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Single-Issue Silos Deeply Harmful To Fundamental Change In Sacramento

by: David Dayen

Fri Jan 30, 2009 at 15:36:03 PM PST


This certainly made for a great picture - thousands of teachers in Pershing Square in downtown LA rallying against budget cuts to education.  You can put it next to state employees rallying against state employee cuts.  And nurses rallying against health care cuts.  And, I don't know, park rangers rallying against park closures.  But social movements don't happen in a vacuum.  History shows us that coalitions built across platforms succeed in galvanizing public opinion and forcing through progress.  Teachers angry about education cuts is something I endorse.  They're well within their sphere of expertise to complain about that area of the budget.  I don't know that it's helpful at all in the midst of this crisis.  Especially when it's so narrowcast and specific.

The California Teachers Association released a TV ad Friday that says "some Sacramento politicians are going too far" in considering changes to the schools budget.

Specifically, the teachers union attacks a proposal floating around the Capitol to give school administrators more flexibility in how to use so-called categorical money that is currently earmarked for class-size reduction.

"Tell your lawmakers: Ending the class size reduction program won't save California one dime. It only hurts our kids," the voice in the ad says.

Now, nobody wants class sizes to inflate.  But when each single-issue silo zealously guards their small piece of power and tries to call to action only for that specific piece, several things happen.  First of all, the counterpoint is easily cast as "special interests clinging to power."  Second, there is absolutely no continuity of message across the groups, and in fact their messages can conflict with one another.  As I've said many times, unity is the great need of the hour.  And there seems to be no comprehension on the part of CTA or frankly any other progressive or labor group that budget money is fungible and everything that the state does affects their single issue in one form or another.

By way of example, how great would it be if CTA put up an ad saying, "Times are tough, and yet the state spends billions of dollars warehousing low-level drug offenders who need treatment and not jail.  We need education and not incarceration.  Tell the governor and your legislator to end 30 years of failure in our prisons and return to sensible sentencing policy to save us billions and help fund our schools."  It's really not that hard.  Even Dan Walters can do it.

The fastest growing segment of the state's deficit-ridden budget, by far, has been its prison system, reflecting severe overcrowding, generous labor contracts and federal court pressure to reform inmate health care.

"Corrections," an ironic misnomer, has jumped from less than $5 billion a year to more than $10 billion in the last decade, over twice as fast as school spending, the biggest budget item. It now costs about $45,000 a year to feed, clothe and medicate each of the state's 170,000-plus inmates, or roughly five times what taxpayers spend on a typical public school student. And that doesn't count what it costs to supervise tens of thousands of parolees.

One element of any plan to close the state's immense deficit, as well as relieve the overcrowding that invites federal intervention, must be to get a handle on prison costs by shedding some low-intensity inmates.

We could see the state employees union demand to restore the car tax.  The firefighters could call for full funding of education.  Etc.

If each group goes after their piece of the pie, ultimately we're all going to lose.  History teaches us that only with a movement united together can we create prosperity and security for all Californians.

David Dayen :: Single-Issue Silos Deeply Harmful To Fundamental Change In Sacramento
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Indeed, movements are broad (8.00 / 1)
or they are not movements.  And no one, not even the smartest, best funded unions, can build movements.  The post-Prop. 8 energy is the rumblings of a movement that leaves silos, as Dave says.  When the LGBT folks realize that Lobby Day, for example, in February (hosted by EQCA) is worth doing only if the LGBT movement thanks the Dems for staying with us and asks how we can help, we'll know we have a movement. Power comes from the many, not the top down.

I'm not hearing enough about this, either (0.00 / 0)
Rick,

This has been a worry of mine since November.  It's almost February, and in the four months since the election, there's been very little organizing that has not been Prop 8 focused.

I can't blame the LGBT community, since the outburst of energy and creativity that came out of the vote was an incredible opportunity for movement building.  It's an opportunity for that opportunity to build beyond the traditional NGO-type silos that folks like the environmental community are still saddled with.  But by being fairly narrowly focused on issues, it's still a silo.

Some of this may be "selection bias", since I get most of my California news from this blog, and the Prop 8 vote affected many of the folks who post here in a very direct and deeply personal way: they post about something they care passionately about, and that they should feel passionately about.  But there's a risk that energy that went towards other issues and other campaigns last year will be lost if someone else puts effort into channeling that other energy as well.  In particular -- it's a lost opportunity of capturing some of the organizational knowledge and people who helped elect Barack Obama.

The Courage Campaign can help a lot in this.  At a minimum, it's well placed to organize "debriefings" and trainings on "where do we go from here", before the election is a distant memory.  


[ Parent ]
Spot on, Dave (0.00 / 0)
Groups pursuing issue silos, like CTA is doing, damage all progressive efforts substantially. And, as Rick notes above, that ain't no movement. Instead of wingnuts using a divide and conquer strategy against progressives, groups like CTA are doing it for them.

Devil's Advocacy -- What's The Alternative (0.00 / 0)
Right now, there really isn't a state-wide organizational structure to put together protests and educate the public on these issues.  By state-wide, I don't mean organizations that cover the whole state from one office.  By state-wide, I mean an organization that can get neighbor meeting neighbor in every county and town in the state.   We don't even have the equivalent of a California Move-On -- an organization that can effectively reach people via cyber media.

So the unions like CTA are stepping into a vacuum.  Don't blame them for filling that vacuum.  Start creating a structure so we can fill that vacuum with something more broad based.


ah, but we are (0.00 / 0)
I was discussing today with some people ways to build a grassroots army out of the remnants of the Obama campaign.  More soon.

Nevertheless, it's shortsighted and stupid for CTA to go out on their own.  Recent precedent from 2005 and the special election shows that working together is a far better solution.


[ Parent ]
2005 is a great example (0.00 / 0)
That was doing it right, yeah.  But the state Democratic Party doesn't seem to have had much to do with it, and after the election, butkis.  Angelides, who was very supportive of the No-On-75 campaign, appeared to want nothing to do with the tactics or people who won that fight.  Chances are, if he had glommed on to the value of that support, he'd be governor now, and I suspect the state would be in much better shape than Herr Governor has left us.

I look forward to see what y'all are up to.  I'm not in a position right now to help organize such an effort at the state level, but I'm very interested in helping out locally.  I'm guessing there are a lot of people like me waiting to see what happens.


[ Parent ]
Well I can tell you this: (0.00 / 0)
The animal rescue community is mighty pissed over the proposed 9% veterinary tax.  I have called and sent letters.

I pay through the nose to do what the local government cannot or will not.  Then they block mandatory spay and neuter to help backyard breeders make money under the radar and cause even higher population which RESCUES end up dealing with.

One thing about the humane community:  They don't screw around, they act.

I for one am furious.  On a $300.00 vet bill (which is the norm for a single rescue animal, with some less and many 10 times that, the tax will be the equivalent of a cat neuter.

The more they tax us, the less we can help and the more animals killed.


when noone else is stepping up (0.00 / 0)
you have to at least try to defend your turf. you'd have a stronger point if there was some umbrella movement that the CTA was breaking off from.

would that the democratic party gave enough of a damn to coordinate some kind of thing like that.

surf putah, your friendly neighborhood central valley samizdat


would that labor did, too (8.00 / 1)


[ Parent ]
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