Our public schools are still a good investment
The “Strong Schools, Strong City” levy referendum on which we will vote in November is a call for a breakthrough in Minneapolis education. Imagine this: we invest in our community schools and the growing needs of our urban students, and Minneapolis holds its own as one of the most highly educated populations in our country.
We have high numbers of high school and college graduates. According to the Brookings Institution’s 2005 “Mind the Gap” report, the latter has held true. In 2000, the Twin Cities ranked high for median income (14th) among the 100 largest metro areas.
According to a 2008 report by state economist Tom Stinson and state demographer Tom Gillaspy, however, the prosperity Minnesota enjoys today is due to “wise decisions made 50[-plus] years ago,” including “investment in education and human capital.”
Now, metro-area workers are aging, the achievement gap between white students and students of color is one of the largest in the country, and our citizens’ investment in education is not keeping pace with the rising costs of inflation. By the time you read this, the number of workers turning age 62 may have already jumped to 30 percent. As our baby boomers retire, Minneapolis will increasingly rely on the students in today’s urban classrooms.
Minneapolis Public Schools (MPS), like all public schools, is a cornerstone of democracy. MPS subscribes to the 100 percent rule, which simply means they agree to responsibly educate each child who comes through their doors, regardless of that child’s life circumstances.
While we may compare our public schools to other businesses from time to time, let’s be clear on one thing: our public schools do not get to choose their raw material. In addition, our schools pay much less towards administration. While most businesses scream if their administrative budget is less than 7 percent of their income, MPS pays only 3.5 percent of its costs towards its administration (compared to a 4.2 percent average for most Minnesota districts). Yet, the mission of MPS is firm: to grant all children — even those with compromised access to housing and health care — an education that will lift them from poverty to meet the challenges of a global economy.
Our state has invested well in our Minneapolis children, and for good reason. According to MPS data for 2008–2009, 65.6 percent of our students receive free or reduced-cost lunches (a standard gauge for poverty); 23.2 percent are English language learners and 15.9 percent are in special education.
More than 70 percent of Minneapolis public schools students are students of color, and by nearly any indicator, the statistics are not in their favor. According to the Brookings Institution, minority households in the Twin Cities metropolitan area have incomes at least $20,000 lower than white households. Their home-ownership rate is 20 percentage points less than that of whites, and they live with a wide disparity of health care resources — 33 percent of Latinos lack health insurance, compared to 5 percent of whites and 12 percent of African Americans.
Unfortunately, our state investment in Minneapolis children has not kept up with the rising costs of energy and fuel oil, gasoline, educational books and supplies, and medical care for education professionals. However, mandates for high-stakes testing, special education services, transportation, English language learning, health and safety, physical education, drug and sex education (to name a few) are rising exponentially.
The cuts over the last decade have cost us dearly in other ways: fewer enrichment programs like art and music, books and technology that are often older than our students; poor facility maintenance, and a greater reliance on parent fundraising (which can exacerbate equity disparities among schools).
Something — someone — has got to give. I suggest that it be us, the citizens of Minneapolis. Our schools’ burden is our opportunity. We in Minneapolis are smart enough to know that, in our globalized world, with the growing diversity of residents and students, maintaining our current standard of living means that we must invest in our human capital — our public school students.
Our schools can make a significant difference in closing the race and class disparities that plague our urban students. There are proven interventions that work, and MPS’s new Strategic Plan aims to apply them: to help all children read at grade-level by third grade, to prepare all children for algebra by eighth grade, to expose all students to cutting-edge technology and culturally-competent textbooks and, finally, to continue an investment in lower class sizes.
The referendum will allow our schools to do all of the above at an increase of $60 million in annual revenue per year. For the average homeowner, this amounts to a monthly increase of $17. That’s about 50 cents a day to bring critical resources to many children whose greatest hope is a strong education.
50 cents a day to boost our schools’ achievement at a time when fuel costs are attracting families back into the city. That’s a small price for our future adults whose earnings will fund our retirement and Minneapolis prosperity. And we can also expect home values to increase as our schools and their students grow stronger.
Kate Towle is co-chair of the MPS District Parent Advisory Council, a member of the Strong Schools, Strong City volunteer committee and the parent of two MPS students. She lives in the Prospect Park/East River Road neighborhood.
last revised: August 21, 2008


This typical “feel-good” “for the kids” rhetoric really has to be contained. Facts and logic appear to have no place in today’s educational discussion anymore.
Kate Towle states “our citizens’ investment in education is not keeping pace with the rising costs of inflation”. In fact, educational expenditures have risen at twice the rate of inflation, the highest increase of any spending we know of, even more than health care. Where does she come off saying we are lagging?
Listening to Kate, one would believe the ability for an indiduals brain is strictly limited to the “child’s life circumstances”.
“65.6 percent of our students receive free or reduced-cost lunches”. What does this have to do with learning?
“More than 70 percent of Minneapolis public schools students are students of color, and by nearly any indicator, the statistics are not in their favor”. What statistics are not in the favor? Are you saying Black kids are dumber than white kids?
“minority households in the Twin Cities metropolitan area have incomes at least $20,000 lower than white households. Their home-ownership rate is 20 percentage points less than that of whites, and they live with a wide disparity of health care resources” Does owning a home increase your child’s IQ? Does making more money make your child learn? Does the disparity in health care access really keep kids away from school so they cannot learn?
This whole article is nothing short of BS. Minneapolis spends an average of more than $18,000 per pupil (54% higher than the state average) and pays their teachers an average of $54,000/year ($84,000 when you include benefits). What are we getting short-changed on?
My kid is a straight A student in Minneapolis schools. Yet, she gets free lunches, we have no health care, rent and make considerably less than the $20,000 year gap you speak of. Why, by your account, if she were black, she would be the dumbest kid in the class. But even though she is lucky enough to be white, the rest of the deck is supposedly stacked against her and she should not be “performing” well in school.
Everything in this article is pure BS and has nothing at all to do with the ability for kids to get a good education. Try taking a look at the real reasons for educational disparities amoung the poor and minority populations and deal with them. It has nothing to with money and everything to do with parental beliefs, attitudes, priorities and support.
We don’t need more money for our schools, we need to give parents a swift kick in the behind.
That a “Rambler” rambles speaks for itself, but “common sense,” a stretch. I have to ask myself what this man’s point is. Repeating the same same famous phrase twice (What is BS by the way?). What a closing! Suggesting that “we” whoever that is, should around kicking people in the where? (Oh, now he mutes his arrogant vulgarity.) Sheer eloquence, and what an argument to back it up.
Are you telling us that you are a model parent? How much kicking at home did you do to mold your daughter into a straight A student? And raising her with in a family that doesn’t seem to know the necessity of health insurance.
What great lessons! I’m sure that you are absolutely certain that she’ll turn out more-than-OK, just like you! How much do those bragging rights cost? Any for sale?
And for a person without the least bit of tolerance for another parent like Kate Towle who realizes that good, and even great education must be funded and that America is losing more of its global edge by the second. That the frightening disparity between the rich and the poor is precisely impacting public education, because of people like you are filled with the “common sense” to vote against your own interests, never mind that of your child.
Wake up, pal, or just invite everyone to your own personal educational theme park where you can spew your vulgarity in the public realm and we all can’t wait to hear the next word. Oh, sorry, we forgot… this is all about you! Hey, you’re the star. What lucid thoughts!
If you don’t support the good of ALL children (oh that A-list daughter!) think about a new career path, add a few zeros to the $17 and put her in a private school. I’m sure she’ll end up at Yale and buy the old folks some health insurance some fine day.
Suggest you drop the “clashing cymbal” act. What a voice of the opposition for all to see! Are you all like that? You must be proud of yourself for that post.