May 21, 2012

Iowa State Fair director raises school start debate again

Organizers of the Iowa State Fair are worried a later start date might hurt attendance as more kids will be back in school as the fair winds down. The fair hit a record 1.1 million people this year in its run from August 7th through the 17th.

Next year the fair will run from August 13th through the 23rd, and executive director John Putney says by the final day some kids will have been in school for one week already. Putney says it’s difficult to leave an activity like fair and the animals you show, and the projects and then go right back to school without a break.

Putney says he’s also worried about the whole tourism industry in Iowa, and the fact that the tourism industry generates dollars that help fund education and other "important priorities to Iowans." Putney also serves in the Iowa Legislature and delaying the start of school until later in August has been one of his priorities for six years.

Putney says Ankeny seems to be the worst offender, "And it’s just unbelievable the economic impact this fair furnishes the City of Ankeny, with the kids that we hire in the summer and the motels and hotels that’re booked the whole time, I think it’s just absolutely a crime."

Ankeny Schools Superintendent, Matthew Wendt, says they’re doing what’s best to help kids learn. "Our primary mission is to educate pre-K-12 students, and we are under more scrutiny than I have witnessed in my professional career," Wendt says, "and if world class education means that we need to be in school more days, that’s what we are going to do."

Wendt starting school in the middle of August permits students to earn more college credit while they were still in high school. Wendt says they do have almost 10,000 credit hours earned through the Des Moines Area Community College in Ankeny, and also have students taking other classes through other institutions. Wendt says he respects the desire of lawmakers to protect the state tourism industry, but says it may not be fair to put that on the backs of schools.

Stacy Rosemore, the director of tourism for Okoboji, says the tourism money is important to the state — including schools. Rosemore says the tourism industry brings in billions of dollars for the state, and every day the kids leave to go back to school, we don’t have the workforce for the restaurants and facilities, and they also lose families that are vacationing. "So we are losing millions of dollars a day by these children going back to school early," Rosemore says.

Rosemore says Iowa should join other Midwestern states like Minnesota, Michigan and Wisconsin who prohibit school from starting before Labor Day. Iowa law does prohibit schools from starting before September 1st, but all but one of the 362 districts were granted a waiver from the law this year.

Department of Education Director Judy Jeffrey says the waiver decision is decided locally. Jeffrey says every local board must establish the start and ending dates of the school year in an open meeting that includes public input. "So it’s very difficult for us to deny a waiver, only because of a state fair event," Jeffrey says.

Jeffrey says districts usually request an earlier start date for two reasons — they want to shorten the summer break to reduce remedial work in the fall, and they want to finish first semester tests before the Christmas break.

Winterset superintendent Doyle Scott says they surveyed parents and teachers to find out when they wanted classes to begin and end, and the vote was 15 to one to start school before September first.

Scott says you also have to keep in mind that high school volleyball, band and football practices start in the middle of August, so almost half of the high school students in the state are already involved in activities at that time. Scott says an earlier start date also allows districts to align their calendar with neighboring colleges or universities.

 

Clinton-backing Iowans intend to vote for her in Denver

Fifty-seven delegates from Iowa will be seated on the floor of the Democratic National Convention in Denver, with eight other Iowa Democrats serving as alternates. On Monday, Illinois Senator Barack Obama, the presumptive party nominee, will stop in Iowa on his way to Denver. Obama bested Hillary Clinton in the overall delegate count, but Clinton backers intend to place her name in nomination at the convention — with Obama’s blessing.

Former Iowa Governor Tom Vilsack was among Clinton’s keenest supporters. Although Vilsack endorsed Obama in June, Vilsack plans to vote for Clinton — first — in Denver. "I think the purpose of the roll-call vote is to recognize the extraordinary campaign that Senator Clinton ran and it is a way of giving those ardent supporters of Senator Clinton an opportunity to express their and enthusiasm and appreciation for her effort and I think that’s how it ought to be viewed," Vilsack says. "At the end of the day, what’s going to happen is that there’s going to be a unanimous vote for Senator Obama and every single delegate on that floor is going to be an Obama supporter."

It wasn’t until June, after all states and territories had held their contests, that Clinton ended her campaign and endorsed Obama. Vilsack says despite the mechanics of the delegate voting at the convention, Clinton will not be the nominee. "I am obviously a big supporter and a friend of Senator Clinton. I’m keeping my hopes up that maybe — somehow — she’ll be on the ticket. If she’s not, I’m sure Senator Obama will have a great running mate and we’ll have a great team," Vilsack says. "I’ll vote as I was appointed and selected as a Clinton delegate, and then I will be enthusiastically supporting Senator Obama."

First-term Congressman Dave Loebsack, a Democrat from Mount Vernon, endorsed Obama just before the Caucuses and plans to cast his vote — as a "super" delegate — for Obama. "I am confident that no matter what happens at the convention, truly I’m confident, that we’re going to come together, we as Democrats, and unite behind Barack Obama," Loebsack says.

Back in 2000, Loebsack was not a congressman, he was a college professor and a Bill Bradley-backing delegate to the Democratic National Convention. The day before that convention, though, Bradley asked all of his delegates to vote for Al Gore and Bradley’s name was not placed in nomination. Michael Gronstal of Council Bluffs, the Democratic leader of the Iowa Senate, is a Clinton supporter who sees nothing wrong with a boisterous, pro-Clinton demonstration on the convention floor, something that happened at conventions in the 1950s and early ’60s.

"I actually remember watching on black-and-white TV the parades through the Democratic and Republican conventions — mostly the Republican conventions because my parents, that’s what they watched — of the people nominated and then the supporters, waving their signs and marching through the convention hall and those are fond memories for me," Gronstal says. "I think that’s appropriate."

Gronstal’s wife endorsed Clinton before the Caucuses. Shortly afterwards, Gronstal — as one of the "super" delegates to the 2008 convention — announced his support of Clinton, too. "I have great affection and respect for Hillary Clinton and that hasn’t stopped," Gronstal says.

Despite all the talk about Clinton, though, this convention is being run by and for Obama and his organization. Governor Chet Culver endorsed Obama after the Iowa Caucuses. Culver will be among a group of Democratic governors given a chance to speak to the delegates assembled in Denver. "I’m looking forward to it. I really am. It’s very exciting," Culver says. "I think it’s a great thing for the state. I’ll certainly talk a little bit about Iowa’s prominent role in helping get Senator Obama up and running because he did so well in the Caucuses."

Obama won Iowa’s Caucuses on January 3, establishing himself as a contender and dismantling the idea that Clinton would cruise to the nomination.