The School Committee race presents us with three options for
two open seats – with candidates Mike Zullas, Becky Padera, and Bob Hiss
offering to serve the town.
During my 30 years in Milton, I’ve watched the continued improvement
of our public school system. From French
Immersion to English/STEM, we offer a rigorous curriculum that challenges
students at every level, in every school. We now offer full day kindergarten.
Our children attend world class facilities. The central administration and
school level managers work with exceptional competence and dedication. And our expenditures on education are now
nearer what they should be for a town like ours.
A great many people, with the help of the taxpayers of
Milton, worked very hard for many years to bring this about. Maintaining our
progress, and indeed continuing to improve, places special importance on our
selection of a new generation of elected leaders in public education. I find two candidates who understand what it
takes, and of equal importance, can be trusted to advocate for the necessary
resources.
Mike Zullas
I met Mike a couple of years ago, though I knew of him earlier
through his work on the Warrant Committee. For the last two months while
working on his campaign I’ve gotten to know him. Mike is a true believer in the
power of public school education. A
product of the Brockton public schools, he went on to attend Williams College
and then Vanderbilt Law School where he served as the Law Review Editor-In-Chief.
Mike and his wife Marianne moved to Milton about 8 years ago
in large part because of the quality of our public schools. After a few years
he volunteered for some of the committee work that is so crucial to the ongoing
success of Town Meeting government in Milton.
He served for 3 years on the Warrant Committee, including time on the
Sub-Committee for Schools. He’s also
been a member of the Town Capital Committee. Currently he’s a member of the
Milton High School Site Council, as well as a Town Meeting member.
I think it’s a testament to Mike’s concern for the town and
its public school system that he’s put in this time even before his own
children enter school. Next September
his oldest daughter will begin Kindergarten.
He will have children in our elementary schools for the next 7 years.
So Mike would bring a good knowledge of school issues and a
detailed understanding of its budget. He also brings fresh thinking. Mindful of the need to stretch a dollar, he’s
proposing the consolidation of certain redundant business office functions in
the schools with those already being performed at Town Hall. He’s eager to continue the effort to close
achievement gaps, and believes a strategic plan will help us focus our goals
with our budget.
Becky Padera
Becky Padera is an interim member of the School Committee
serving out the remainder of Denis Keohane’s term. Padera was selected from a large pool of
impressive residents for the interim spot. She’s a former public school
guidance counselor and has two children in our Elementary Schools.
During her year of service she’s taken the time to visit
each of our schools to get to know the staff and students. Through her participation on the Finance
sub-committee she’s become knowledgeable about the budget and has met with
parents in many venues to inform them on the school system’s finances.
As a competitive triathlete, Padera has focused on children‘s
health by co-writing a grant request to the American Heart Association to better
structure recess time. As a STEM
supporter she organized a tour of the MIT Space Laboratory for School Leaders,
and is working on a number of initiatives to enrich this program.
Bob Hiss
Bob Hiss is a business executive with extensive experience
in the software industry. He has one
child in the school system and currently represents Precinct 3 at Town Meeting.
He’s also the Chairman of the Milton Town Republican Committee and sometime
host of the Town Republican Committee’s television show on local access cable. These
last two items have been missing from his campaign communication.
As an activist Republican, leading a town committee dedicated
to “limited taxation” and “limited government”, I was curious how these tenets
would manifest themselves in the race for School Committee. During the second
debate, sponsored by Mytownmatters.com, Candidate Zullas indicated his concern about the high fees for athletic
participation. Mr. Hiss offered as a solution limiting raises for school
department employees. This is similar to
his argument against the CPA, during which he claimed we could have all the
things the CPA might pay for in the future, simply by reducing the future compensation
of town employees. He’s voiced similar views at town meeting.
Aside from the basic unfairness of the idea, as a possible
solution it suffers from a lack of understanding of the town’s financial
situation. Milton suffers from a
systemic financial problem in that our annual revenue growth lags many other
communities, including the state average as a whole. In the last 20 years, the towns of Hingham
and Needham have seen their revenue grow about 78%, while Milton’s has grown
about 63%, as measured by the Department of Revenue in their Municipal Revenue
Growth Factor. Imagine what the 15% spread between Milton and those towns would
have been without numerous overrides during the time?
So a curtailment of our town employees’ compensation would
have to be ongoing- essentially permanent – to deal with the systemic
problem. In very short order we would
find ourselves non-competitive in our ability to hire employees. Imagine our
schools attempting to hire French teachers with native or near native fluency,
or top notch math and science teachers for the STEM program, with a
compensation structure that is simply not competitive.
It’s not enough to say you’re a supporter of public
education. If you’re not willing to advocate for the resources that make high
quality education possible, it’s just an empty phrase.
I hope you’ll join me in supporting Mike Zullas and Becky
Padera for School Committee.
“Milton Mews” 40B Project
The Neponset River Watershed Association is collecting
signatures for a petition opposing the 40B development targeted for the Fowl
Meadow area of Milton. If you’d like to sign the petition, go here:
http://www.neponset.org/