Asking a 50-something person who doesn't "blog" (and until recently didn't know what one was) to write one seems awfully risky. But the younger, hipper LEVitators assigned me a topic they knew I would bite on--tomorrow's school levy elections. The reality is that I got infected by the school levy virus back in 1996 when Seattle failed its operating levy, and I have been fairly obsessed with wanting to help other districts pass their funding measures ever since. One example is our Levy Library [1]. Check it out and be sure to send us samples from your last campaign.
It is a strange system we have in Washington, where existing operating levies for schools have to be re-approved by local voters every few years. Until recently, those renewal levies needed an undemocratic supermajority of 60 percent to pass. After the passage of "simple majority" last fall, school districts all across the state are breathing easier. But hopefully school districts are not getting lazy and taking their voters for granted. They still need to get voters' permission to just keep up the current level of spending, much less ask for more, and they have to prove that they are spending tax dollars wisely.
Bonds have always been tougher sells and they still need 60 percent approval to pass.
One district (Renton) has all three.
Here is the link to the complete list [2].
These last few hours before the vote counts come in are nerve wracking. You wonder whether you have done everything possible to remind your voters what is at stake. But the decision--including the important one about whether enough people will even bother to mail in a ballot or show up to cast a vote--is out of your hands.
One thing is for certain. Every vote counts. Remember our over-time simple majority win. Schools are unfortunately used to winning and losing these ballot measures by just a handful of votes. I am just hoping that voters all over the state do the right thing tomorrow and say yes to investing in kids and schools.
Links:
[1] http://www.levylibrary.org/
[2] http://www.educationvoters.org/files/Levy_and_Bond_March11.pdf