook Peace and Conflict Studies leans heavily on Lenin, who “maintained that only revolution—not reform—could undo capitalism’s tendency toward imperialism and thence to war,” and on Galtung, who helpfully revised Lenin’s theories to account for America’s “indirect” imperialism. Students acquire a zero-sum picture of the world economy: if some countries and people are poor, it’s because others are rich. They’re taught that American wealth derives entirely from exploitation and that Americans, accordingly, are responsible for world poverty.

If the image of tenured professors pushing such anticapitalist nonsense on privileged suburban kids sounds like a classic case of liberals’ throwing stones at their own houses, get a load of this: America’s leading Peace Racket institution is probably the University of Notre Dame’s Joan B. Kroc Institute for International Peace Studies—endowed by and named for the widow of Ray Kroc, founder of McDonald’s, the ultimate symbol of evil corporate America. It was the Kroc Institute, by the way, that in 2004 invited Islamist scholar Tariq Ramadan to join its faculty, only to see him denied a U.S. visa on the grounds that he had defended terrorism.

Peace studies students also discover how to think in terms of “deep culture.” How to prevent war between, say, the U.S. and Saddam’s Iraq? Answer: examine each country’s deep culture—its key psychosocial traits, good and bad—to understand its motives. Americans, according to this bestiary, are warlike and money-obsessed; Iraqis are intensely religious and proud. Not surprisingly, the Peace Racket’s summations of deep cultures skew against the West. The deep-culture approach also avoids calling tyrants or terrorists “evil”—for behind every atrocity, in this view, lies a legitimate grievance, which the peacemaker should locate so that all parties can meet at the negotiating table as moral equals. SUNY Binghamton, for instance, offers a peace studies course that seeks to “arrive at an understanding of contemporary violence in its ideological, cultural, and structural dimensions in a bid to move away from ‘evil,’ ‘inhuman,’ and ‘uncivilized’ as analytical categories.”

For the Peace Racket, to kill innocents in cold blood is to buy the right to dialogue, negotiation, concessions—and power. So students learn to identify “insurgent” or “militant” groups with the populations they purport to represent. A few years ago, a peace organization called Transcend equated the demands of the Basque terrorist group ETA with “the desires of the Basque people”—as if a “people” were a monolithic group for whom a band of murderous thugs could presume to speak. The complaints that Transcend made about the Spanish government’s “blockade positions”—its refusal to cave to terrorist demands—and the Spanish media’s lack of “objectivity”—their refusal to take a middle position between Spanish society and ETA terrorists—are standard Peace Racket fare. Similarly, during Saddam’s dictatorship, “peace scholars” wrote as if Iraq were equivalent to Saddam and the Baath party, entirely removing from the picture the Shiites and Kurds whom Saddam’s regime subjugated, tortured, and slaughtered.

The recipes for peace that flow from such thinking seem designed not only to buttress oppression but to create more of it. For if democracies consistently followed the Peace Racket’s recommendations, what they’d eventually reap would be the kind of peace found today in Havana or Pyongyang.

The Peace Racket maintains that the Western world’s profound moral culpability, arising from its history of colonialism and economic exploitation, deprives it of any right to judge non-Western countries or individuals. Further, the non-West has suffered so much from exploitation that whatever offenses it commits are legitimate attempts to recapture dignity, obtain justice, and exact revenge. Have Third World terrorists taken Americans hostage? Don’t call the hostages innocent victims. After all, as Americans, they’re complicit in a system that has long inflicted “structural violence” (or “structural terrorism”) upon the Third World poor. Donald Rothberg of San Francisco’s Saybrook Institute explains: “In using the term ‘structural violence,’ we identify phenomena as violent that are not usually seen as violent. For example, Western economic domination.”

It is this mind-set that leads peace professors to accuse the U.S. of “state terrorism,” to call George W. Bush “the world’s worst terrorist,” and even to characterize those murdered in the Twin Towers as oppressors who, by working at investment banks and brokerage houses, were ultimately responsible for their own deaths. Barash and Webel, for instance, write sympathetically of “frustrated, impoverished, infuriated people . . . who view the United States as a terrorist country” and for whom “attacks on American civilians were justified” because one shouldn’t distinguish “between a ‘terrorist state’ and the citizens who aid and abet that state.” They also approvingly quote Osama bin Laden’s claim that for many “disempowered” people, “Americans are the worst terrorists in the world”—thereby inviting students to consider Osama a legitimate spokesperson for the “disempowered.” Speaking at a memorial concert on the first anniversary of the September 11 attacks, George Wolfe of Ball State University’s peace studies program suggested that we “reflect on what we as Americans may have done or not done, to invoke such extreme hatred.” The Kroc Institute’s David Cortright agrees: “We must ask ourselves . . . what the United States has done to incur such wrath.”

In short, it’s America that is the wellspring of the world’s problems. In the peace studies world, America’s role as the beacon of opportunity for generations of immigrants is mocked, its defense of freedom in World War II and the cold war is reinterpreted to its discredit, and every major postwar atrocity (the Gulag, the Cultural Revolution, genocide in Cambodia, Bosnia, Rwanda, and Sudan) is ignored, minimized, or—as with 9/11—blamed on the U.S. itself.

One peace studies motif holds that the U.S. intentionally preserves its enemies to justify military expenses. According to a 2000 article by Michael Klare, professor of peace and world security studies at Hampshire College, for instance, the Pentagon deplored the prospect of peace between the Koreas because it “would erase the most menacing of our putative ‘rogue state’ adversaries” and thus “imperil . . . future military appropriations.” (For Klare, North Korea is only “putatively” a rogue state.) The director of Cornell’s peace studies program, Matthew Evangelista, blames the cold war on the U.S. Defense Department and claims that it ended only because a good-hearted, newly enlightened Gorbachev “heeded the advice of transnational [peace] activists.” You might think that no one could fall for such nonsense. But keep in mind that the Berlin Wall fell in 1989 and that students starting college in 2007 arrived in the world a year later. They don’t remember the cold war—and are ripe targets for disinformation.

As for America’s response to terrorism, Barash and Webel tidily sum up the view of many peace studies professors: “A peace-oriented perspective condemns not only terrorist attacks but also any violent response to them.” How should democracies respond to aggression? Hold dialogue. Make concessions. Apologize. Neville Chamberlain’s 1938 capitulation to Hitler at Munich taught—or should have taught—that appeasement just puts off a final reckoning, giving an enemy time to gain strength. The foundation of the Peace Racket’s success lies in forgetting this lesson. Peace studies students discover that the lesson of World War II is the evil of war itself and the need to prevent it by all possible means—which, of course, is exactly what Chamberlain thought he was doing in Munich. What they learn, in short, is the opposite of the war’s real lesson.

Warblogger Frank Martin described his visit to the military cemetery at Arnhem, in the Netherlands, where a teenage guide said that the Allied soldiers “were fighting for bridges; how silly that they would all fight for something like that.” Martin was outraged: “I tried to explain that they weren’t fighting for bridges, but for his and his families’ freedom.” That teenager articulated precisely the kind of thinking that peace professors seek to instill in their students—that freedom is at best an overvalued asset that can hinder peacemaking, and at worst a lie, and that those who harp on it are either American propagandists or dupes who’ve fallen for the propaganda. In March, Yusra Moshtat, an associate of the Transnational Foundation for Peace and Future Research, and Jan Oberg, director of the foundation, wrote that “words like democracy and freedom are deceptive, cover-ups or Unspeak.” And in a 1997 speech at a Texas peace foundation, Oscar Arias, ex-president of Costa Rica and founder of his own peace foundation, described the American preoccupation with freedom versus tyranny as “obsolete,” “oversimplified,” and above all “dangerous,” because it could lead to war. In other words, if you want to ensure peace, worry less about freedom. Appease tyranny, accept it, embrace it—and there’ll be no more war.

That’s the Peace Racket’s message in a nutshell—and students find themselves graded largely on their willingness to echo it. For while the peace professor argues that terrorist positions deserve respect at the negotiating table, he seldom tolerates alternative views in the classroom. Real education exposes students to a range of ideas and trains them to think critically about all orthodoxies. Peace studies, as a rule, rejects questioning of its own guiding ideology.

Take the case of Brett Mock, who writes in FrontPage Magazine that a peace studies class he’d taken in 2004 at Ball State University—“indoctrination rather than education,” as he puts it—had been “designed entirely to delegitimize the use of the military in the defense of our country.” The teacher, George Wolfe, “would not allow any serious study of the reasons for the use of force in response to an attack,” and students were expected to “parrot . . . back views we did not agree with.” To get full credit, moreover, Mock reports, students had to “meditate at the Peace Studies center,” “attend Interfaith Fellowship meetings,” or join Peace Workers—a group that Wolfe founded and that, according to Sara Dogan of Students for Academic Freedom, “is part of a coalition of radical groups that includes the Muslim Students Association . . . and the Young Communist League.” Kyle Ellis, another Ball State student, added that “Wolfe has required students to attend a screening of the antiwar propaganda film Uncovered: The Whole Truth About the War in Iraq, without material critical of the film and representing the other side.”

Then there’s Andrew Saraf, who in 2006 objected publicly to the one-sidedness of a peace studies course taught at his Bethesda high school by Washington Post columnist Colman McCarthy. “The ‘class,’ ” Saraf complained, “is headed by an individual with a political agenda, who wants to teach students the ‘right’ way of thinking by giving them facts that are skewed in one direction.” McCarthy shrugged off the criticism, having long ago admitted his course’s bias: “Over the years, I’ve had suggestions from other teachers to offer what they call ‘balance’ in my courses, that I should give students ‘the other side.’ I’m never sure exactly what that means. After assigning students to read Gandhi I should have them also read Carl von Clausewitz? After Martin Luther King’s essay against the Vietnam War, Colin Powell’s memoir favoring the Persian Gulf War? After Justice William Brennan and Thurgood Marshall’s views opposing the death penalty, George W. Bush and Saddam Hussein’s favoring it? After a woman’s account of her using a nonviolent defense against a rapist, the thwarted rapist’s side?” (Note, by the way, the facile juxtaposition of Bush and Saddam.)

Mock and Saraf are the exceptions—students who raise questions. One can begin to form a picture of the typical peace studies student by reading the testimonials by students and graduates that many of these programs have posted online. Essentially the same story occurs over and over in these accounts: the privileged upbringing; the curiosity about other cultures; the visit to the Third World, where the poverty shocks, even transforms, the student (“I . . . would never be the same after experiencing what I did in Honduras”); and, finally, the readiness to swallow the peace professors’ explanation for it all—namely, that it’s America’s fault—and to work for revolutionary change. Many students make it clear that they’re ashamed to be American; one of them, listing her aspirations, writes, “I envision myself American, not needing to be embarrassed of it.” They view themselves instead as “global citizens.”

The more one considers oneself a global citizen, of course, the less one considers oneself an American citizen whose loyalty is to the Constitution and its freedoms. Each new global citizen, in fact, transfers his loyalty to the Peace Racket. No wonder these students often sound like cultists: “I have pledged my passion, dedication, and undying energy to the World Peace Program and the ongoing fight for a more peaceful world for all people.” They may think that they’ve figured out the world (“Global Militarism and Human Survival . . . has allowed me to analyze how the United States’ military agenda denies indigenous rights and crushes people’s hopes for social justice all over the world”), but all they’re doing is regurgitating ideological clichés.

Reading these personal accounts, I remembered being 17. I’d never been outside North America, but I’d paid attention in history class and, being curious about the world, had read The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich, Babi Yar, 1984, John Gunther’s Inside series, several books about the USSR, and much else. I had an uncle who’d been in a Nazi POW camp, a Polish-speaking grandmother who felt blessed to be an American citizen and not a Soviet vassal, and a Cuban schoolmate whose father, a journalist, Castro had tortured and blinded. I knew what totalitarianism was. The young people who get taken in by the Peace Racket, though, seem not to have had much of a clue about anything before visiting Haiti or Ghana or wherever. And their peace studies classes and international adventures don’t exactly wise them up. A peace studies student at McGill University, recounting her internship with a “Cuban NGO” (as if there really were such a thing!), refers enthusiastically to her participation in “the largest demonstration in Cuban history.” She doesn’t elaborate, but the reference is clearly to a government-organized protest against the U.S. trade embargo. This perilously naive young woman has no idea that she was the tool of a dictatorship.

For Canadian Davis Aurini, who in a May 2007 e-mail described himself as “sorely disappointed” by his peace studies experience, his naively socialist classmates were at least as problematic as the professors. One prof consistently ridiculed Western “science and knowledge”: every time he quoted a Western writer, he would mockingly add, “So he told me,” then clap his hands, then repeat, “So he tooooold me!” and clap his hands again. “He thought he was some kind of native spiritualist,” explained Aurini. The classes were “nothing but a disjointed ramble against anything remotely military or Western. And the students loved it.”

George Orwell would have understood the attraction of privileged young people to the Peace Racket. “Turn-the-other-cheek pacifism,” he observed in 1941, “only flourishes among the more prosperous classes, or among workers who have in some way escaped from their own class. The real working class . . . are never really pacifist, because their life teaches them something different. To abjure violence it is necessary to have no experience of it.” If so many young Americans have grown up insulated from the realities that Vegetius and Sun Tzu elucidated centuries ago, and are therefore easy marks for the Peace Racket, it’s thanks to the success of the very things the Peace Racket despises above all—American capitalism and American military preparedness.

What’s alarming is that these students don’t plan to spend their lives on some remote mountainside in Nepal contemplating peace, harmony, and human oneness. They want to remake our world. They plan to become politicians, diplomats, bureaucrats, journalists, lawyers, teachers, activists. They’ll bring to these positions all the mangled history and misbegotten ideology that their professors have handed down to them. Their careers will advance; the Peace Racket’s influence will spread. And as it does, it will weaken freedom’s foundations.

August 18, 2007

Getting slapped around

Both the Steamer and the Citizen covered the latest meeting of the Meadows Advisory Committee (a sub-committee of the Gilford School Board).  Once again, the Right To Know and the GSB School Board seemingly were close to butting heads, as two applicants were being considered for open slots on the MAC.

With all of the brouhaha swirling around the GSB - Moultonborough meeting, one would have thought that the GSB would have had the thought "let's not even come close to that line that marks controversy and non-controversal.  Let's just play by the rules."

The Citizen reported:

Four members of the committee were set to meet with the only two applicants for the positions on Wednesday night. Prior to commencing the meeting in the Town Hall conference room, School Board Chair and Meadows committee member Sue Allen took committee chair Tim Drew aside and informed him that the group had the option of entering into nonpublic session for the interviews, though she informed him he might consider keeping the proceedings open

Excellent!  Open and transparent.  What local government needs to be optimally effective (doesn't hurt on the PR side either).

Oops, maybe not quite so fast:

 

Allen maintained that the Meadows committee had the right to enter into nonpublic session if it chose to do so, adding that the decision would require a roll-call vote.
When The Citizen pointed out to Allen that the committee would have to cite what provision under RSA 91-A would allow the group to enter into nonpublic session, she responded by saying, "I'll give you a letter."

 

Accountability.  That all this is about.  Doing things the right way, the proper way, the best way.

I'm not talking about making mistakes...everyone and every board will make one from time to time.  But when considering contracts, inter-town meetings,  and now this, one cannot just chalk this up to a simple mistake or misunderstanding.  While Dr. DiMinico later defended the GSB's possible decision to go into non-public session, the Steamer article noted that the Selectmen routinely conducted their interviews in public session.  So did the BudComm!

During the discussion, Allen and Derek Tomlinson, who was filling in for Paul Blandford on the committee, stated their support for remaining in open public session. Tomlinson went as far as to say that, if the candidates wanted to be on a public board, they should get used to the limelight.

The slogan at the 'Grok is to spank'em when they're wrong and thank'em when they're right.  In this case, the THANK YOU (really!  Really not meant sarcastically!). 

When one wishes to serve, that is the atmosphere and the environment for all to expect.  IMHO, non-public meetings should be kept to a minimum if at all possible.

That said, I do have to add the following: 

Oh yeah, I almost forgot about a quote I found in both papers. Derek Tomlinson had this to say:

"I think people are tired of sticking their necks out and getting slapped around."

One does not get "slapped" around for behaving well.  Take that out to the next logical step.

When not behaving well generally means that others notice and comment upon such behavior.  No less so here at the 'Grok.  One makes the deliberate decision to take a given action, for the right or for the wrong. Too often, the right goes thankless.  But wrong?  It can provide a bit of fun for observers.....

Take your pick 

SAU Contracts - School Board not being transparent?

Boy, I go away for vacation for a few days and the paper is just full of news of the School Board.  From the Citizen (8/15):

Gilford School Board again under fire for issuing contracts

As the summer ends and the start of the 2008 budget season is set to begin, many of the Gilford School District's employee contracts have been signed following a unanimous vote of the School Board.

Meeting minutes from the June 22 School Board off-site retreat reveal that Superintendent Paul DeMinico and Chair Sue Allen had been authorized by a motion from board member Paul Blandford and seconded by Kurt Webber, "to place staff under contract during the summer months."

I had noticed this while reviewing the minutes for the School Board because of the Moultonborough "kerfuffle".  And since the normal minutes only referenced this retreat, I had to go back and request that retreat's minutes separately (which was promptly delivered).

While staff contracts do not fall within the purview of the budget committee, some committee members nevertheless were upset about the contract process.

"I'd rather have them do the contracts after they present their budget proposal [to the budget committee]," said Doug Lambert. "I find it to be just another means our elected School Board uses to avoid the limelight."

Superintendent Paul DeMinico explained that many of the contracts awarded were for district teaching positions. There was, however, a one-year administrative contract that Allen and DeMinico entered into on behalf of the School Board.

And that Admin contract was for who?  And what is it costing the taxpayers?

[snip]

Last summer, the School Board renewed almost all of the administrative contracts, including DeMinico's five-year, $125,000-per-year contract without bringing it to a regular meeting.

This is my problem with how business is done - The BudComm does not negotiate individual contracts, that is true.  However, some of these contracts do put the taxpayers on the hook for a considerable sum of money...such as the good Dr. DeMinico.  Over the lifetime of the contract, a round number three quarters of a million dollars.

No, the BudComm does not set policy, but it is responsible to the citizens for oversight of the monies spent on their behalf to run the Town.  It is hard to have that oversight when contracts are discussed, drawn up, signed and completed, when the BudComm is not in session.  So when School Board complains that "the BudComm is haggling and hassling over nickel and dimes", remember that when most of their budget has deliberately been locked up in contracts (which by state statute prevents BudComms statewide from reviewing contracts that are in force) before the budget season starts.

After all, the School Board could, if they so desired, work with the BudComm on these issues.

With regard to the criticism of the process, DeMinico pointed out that the budget committee has no say in district employee contracts, as the committee's authority rests with the bottom-line budget figures. He added that most of the contracts had already been budgeted so they would not cause an overexpenditure of the already-short default budget that is $140,000 less than the School Board had recommended.

"Traditionally, the budget committee has not been involved with the ratification of these things," explained DeMinico.

That one word says it all.  Why?  The only entity that has control over the process is the School Board. As long as they wish to run their operations in a different way, "Traditionally" will be the word for the ages.  Only the School Board can choose to open the process up either in conjunction with BudComm or with the taxpayers.

 

Lambert said that much of this concern came out of the way in which the School Board had entered into the five-year contract with DeMinico. Others on the committee, including the chair, expressed similar concerns. Their objections had less to do with the dollar amount of the contract than with the lack of publicity given to the transaction.

"The School Board could simply choose to do the contracts at another time," Lambert said.

"It sort of ties your hands, because more and more of the budget is fixed," said Budget Committee Chair Dick Hickok, explaining that the underlying problem is committing to spending through contractual obligations that his committee has not seen.

[snip]

However, he said, something along the lines of a contract committee that would review the contracts throughout town might be a good idea.

Hickok said a Gilford citizen had made that suggestion, pointing out that other towns have similar committees.

Lambert, who recently was re- elected to serve a three-year term on the budget committee, said he is in favor of such a committee, which might be formed as a subcommittee of the full budget committee.

Lambert said that, at the very least, he hopes that, in the future, the contracts and the process behind them, are completed in a more open process.

This would be a good thing to have, and I would be in favor of this.

Allen did not return a call seeking comment on the issue.

And why am I not surprised?

A move by the town could affect the process. The Gilford Board of Selectmen recently discussed changing the town's fiscal year from a calendar-year schedule to one running from July 1 through June 30. That would put both the town and school on the same budget cycle and might allow the budget committee to discuss pending contracts before the money is committed.

Hickok said such a move would be beneficial for all involved.

This could be a good thing for the taxpayers..... 

 

Laconia School Board to spend more? Why?

I noticed this is the Wednesday (8/15) in the Laconia Daily Sun at the end of the headline article “Laconia High underclassmen to be confined to campus for lunch”. The part that struck me was this:

Como se dice “detention?

My high school and college Spanish is quite rusty (now, sigh, about 30 years in the past), but I believe it means

How do you say “detention” in Spanish?

The text of the article is:

Based on advice from the School Board association, the board added language to the Student Rights and Responsibilities policy, which was given a first reading at the board meeting. The new language states that the Parent-Student Handbook “will be made available in another language or presented orally upon request.”

Oh boy – this could get expensive. Are they opening up a Pandora's box such that like large cities, the School Board will be spending lots of taxpayer money for not a whole lot of reason? Sure, it sounds nice and all, but are they committing other peoples' money, for example, for an Urdu translation in case that comes up? After all, do it for one, the fairness police will say, you gotta do it for all!

And let me throw this out – the question that should be asked often but some cringe and others snarl when it is uttered “what's the cost / benefit ratio for this? In other words, can you “real world” justify this?

I guess my 'real world' example is over at Lowe's. If they really wanted to be dual language, they picked the wrong one – it should have been French! Really, out of entire population of the Lakes Region, how many Spanish-only customers are there really?

I think Scott Vachon, the lone School Board member to be openly against this, may have a lonely time of it....

I'll see what the School Board Association has to say on this (as it was cited in the article)....let's see if it has been firewalled so that the “masses” can't get in.

Hey, since our taxes pay for the SAU, and the Gilford School Board has members, you think that they'll lend me a username and password for a while in case it is?

Naw, didn't think so....


Another BudComm at loggerheads with a School Board? Heavens!

What the heck is going on with all these School Boards? First Gilford's seems to want to do things steathily, Laconia's Pandor's box of translations, and now the Winnisquam one has riled up folks (Laconia Sun, Thurs, 8/16):

The Northfield Education Committee, an official town board appointed by the Board of Selectmen earlier this year, is urging voters in the Winnisquam School District to turn thumbs down on a proposed teachers contract that will [be] presented to voters of the Northfield-Sanbornton-Tilton school district at a special district meeting this coming Wednesday night.

Actually, let's cut to the chase as to why. Ken Gorrell, a smart and well grounded conservative, is the Chair of the NEC. He had this to say, as the School Board has apparently screwed up in negotiating with the teachers union and then performing badly in having the voters have their say on the contract. In essence, with 3 tries at it, they've messed up each time. And now want a free pass – essentially asking the court and taxpayers “please do not hold us accountable for messing up – just give us the money for this messed up contract. After all, it's for the teachers (strike out) children.”

This is a case of actions have consequences. Or really, the lack of actions have consequences – major ones. Not only is it costing the taxpayers additional time and money to have the special election, one also has to remember that the WRSB fought really hard against the establishment of the NEC which will hold them accountable.

Gee, just as from the Moultonborough tape I was given, it seems that the MSC members don't think that the Moultonborough taxpayers need a Budget Committee either? I may be wrong, but weren't many on that committee not in favor of it? Just as our own Scott Laliberte disparaged our present Gilford BudComm?

Is there something that School Board members have to sign – get elected and behave badly? After all, Ken takes the WRSB to task for spending $200,000 of excess money that could have been returned to the taxpayers. Which would have been the right thing to do, as that money does come from the taxpayers! It seems that the lure of available money distorts many – if it is there, it has to be spent!