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Curmudgeon's Corner

cur-mud-geon: anyone who hates hypocrisy and pretense and has the temerity to say so; anyone with the habit of pointing out unpleasant facts in an engaging and humorous manner

Voters Have Spoken...

By Al Campbell
Wednesday, Apr 2 2008, 06:45 AM

Random thoughts:

  • The turn-out by voters in Germantown was reported to be some 34%, as contrasted with the statewide prediction of only about 20%.  That may well be a 'victory' for the group that was pushing its agenda using postcards and telephone calls.  I suspect that this group stimulated a greater turnout than would've otherwise been the case.  That is a good thing.
  • It seems though that the voters were not swayed sufficiently so as to follow the suggestions made by this group.  Those who were criticized by this group seem to have fared well enough to win.  Those who were 'favored' by not being attacked by this group didn't fare as well.  Are we likely done with this kind of electioneering in Germantown?  I am admittedly naive, but I'm not that naive.  I expect these tactics will continue to be seen in future Germantown elections.
  • The need for some kind of solution to the school crowding in the Germantown district will have to be addressed at some point in the future.  It may be that a scaled down version of the defeated proposition will find its way to a ballot later this year.  If so, I suspect we'll see higher interest rates and increases in all the associated costs so that, even if the total bond issue were to be reduced, the ultimate costs could very well exceed what would've been the case with this issue.  The reported 55% to 45% margin was a bit surprising; I had suspected the issue might have been outvoted by a larger number.  The smaller turn-out obviously included a higher number of voters who favored the referendum.  That might be expected in a non-Presidential election.
  • The face of the School Board changes a bit.
  • The state Supreme Court race was critical, in my view, and the conservative won albeit by a relatively slim margin.  That bodes well for the state.
  • There is a large segment of new members elected to the Washington County Board.  What that will mean can only be determined as we see the outcome of the various issues that will face this new board.  I hope that we will see special attention paid to holding down spending and thus taxes.  Maybe my naivite' is showing again.
  • And, the 'Frankenstein Veto' has died at the hands of the voters.  That, also, is a very good thing without regard to which party might control the Governor's Mansion.

All in all, the voters have spoken and our representative form of government is working as was intended.

Comments

Tom Stauffacher   

Thank you Germantown voters for partially restoring my faith in the political process. You ignored the outside interests,the interlopers,and special interest groups in the elections for village trustees. It almost makes me want to participate in the political arena again. Like a Phoenix the village has risen out of the ashes of political despair to new heights of optimism. Thank you.

April 2, 2008 8:18 AM

POMO17   

Thank you Germantown Citizens United, for opening up my eyes-I guess you were right... What goes around comes around !!! Good luck to our newly elected Trustees!!!

April 2, 2008 8:36 AM

Concerned GT Resident   

I fail to see new heights of optimism when it comes to the school referendum outcome.  The consequences will be larger class sizes at the elementary grade levels.

April 2, 2008 8:43 AM

taxedtothemax   

I see lots of optimism that I'm not being asking to pay for 4 year old kindergarden so that some people can stop paying for day care.

I also have some optimism that the school board notices that the only opposed member in their school board race - lost to someone who didn't support the referendum.

Maybe now the school board will realize we are not made of money and will do what New Berlin did if we really need a new school. They will take money out of their operational budget and build the school that way.

April 5, 2008 12:32 PM

Niki   

Taxed to the Max,

So, how can I (as a stay at home mom, so no day care costs here) be optimistic at the fact that when my daughter goes to 5 year old kindergarten, she may not be able to go for a full day.

April 10, 2008 1:01 PM

Concerned GT Resident   

Max,

Where did anybody say anything about 4 year old Kindergarten?

Cool.  You don't want to pay to build space that Germantown needs, yet I don't see you raising a stink about paying $300 more per year to MATC than you would to WCTC.

April 10, 2008 9:11 PM

taxedtothemax   

Niki - this is my problem because? If you want your 5 year old to go to full day kindergarden - then pay for it.

And as soon as we get full day 5 the very next thing they will push for is 4 year old kindergarden.

I can't do anything about MATC or WCTC. Bring me something to vote on and I will, or better yet, allow us to elect the people who tax us for MATC and maybe that fee would come down.

Yet another business announced they are leaving Wisconsin today, let's just keep raising and raising these taxes and we can get rid of all of them.

April 11, 2008 12:22 AM

Niki   

Taxed to the Max-

I suppose it really isn't your problem. All I am asking you to do is look at something outside of your point of view. You made a blanket statement, being happy about not having to pay for someone else not to have to pay for daycare. I just thought that you may want to see things another way. Sadly, I can't afford to send my kids to private school. Yes I appreciate, not your problem. However, I wish you would have given all the kids in Germantown a chance at what could and would be the beginning of a wonderful education at Germantown Schools.  

April 11, 2008 10:28 AM

taxedtothemax   

And how is a new school going to help that? Good teachers are key to a good education. Buildings are 0% to do with good education.

April 11, 2008 7:31 PM

Niki   

But if we don't have the classroom space and the kids are all on top of each other and trying to get the attention of the teacher and competing with up to 34 other children, as opposed to 24, how are we helping? Even the best teachers need the space to do their thing.

April 12, 2008 4:22 PM

Recalcitrant   

Normally I participate in this blogosphere as a true recalcitrant actor - I'm stubbornly defiant of authority.   But that doesn't make me stupid, arrogant or self-centered.  I have a sense of community, I think of the rights of others moreso than my own.  Max is not like me.  I would venture to say that Max is living beyond his or her means, and also that he/she/it pays no taxes whatsoever.  Maybe the landlord or park owner does, but not Max.

Max is an example of the most dangerous kind of authority:  a narcissistic electorate.  They wend their ways into otherwise good communities, bent on destruction so that no one person can be better than they.  

There was a story in last weeks paper that Cedarburg is taking up the issue of all-day kindergarden:  of 415 or so Wisconsin school districts, only 9 aren't offering this program.  Max's contention is that 406 school districts are stupid, and only 9 are smart.  Max fails to accept that full-day kindergarden is expected all across the country, not just Wisconsin.  Or at least by good families with decent expectations for their children.

Max, everything you type spotlights your ignorance.  "Do what New Berlin did, pay for it out of the operating budget."  Newsflash:  the operating budget IS tax dollars.  New Berlin overtaxed the residents for 10 years and built up a huge cash surplus;  according to their annual report, they went from a seven millon dollar surplus to two million.  "I can't do anything about MATC or WCTC.  Bring me something to vote on and I will":  you just had something to vote on, and you voted FOR MATC.  "Yet another business announced they are leaving Wisconsin":  perhaps the community they are located in is a lot like Germantown, with no inherent qualities to attract and keep qualified workers and executives.  Name one single high-quality business in Germantown that pays taxes.  Finally, "Buildings are 0% to do with good education".  That, Max, was probably the most ignorant comment to date.  I suppose you'd have classes held in one of the parks, devoid of computers, books, shelter and indoor plumbing.

Max, perhaps you could find someone who actually pays taxes around here to look up their tax bills for the past several years, and actually study that the School Board has DECREASED taxes.  Perhaps, Max, the businessmen on the board actually had a strategy (as they have explained over and over to the public) to keep lowering taxes.  Your narcissism has and will continue to bring down the community I was born and raised in.  Please go back to Milwaukee.

April 21, 2008 6:15 PM

Recalcitrant   

I forgot to whip Max some more.  Max, why should Niki stop with paying for her child to go to kindergarden for an entire day?  why not make her pay for her child's first grade education too? or second grade? third? fourth?  If Niki's daughter enjoys music, why shouldn't she have to pay for music instruction?  How about biology?  What about foreign language?

Oh, yeah, 4 year old kindergarden.  God forbid we should start educating 4 year olds, too.  Face it, Max.... you're just afraid of educated people under 4 feet tall.

April 21, 2008 8:33 PM

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