• Saying Goodbye to Educational Freedom in Nevada

    July 6, 2012
    When I first heard the State of Nevada had opted to combine No Child Left Behind with Common Core, in late 2007 – I knew it was a plan to ‘take over and remake our local school system.’ By the time the Nevada State Board of Education adopted the Common Core State Standards (CCSS) in October 2010, I knew I was correct.

    Since then I’ve done my best to update this article with new information.

    Common Core is an Agenda 21 (U.N.) based curriculum that teaches sustainable development, zero-population philosophies and the dangers of humans impacting the environment. It is designed to teach children what kind of action should be taken globally, nationally and locally by organizations of the United Nations System, Governments, and Major Groups. The CCSS are sold as a set of academic standards, or learning goals, for kindergarten through 12th grade in English language arts and mathematics that states voluntarily adopt.

    In order to adopt a global-type-thinking, an individual must be trained to give up their personal sovereignty and adopt phrases like “for the good of the whole.” A key step is to disregard the whole importance of basic human rights held in the Bill of Rights.

    They were supposedly developed by governors and chief state school officers, in consultation with higher education faculty and other stakeholders. CCSS, however is really federally mandated.

    The standards outline what students should master in each grade and shape curriculum development at each grade level. The standards establish a clear roadmap of academic expectations, so that students, parents, and teachers can work together toward shared goals.

    The standards are ‘clear, concise, and relevant’ to the real world, focusing on the knowledge and skills students will need to succeed in life after high school, in both postsecondary education and a globally competitive workforce. Unfortunately, they aren’t.
    The push from the federal government for access to your child’s private information all started long before the stimulus and Common Core, but it is all connected in the same tangled web. The assessments, which will be used to collect the data, are aligned to Common Core.

    The Educational Technical Assistance Act of 2002, Title II, created the Institute of Education Sciences (IES). The IES manages the State Longitudinal Data Systems (SLDS) grants — one source of federal taxpayer dollars. Even before that, the America Competes Act 2000 mandated that several elements of data be collected by all the states.

    When researched the ‘Birth and Beyond’ grant applications were actually submitted and processed through the National Center for Education Statistics (NCES) whose purpose, per the website, is to:”…fulfill a Congressional mandate to collect, collate, analyze, and report complete statistics on the condition of American education; conduct and publish reports; and review and report on education activities internationally.”

    The NCES site also contains a link to something called Common Core of Data (CCD): “…(CCD) is a program of the U.S. Department of Education’s National Center for Education Statistics that annually collects fiscal and non-fiscal data about all public schools, public school districts and state education agencies in the United States. The data are supplied by state education agency officials and include information that describes schools and school districts, including name, address, and phone number; descriptive information about students and staff, including demographics; and fiscal data, including revenues and current expenditures.”

    Furthermore the Common Education Data Standards (CEDS) project states this: “…a national collaborative effort to develop voluntary, common data standards for a key set of education data elements to streamline the exchange, comparison, and understanding of data within and across institutions and sectors.”

    Under CEDS Frequently Asked Questions is “How is CEDS different from the Common Core State Standards?

    “… (CEDS) is a set of commonly agreed upon names, definitions, option sets, and technical specifications for a given selection of data elements. CEDS focuses on the meaning of data stored in longitudinal data systems, and is being developed by a stakeholder group facilitated by (National Center for Education Statistics.) CEDS will support systemic education reform efforts by making it possible for states to collect the data they need to fully understand their progress on successfully adopting the Common Core State Standards or any other standards.”

    The NCES, adds: “…the consolidated hub of a comprehensive statewide longitudinal data system—comprising individual student, faculty and other relevant data from birth to high school, college, and career – that interfaces with an integrated statewide online portal …”

    This started back in 2005 when the organization, ‘Achieve’ launched the American Diploma Project (ADP) Network. Through the ADP Network governors, state education officials, postsecondary leaders and business executives work together to improve postsecondary preparation by aligning high school standards, graduation requirements and assessment and accountability systems with the demands of college and careers.

    To close the expectations gap, ADP Network says states have committed to the following four actions: align high school standards and assessments with the knowledge and skills required for the demands of college and careers; establish graduation requirements that require all high school graduates to complete a college- and career-ready curriculum so that earning a diploma assures a student is prepared for postsecondary education; develop statewide high school assessment systems anchored to college — and career- ready expectations; and create comprehensive accountability and reporting systems that promote college and career readiness for all students.

    From Achieves 2006 report ‘Closing the Expectations Gap’: “To help states put stronger educational data systems in place, 10 national organizations including Achieve, NGA, the Council of Chief State School Officers, State Higher Education Executives Organization and the National Center for Educational Accountability teamed up to launch the Data Quality Campaign. The campaign is a collaborative effort to encourage state policy-makers to improve the collection, availability and use of high-quality education data from prekindergarten through the postsecondary level and to provide tools and resources that will assist them.”
    As for the Data Quality Campaign, it aims is to implement state longitudinal data systems, which has been described as a “womb-to-workplace” data collection system . This creates and collects information in these 12 areas:

    1. An unique identifier for every student that does not permit a student to be individually identified (except as permitted by federal and state law);

    2. The school enrollment history, demographic characteristics, and program participation record of every student;

    3. Information on when a student enrolls, transfers, drops out, or graduates from a school;

    4. Students scores on tests required by the Elementary and Secondary Education Act;

    5. Information on students who are not tested, by grade and subject;

    6. Students scores on tests measuring whether they’re ready for college;

    7. A way to identify teachers and to match teachers to their students;

    8. Information from students’ transcripts, specifically courses taken and grades earned;

    9. Data on students’ success in college, including whether they enrolled in remedial courses;

    10. Data on whether K-12 students are prepared to succeed in college;

    11. A system of auditing data for quality, validity, and reliability; and

    12. The ability to share data from preschool through postsecondary education data systems.

    In 2010, Nevada joined the Smarter Balanced Assessment Consortium (SBAC), a state-led consortium working to develop next-generation assessments that accurately measure student progress toward college- and career-readiness. Smarter Balanced is one of two multistate consortia awarded funding from the U.S. Department of Education in 2010 to develop an assessment system aligned to the CCSS by the 2014-15 school years.

    The second multistate consortia (a fancy word for a partnership) are the Partnership for Assessment of Readiness for College and Careers (PARCC).

    In 2012, Nevada received the National Governors Association (NGA) CCSS Postsecondary Collaborative Grant to identify steps necessary for a seamless transition from K-12 into college and careers. Areas of examination under the grant include transition courses and options to help high school seniors who do not meet college-readiness benchmarks under the new assessments based on the CCSS; communication strategies to explain to students, parents, policymakers, and other stakeholders the anticipated impact of the more rigorous CCSS and related assessments; and NSHE faculty preparation to understand the value and positive, tangible impact of the CCSS in educating future Nevada System of Higher Education students.

    In March 2013, the Board of Regents adopted a new K-12 Alignment policy under Title 4, Chapter 16, Section 2 of the Handbook authorizing institutions to enter into agreements with school districts to provide college readiness programs, including remedial and 100-level courses at a registration fee appropriate to cover at least the costs of the program, including but not limited to the instructor’s salary, supplies and equipment needed, and appropriate overhead costs. The registration fee must be approved by the President.

    Institutions must report annually to the Board on the programs offered, the number of high school students served, and the approved registration fees charged.

    At the end of May 2013, the Smarter Balanced Assessment Consortium released sets of example test questions for grades 3–8 and 11 in both English language arts/literacy and mathematics. The Practice Tests are freely available on the SBAC website.

    In June 2013, Governor Brian Sandoval created the Common Core State Standards Steering Committee co-chaired by the Chancellor of NSHE and the Nevada Superintendent for Public Instruction, through Executive Order #2013-06.

    In July 2013, the Board of Regents adopted a resolution expressing support for and encouraging long-term commitment by the State of Nevada in the adoption and implementation of the CCSS.

    The CCSS are supposedly anchored in expectations for college readiness. Higher Education will benefit as students graduate from high school better prepared for college and need less remediation.

    College students who do not need remediation are also more likely to earn a degree or finish a certification program and at lower costs to themselves and their institutions, which will mean resources for other areas. Higher education faculty will also be able to spend more time going deeper in to complex material with their students.

    NSHE is a key partner in the successful implementation of the CCSS in Nevada and is actively participating in many related efforts:

    Over the years, individual NSHE institutions have often worked with local school districts in their service areas on various educational issues important to K-12 and postsecondary students. The partnership between UNR, TMCC, and the WCSD to offer college-prep courses in local high schools was highlighted at the June 2013, Board of Regents meeting.

    According to Corestandards.org, the CCSS are:

    1) Research and evidence based

    2) Clear, understandable, and consistent

    3) Aligned with college and career expectations

    4) Based on rigorous content and the application of knowledge through higher-order thinking skills

    5) Built upon the strengths and lessons of current state standards

    6) Informed by other top-performing countries to prepare all students for success in our global economy and society

    Standards shouldn’t be attached to school subjects, but to the qualities of mind it’s hoped the study of school subjects promotes. Subjects are mere tools, just as scalpels, acetylene torches, and transits are tools. Surgeons, welders, surveyors — and teachers — should be held accountable for the quality of what they produce, not how they produce it.

    The world is changing and the future is indiscernible. Clinging to a static strategy in a dynamic world may be comfortable, even comforting, but it’s a Titanic-deck-chair

    The Common Core Standards assume that what kids need to know is covered by one or another of the traditional core subjects. In fact, the unexplored intellectual terrain lying between and beyond those familiar fields of study is vast, expands by the hour, and will go in directions no one can predict.

    So much orchestrated attention is being showered on the Common Core Standards, the main reason for poor student performance is being ignored—a level of childhood poverty the consequences of which no amount of schooling can effectively counter.

    Common Core kills innovation. When it’s the only game in town, it’s the only game in town.

    The CCSS are a set-up for national standardized tests, tests that can’t evaluate complex thought, can’t avoid cultural bias, can’t measure non-verbal learning, and can’t predict anything of consequence (and wastes money).

    The word “standards” gets an approving nod from the public and from most educators because it means “performance that meets a standard.” However, the word also means “like everybody else,” and standardizing minds is what the Standards try to do.

    CCSS fans sell the first meaning; the Standards deliver the second meaning. Standardized minds are about as far out of sync with deep-seated American values as it’s possible to get. The standards stated aim — “success in college and careers”— is at best pedestrian, at worst an affront. The young should be exploring the potentials of humanness.

    Education Secretary Arne Duncan has been defending the Common Core, which has been adopted by 45 states and the District of Columbia and is reportedly designed to raise student achievement.

    He got himself in trouble in 2013 for remarks made about “white suburban moms” becoming critics because the new, harder exams have shown suddenly that “their child isn’t as brilliant as they thought they were.” But the opposition has grown, from the left, the right and the middle, expressing different concerns about the Core and its implementation.

    And though Duncan has said repeatedly that Common Core is a state-led, voluntary initiative, the Obama administration has supported the standards, and critics on the right charge that the federal government has used it to develop a national curriculum. Critics on the left and the middle have argued that the standards are not based on substantive research, which they ignore what is known about early childhood development and/or that reformers have rushed implementation before teachers have had time to absorb them and create materials to teach them.

    One prominent Core supporter, American Federation of Teachers President Randi Weingarten, blasted the implementation, saying, “You think the Obamacare implementation is bad? The implementation of the Common Core is far worse.”

    They arrived at a time when American public education and its teachers were and remain under attack. Never have public schools been as subject to upheaval, assault, and chaos as they are today.

    Unlike modern corporations, which extol creative disruption, schools need stability, not constant turnover and change. Yet for the past dozen years, ill-advised federal and state policies have rained down on students, teachers, principals, and schools.

    George W. Bush’s No Child Left Behind (NCLB) and Barack Obama’s Race to the Top (R2T) have combined to impose a punitive regime of standardized testing on the schools. NCLB was passed by Congress in 2001 and signed into law in 2002.

    NCLB law required schools to test every child in grades 3-8 every year; by 2014, said the law, every child must be “proficient” or schools would face escalating sanctions.

    The ultimate sanction for failure to raise test scores was firing the staff and closing the school.

    Because the stakes were so high, NCLB encouraged teachers to teach to the test. In many schools, the curriculum was narrowed; the only subjects that mattered were reading and mathematics.

    What was not tested—the arts, history, civics, literature, geography, science, physical education—didn’t count. Some states, like New York, side-stepped the system by dropping the passing mark each year, giving the impression that its students were making phenomenal progress when they were not.

    Some districts, like Atlanta, El Paso, and the District of Columbia, were caught up in cheating scandals. In response to this relentless pressure, test scores rose, but not as much as they had before the adoption of NCLB.

    Then along came the Obama administration, with its signature program called R2T. In response to the economic crisis of 2008, Congress gave the U.S. Department of Education $5 billion to promote “reform.”

    If states wanted any part of that money, they had to agree to certain conditions. They had to agree to evaluate teachers to a significant degree by the rise or fall of their students’ test scores; they had to agree to increase the number of privately managed charter schools; they had to agree to adopt “college and career ready standards,” which were understood to be the not-yet-finished Common Core standards; they had to agree to “turnaround” low-performing schools by such tactics as firing the principal and part or all of the school staff; and they had to agree to collect unprecedented amounts of personally identifiable information about every student and store it in a data warehouse.

    It became an article of faith in Washington and in state capitols, with the help of propagandistic films like “Waiting for Superman,” that if students had low scores, it must be the fault of bad teachers. Poverty, we heard again and again from people like Bill Gates, Joel Klein, and Michelle Rhee, was just an excuse for bad teachers, who should be fired without delay or due process.

    These two federal programs, which both rely heavily on standardized testing, has produced a massive demoralization of educators; an unprecedented exodus of experienced educators, who were replaced in many districts by young, inexperienced, low-wage teachers; the closure of many public schools, especially in poor and minority districts; the opening of thousands of privately managed charters; an increase in low-quality for-profit charter schools and low-quality online charter schools; a widespread attack on teachers’ due process rights and collective bargaining rights; the near-collapse of public education in urban districts like Detroit and Philadelphia, as public schools are replaced by privately managed charter schools; a burgeoning educational-industrial complex of testing corporations, charter chains, and technology companies that view public education as an emerging market. Hedge funds, entrepreneurs, and real estate investment corporations invest enthusiastically in this emerging market, encouraged by federal tax credits, lavish fees, and the prospect of huge profits from taxpayer dollars.

    Celebrities, tennis stars, basketball stars, and football stars are opening their own name-brand schools with public dollars, even though they know nothing about education.

    No other nation in the world has inflicted so many changes or imposed so many mandates on its teachers and public schools as we have in the past dozen years. No other nation tests every student every year as we do.

    Our students are the most over-tested in the world. No other nation—at least no high-performing nation—judges the quality of teachers by the test scores of their students.

    Most researchers agree that this methodology is fundamentally flawed, that it is inaccurate, unreliable, and unstable, that the highest ratings will go to teachers with the most affluent students and the lowest ratings will go to teachers of English learners, teachers of students with disabilities, and teachers in high-poverty schools. Nonetheless, the U.S. Department of Education wants every state and every district to do it.

    Because of these federal programs, our schools have become obsessed with standardized testing, and have turned over to the testing corporations the responsibility for rating, ranking, and labeling our students, our teachers, and our schools.

    The Pearson Corporation has become the ultimate arbiter of the fate of students, teachers, and schools. This is the policy context in which the CCSS were developed.

    Five years ago, when they were written, major corporations, major foundations, and the key policymakers at the Department of Education agreed that public education was a disaster and that the only salvation for it was a combination of school choice—including privately managed charters and vouchers– national standards, and a weakening or elimination of such protections as collective bargaining, tenure, and seniority. At the same time, the political and philanthropic leaders maintained a passionate faith in the value of standardized tests and the data that they produced as measures of quality and as ultimate, definitive judgments on people and on schools.

    The agenda of both Republicans and Democrats converged around the traditional Republican agenda of standards, choice, and accountability. This convergence has nothing to do with improving education or creating equality of opportunity but everything to do with cutting costs, standardizing education, shifting the delivery of education from high-cost teachers to low-cost technology, reducing the number of teachers, and eliminating unions and pensions.

    The CCSS were written in 2009 under the aegis of several D.C.-based organizations: the National Governors Association, the Council of Chief State School Officers, and Achieve. The development process was led behind closed doors by a small organization called Student Achievement Partners, headed by David Coleman.

    The writing group of 27 contained few educators, but a significant number of representatives of the testing industry. From the outset, the Common Core standards were marked by the absence of public participation, transparency, or educator participation.

    The U.S. Department of Education is legally prohibited from exercising any influence or control over curriculum or instruction in the schools, so it could not contribute any funding to the expensive task of creating national standards. The Gates Foundation stepped in and assumed that responsibility.

    It gave millions to the National Governors Association, to the Council of Chief School Officers, to Achieve and to Student Achievement Partners.

    Once the standards were written, Gates gave millions more to almost every think tank and education advocacy group in Washington to evaluate the standards—even to some that had no experience evaluating standards—and to promote and help to implement the standards. Even the two major teachers’ unions accepted millions of dollars to help advance the Common Core standards.

    Altogether, the Gates Foundation has expended nearly $200 million to pay for the development, evaluation, implementation, and promotion of the Common Core standards. And the money tap is still open, with millions more awarded this past fall to promote the Common Core standards.

    Some states—like Kentucky–adopted the CCSS sight unseen. Some—like Texas—refused to adopt them sight unseen.

    Some—like Massachusetts—adopted them even though their own standards were demonstrably better and had been proven over time.

    The advocates of the standards saw them as a way to raise test scores by making sure that students everywhere in every grade were taught using the same standards. They believed that common standards would automatically guarantee equity.

    Some spoke of the CCSS as a civil rights issue. They emphasized that the standards would be far more rigorous than most state standards and they predicted that students would improve their academic performance in response to raising the bar.

    Integral to the Common Core was the expectation that they would be tested on computers using online standardized exams. As Secretary Duncan’s chief of staff wrote at the time, the Common Core was intended to create a national market for book publishers, technology companies, testing corporations, and other vendors.

    What the advocates ignored is that test scores are heavily influenced by socioeconomic status. Standardized tests are normed on a bell curve.

    To expect tougher standards and a renewed emphasis on standardized testing to reduce poverty and inequality is to expect what never was and never will be.

    The upper half of the curve has an abundance of those who grew up in favorable circumstances, with educated parents, books in the home, regular medical care, and well-resourced schools. Those who dominate the bottom half of the bell curve are the kids who lack those advantages, whose parents lack basic economic security, whose schools are overcrowded and under-resourced.

    Who supported the standards?

    Secretary Duncan has been their loudest cheerleader. Governor Jeb Bush of Florida and former DC Chancellor Michelle Rhee urged their rapid adoption. Joel Klein and Condoleeza Rice chaired a commission for the Council on Foreign Relations, which concluded that the Common Core standards were needed to protect national security.

    Major corporations purchased full-page ads in the New York Times and other newspapers to promote the Common Core. ExxonMobil is especially vociferous in advocating for Common Core, taking out advertisements on television and other news media saying that the standards are needed to prepare our workforce for global competition.

    The U.S. Chamber of Commerce endorsed the standards, saying they were necessary to prepare workers for the global marketplace. The Business Roundtable stated that its number one priority is the full adoption and implementation of the Common Core standards.

    All of this excitement was generated despite the fact that no one knows whether the Common Core will fulfill any of these promises. It will take 12 years whether we know what its effects are.

    The Obama administration awarded $350 million to two groups to create tests for the Common Core standards. The testing consortia jointly decided to use a very high passing mark, which is known as a “cut score.”

    The Common Core testing consortia decided that the passing mark on their tests would be aligned with the proficient level on the federal tests called NAEP. This is a level typically reached by about 35-40% of students.

    Massachusetts is the only state in which as many as 50% ever reached the NAEP proficient level. The testing consortia set the bar so high that most students were sure to fail, and they did.

    In New York state, which gave the Common Core tests last spring, only 30% of students across the state passed the tests.

    Only 3% of English language learners passed. Only 5% of students with disabilities passed. Fewer than 20% of African American and Hispanic students passed.

    By the time the results were reported in August, the students did not have the same teachers; the teachers saw the scores, but did not get any item analysis. They could not use the test results for diagnostic purposes, to help students.

    Their only value was to rank students.

    When New York state education officials held public hearings — parents showed up en masse to complain about the testing. Secretary Duncan dismissed them as “white suburban moms” who were disappointed to learn that their child was not as brilliant as they thought and their public school was not as good as they thought.

    But he was wrong: the parents were outraged not because they thought their children were brilliant but because they did not believe that their children were failures. What, exactly, is the point of crushing the hearts and minds of young children by setting a standard so high that 70% are certain to fail?

    The financial cost of implementing Common Core has barely been mentioned in the national debates. All Common Core testing will be done online.

    This is a bonanza for the tech industry and other vendors.

    Every school district must buy new computers, new teaching materials, and new bandwidth for the testing. At a time when school budgets have been cut in most states and many thousands of teachers have been laid off, school districts across the nation will spend billions to pay for Common Core testing.

    Los Angeles alone committed to spend $1 billion on iPads for the tests; the money is being taken from a bond issue approved by voters for construction and repair of school facilities. Meanwhile, the district has cut teachers of the arts, class size has increased, and necessary repairs are deferred because the money will be spent on iPads.

    The iPads will be obsolete in a year or two, and the Pearson content loaded onto the iPads has only a three-year license. The cost of implementing the Common Core and the new tests is likely to run into the billions at a time of deep budget cuts.

    Other controversies involve the standards themselves.

    Early childhood educators are nearly unanimous in saying that no one who wrote the standards had any expertise in the education of very young children. More than 500 early childhood educators signed a joint statement complaining that the standards were developmentally inappropriate for children in the early grades.

    The standards, they said, emphasize academic skills and leave inadequate time for imaginative play. They also objected to the likelihood that young children would be subjected to standardized testing.

    And yet proponents of the Common Core insist that children as young as 5 or 6 or 7 should be on track to be college-and-career ready, even though children this age are not likely to think about college, and most think of careers as cowboys, astronauts, or firefighters.

    There has also been heated argument about the standards’ insistence that reading must be divided equally in the elementary grades between fiction and informational text, and divided 70-30 in favor of informational text in high school.

    Where did the writers of the standards get these percentages?

    They relied on the federal the National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP) –which uses these percentages as instructions to test developers. NAEP never intended that these numbers would be converted into instructional mandates for teachers.

    This idea that informational text should take up half the students’ reading time in the early grades and 70% in high school led to outlandish claims that teachers would no longer be allowed to teach whole novels. Somewhat hysterical articles asserted that the classics would be banned while students were required to read government documents.

    The standards contain no such demands.

    Defenders of the Common Core standards said that the percentages were misunderstood. They said they referred to the entire curriculum—math, science, and history, not just English.

    But since teachers in math, science, and history are not known for assigning fiction, why was this even mentioned in the standards? Which administrator will be responsible for policing whether precisely 70% of the reading in senior year is devoted to informational text and who will keep track?

    The fact is that the CCSS should never have set forth any percentages at all. If they really did not mean to impose numerical mandates on English teachers, they set off a firestorm of criticism for no good reason.

    Other nations have national standards, and I don’t know of any that tell teachers how much time to devote to fiction and how much time to devote to informational text.

    Another problem presented by the CCSS is that there is no one in charge of fixing them. If teachers find legitimate problems and seek remedies, there is no one to turn to.

    If the demands for students in kindergarten and first grade are developmentally inappropriate, no one can make changes. The original writing committee no longer exists.

    No organization or agency has the authority to revise the standards. The standards might as well be written in stone.

    This makes no sense.

    Furthermore, what happens to the children who fail? Will they be held back a grade?
    Will they be held back again and again? If most children fail, as they did in New York, what will happen to them and how will they catch up?

    The advocates of the standards insist that low-scoring students will become high-scoring students if the tests are rigorous, but what if they are wrong? What if the failure rate remains staggeringly high as it is now?

    What if it improves marginally as students become accustomed to the material, and the failure rate drops from 70% to 50%? What will we do with the 50% who can’t jump over the bar?

    Teachers across the country will be fired if the scores of their pupils do not go up. This is nuts.

    We have a national policy that is a theory based on an assumption grounded in hope. And it might be wrong, with disastrous consequences for real children and real teachers.

    In some states, teachers say that the lessons are scripted and deprive them of their professional autonomy, the autonomy they need to tailor their lessons to the needs of the students in front of them. Behind the standards lies a blind faith in standardization of tests and curriculum, and perhaps, of children as well.

    Yet we know that even in states with strong standards, like Massachusetts and California, there are wide variations in test scores.

    Tom Loveless of the Brookings Institution predicted that the Common Core standards were likely to make little, if any, difference. No matter how high and uniform their standards, there are variations in academic achievement within states, there are variations within districts, there are variations within every school.

    Teachers must have the flexibility to tailor standards to meet the students in their classrooms, the students who can’t read English, the students who are two grade levels behind, the students who are homeless, the students who just don’t get it and just don’t care, the students who frequently miss class. Standards alone cannot produce a miraculous transformation.

    The numerical demands for 50-50 or 70-30 literature vs. informational text should be eliminated. They serve no useful purpose and they have no justification.

    In every state, teachers should work together to figure out how the standards can be improved. Professional associations like the National Council for the Teaching of English and the National Council for the Teaching of Mathematics should participate in a process by which the standards are regularly reviewed, revised, and updated by classroom teachers and scholars to respond to genuine problems in the field.

    The standards should be decoupled from standardized testing, especially online standardized testing. Most objections to the standards are caused by the testing.

    The tests are too long, and many students give up; the passing marks on the tests were set so high as to create failure. Yet the test scores will be used to rate students, teachers, and schools.

    The standardized testing should become optional, include authentic writing assignments that are judged by humans, not by computers and it needs oversight by professional scholars and teachers. In the present climate, the standards and testing will become the driving force behind the creation of a test-based meritocracy.

    With David Coleman in charge of the College Board, the SAT will be aligned with the Common Core; so will the ACT. Both testing organizations were well represented in the writing of the standards; representatives of these two organizations comprised 12 of the 27 members of the original writing committee.

    The tests are a linchpin of the federal effort to commit K-12 education to the new world of Big Data. The tests are the necessary ingredient to standardize teaching, curriculum, instruction, and schooling.

    Only those who pass these rigorous tests will get a high school diploma. Only those with high scores on these rigorous tests will be able to go to college and no one has come up with a plan for the 50% or more who never get a high school diploma.

    In 1958 Michael Young’s book The Rise of the Meritocracy, was published and it has gone through many editions since. A decade ago, Young added a new introduction in which he warned that a meritocracy could be sad and fragile.

    He wrote: “If the rich and powerful were encouraged by the general culture to believe that they fully deserved all they had, how arrogant they could become, and if they were convinced it was all for the common good, how ruthless in pursuing their own advantage. Power corrupts, and therefore one of the secrets of a good society is that power should always be open to criticism. A good society should provide sinew for revolt as well as for power.

    But authority cannot be humbled unless ordinary people, however much they have been rejected by the educational system, have the confidence to assert themselves against the mighty. If they think themselves inferior, if they think they deserve on merit to have less worldly goods and less worldly power than a select minority, they can be damaged in their own self-esteem, and generally demoralized.

    Even if it could be demonstrated that ordinary people had less native ability than those selected for high position, that would not mean that they deserved to get less. Being a member of the “lucky sperm club” confers no moral right or advantage. What one is born with, or without, is not of one’s own doing.”

    We must then curb the misuse of the Common Core standards: Those who like them should use them, but they should be revised continually to adjust to reality. Stop the testing. Stop the rating and ranking. Do not use them to give privilege to those who pass them or to deny the diploma necessary for a decent life. Remove the high-stakes that policymakers intend to attach to them. Use them to enrich instruction, but not to standardize it.

    We cannot have a decent democracy unless we begin with the supposition that every human life is of equal value. Our society already has far too much inequality of wealth and income. We should do nothing to stigmatize those who already get the least of society’s advantages. We should bend our efforts to change our society so that each and every one of us has the opportunity to learn, the resources needed to learn, and the chance to have a good and decent life, regardless of one’s test scores.

    Federal Common Core standards are already being tested in Washoe and Clark counties. But a state-wide implementation plan set for next school year is already raising plenty of questions.

    “Are these the right standards? There’s some issues with that, they aren’t tested,” said Assemblyman Randy Kirner.

    Advocates of the new education system said it is a transition for the next generation of students.

    “Standards that are now asking students to now reach a deeper level of knowledge than they may have in the past,” said Nevada Department of Education Board Member Steve Canavero.

    Proficiency exams for grades 10-12 are being phased out in favor of end of course exams. New career and college readiness assessments are also set to enter the classroom, all by the 2014-2015 school year.

    “Many other states are stopping or slowing this and were not doing anything except moving full steam ahead,” said John Appolito from Stop Common Core Nevada.

    Opponents of the change said the system is moving into Nevada at a rapid rate.

    “I’d like to see them slow things down, look at the data collection, look at the SBAC testing and lok at Common Core all together,” added Appolito.

    Assemblyman Kirner said Common Core tests inside the Washoe County School District are a prime example of successful implementation. These meetings come a year before the 2015 legislative session, where lawmakers have the ability to opt out of the federal program.

    “I’m not quite sure where we’ll end up going on the standards and curriculum and that kind of stuff,” said Kirner. “I suspect there will be conversations about it, but it’s hard to say where that would go.”

    “I certainly know there may need to be some clean up that we would like to do to ensure that we get it right and that were thoughtful in our approach,” added Canavero.

    It is going to be a big change for thousands of teachers and students in Washoe County and across the state.

    “What we are trying to impress upon teachers right now is what will have to shift instructionally in order to meet these new outcomes,” WCSD Common Core teacher Aaron Grossman said.

    Grossman is one of the teachers assigned to train other teachers to accommodate the new standards. The new method requires teachers to boost the level of difficulty, ask their students to do closer readings of the text, and come up with their own answers and theories through discussion with their peers.

    If that sounds familiar, that’s because it is the same basic method that instructors use– in college.

    “If you think about your own college experience,” Grossman said, “no college professor ever said to you, ‘I am going to give you a lot of background, let’s preview it, define a purpose, and give you some skills.’ Instead, they said, ‘Take this home and read it.’”

    The idea is to encourage more independent thinking among students and give them more ownership over the material.

    It is a result that Brown Elementary School teacher Corinn Cathcart has seen first-hand with her fourth graders. Common Core was implemented for K-8 in 2011.

    So, she gave it a try last school year. She gave her fourth graders a poem called “The New Colossus,” by Emma Lazarus. Before Common Core, this level of material was given to eighth graders.

    “Once they start getting into it,” Cathcart said, “They really start to feed off of each other and they discover for themselves what’s going on in the text as opposed to me telling them.”

    “Common Core will increase the rigor, and therefore the expectations,” WCSD Chief Academic Officer Scott Bailey said. “What we’ve found, history would dictate, is that when you raise that bar, the students will rise to the occasion.”

    Cathcart added that for the students, it is not just about learning the material. It is about learning how to learn, so that when they graduate, they can problem-solve in any situation.

    “[It’s about] being able to be given something, any type of text, whether it’s directions, whether it’s anything, and being able to take it apart and figure it out,” Cathcart said. “They need to be held to a higher expectation in order to be successful.”

    On the state level, boosting our education system is something Nevada needs to be successful. The Nevada Department of Education said that implementing the Common Core Standards will make the Silver State more appealing to parents and businesses.

    “I think it’s really exciting,” NDOE Assistant Director Cindy Sharp said. “I think it’s going to be really good for Nevada.”

    Common Core will have its own method of testing for progress, but it isn’t replacing No Child Left Behind. Sharp said both systems will be in place together, but adding Common Core will allow the state to monitor student growth, instead of just proficiency.

    NDOE plans to have Common Core fully implemented at all levels by 2015.

  • Silver Tailings: Mina is for Ferminia

    Mina was founded as a railroad town in 1905 and was named for Ferminia Sarras, also  known as the “Copper Queen.”  Sarras came to Nevada sometime around 1881, which was the date she was first listed on Esmeralda County tax records, described as “Spanish Lady, Belleville.”

    Writing in the September/October 2011 edition of “Nevada Magazine,” Jeffery Richardson imagines Sarras, “Her gaze is steady and frank. Her hands are sure at their task, as she has done this many times before. Her gear has been stacked and is being wrapped expertly in canvas into a pack she will soon hoist on her back.”

    She began prospecting in the Candelaria area in 1883 and went on to file a number of claims on copper mines in the Sante Fe district. Sarras spent a few years prospecting in Silver Peak, but didn’t have much luck during the 1890s, a time when Nevada was in an economic depression.

    She returned to the Sante Fe district in 1899, and it was there that she eventually made her fortune. Sarras prospected alone wearing pants, boots and a back pack.

    Sarras described herself as “a Spanish lady of royal blood.” She was a descendant of Roderigo de Contreras, governed during the 16th century.

    In her native country, Sarras was married to Pablo Flores and gave birth to four daughters, Conchetta, Conceptión, Juanita and Emma. When she arrived in Nevada, she placed the two youngest girls in the Nevada Orphans Asylum in Virginia City.

    Noted author and Nevada historian Sally Zanjani, speculates Sarras may have thought her “daughters would be safer…than at the mining camps of Belleville and Candelaria.”

    It appears she may have been married as many as five times, often to men who were younger than she. One newspaper article claims all of her husbands died violent deaths.

    One of those was Archie McCormack, a man described as a Canadian-born gunman was killed in 1906 in a gunfight while defending one of her claims.

    Each time she made a profitable sale, Ferminia would travel to San Francisco, stay in the finest hotels, shop for elegant clothes and enjoy fine dining and young men until her money ran out.  Then she would return to Nevada and resume prospecting for another fortune.

    By the time she died February 1, 1915, Sarras had made several fortunes on her copper mines. She’s buried in the town of Luning’s cemetery with a massive monument places over the grave, however in the years since vandals have destroyed the headstone.

    Grass Valley author Chris Enss writes of Sarras in her 2008 book, “A Beautiful Mine: Women Prospectors of the Old West,” that the “claims she owned in Giroux Canyon, Nevada, are still being mined today and Ferminia’s descendants continue to benefit from her findings there.”

  • Andy Griffith Remembered in Northern Nevada

    Andy Griffith, who played Sheriff Andy Taylor in the fictional town of Mayberry, died at the age of 86. Born in Mount Airy, North Carolina, in 1926, Griffith graduated from University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill in 1949 with a degree in music.

    He originally planned on being a preacher, but instead became a teacher. After teaching high school music for a few years, he began his entertainment career with regular appearances on “The Ed Sullivan Show,” and Broadway.

    Griffith received a Tony nomination for “No Time for Sergeants,” and later “Destry Rides Again.”  He made his film début in “A Face in the Crowd,” but it was the 1960 début of “The Andy Griffith Show” that brought his greatest fame and ran for eight-years.

    Twice during the late-1970s, Andy Griffith unsuccessfully attempted to launch a TV detective series as  Abel Marsh, Jasper Lake’s police chief whose back-woods demeanor hides a sharp analytical mind and gift for deduction.  The first pilot film was “The Girl in the Empty Grave;” the second was “The Deadly Game.”

    “Girl in the Empty Grave” gets under way when a girl shows up in town, whose  believed dead, leading town-folk to wonder whose buried in her grave. First broadcast September 20, 1977, “Girl in the Empty Grave” was followed a couple of months later by “The Deadly Game.”

    Once again Griffith stars as resort-town Jasper Lake’s sheriff Abel Marsh, this time wrestling with a military conspiracy involving a dangerous chemical spill. “Deadly Game” first aired December 3, 1977.

    I recall watching both made for TV movies when they first aired.

    It was in the mid-90s when I first saw a rerun of “The Deadly Game,” and suddenly recognized much of the landscape in the movie. While the Internet Movie Database (IMDb) lists both of these movies as being filmed at Big Bear Lake, California, Washoe County old-timers have confirmed what I’ve suspected all along — filming of “The Deadly Game,” took place around Lake Tahoe and the Washoe Valley.

  • From Trinidad to Klamath

    The major mining districts of northern California from 1850-1853, were the Trinity River mines, of which Weaverville was the center, and the Klamath and Salmon River diggings, of which Orleans Bar was the focal point. It was from the diggings on the Trinity that the Gregg party started on the expedition resulting in the rediscovery of Trinidad and Humboldt Bays.

    Had the towns of the Humboldt Coast been dependent solely upon the trade with the Trinity River mines, they would have been far less prosperous in the 1850s. Fortunately adventurers in June 1850 discovered gold on Salmon River and two months later made a strike on the Klamath.

    Within weeks after the establishment of the towns on the along the coast, trails were cut through the redwoods and across the mountains to the mining regions. Trinidad and Uniontown, now known as Arcata, took the lead, as both were well situated by geography to act as supply stations for the diggings of the Klamath and Salmon River Districts.

    The first town established was Trinidad, and was for a few years the leader in the packing trade, because it was located closer to the Klamath diggings than the others. During the summer of 1850, packers, utilizing old Indian trails, opened a route from Trinidad up the coast to Big Lagoon, then across the divide to Redwood Creek.

    Redwood Creek was forded at “Tall Trees,” and the trail ascended the Bald Hills to Elk Camp. It then passed along the crest of Bald Hills to French Camp, where the trail forked, one branch leading to the Klamath at Martins Ferry and the other into Hoopa Valley.

    The Trinidad trail followed a route dictated by the topography, and intersected the route leading up the Klamath from Klamath City to Martins Ferry. From Uniontown another trail led to Orleans Bar via the Bald Hills intersecting the Trinidad trail near the mouth of the Trinity.

    A large number of mules had been driven from Sonoma in May 1850, but the demands of the packing trade made it necessary that more be shipped by sea during the winter. High prices were asked and paid for transporting freight.

    Two dollars a pound was asked and received for the trip from Trinidad to the Salmon mines. This raised the price of all imported items to an all-but-prohibitive figure, but such were the times that the miners were prepared to pay the price asked.

    John Daggett was one of the adventurers who reached the Klamath diggings, in 1852, via the Trinidad trail. He wrote that they had to “furnish our own transportation, carrying blankets on our own backs, as there were few if any inns on this route to the mining district. We passed first through the grand belt of old redwood trees, a sight long to be remembered, thence over the bald-hill country, abounding at that time in elk.”

    During the Red Cap War of 1855, pack trains were attacked and traffic over the trail was cut. Supplies at the Klamath and Salmon River diggings ran short. With the return of peace, traffic improved.

    To guard the Trinidad trail and to protect the ranches that had been established on the Bald Hills, troops were posted at Elk Camp in 1862 and 63. These soldiers were supplied by pack trains from Trinidad.

    The section of the Trinidad trail leading from Big Lagoon, crossing Redwood Creek at “Tall Trees,” and ascending the Bald Hills to Elk Camp was abandoned after the construction — in the final decade of the 19th century — of the Bald Hills road, connecting Orick with the Bald Hills.

  • The Victorian Secret

    The heat beating down on the sidewalk seemed to exhaust everything including my good mood. It had been a difficult day at the radio station and the walk seemed like a nice idea at the time.

    Yet the temperature was another factor I had not counted on as I trudged up the long hill. It seemed as if it had taken me forever to make it to the driveway of Rancho San Rafael.

    The white arch across the park entrance gleamed and beckoned me to march the last few uphill steps and through it to its cool shaded trees and flower garden. I heard its call and responded without a word.

    Inside the garden I found not a soul accept myself. I could hear the chirping and singing and whistling of the birds.

    And a time or two I spotted a rabbit dash for cover surprised by my presence. I thought, “This could be Eden.”

    Within minutes I found myself relaxing and able to enjoy the sight of the many different flowers. I heard a rushing sound of falling water and a few seconds later discovered myself standing in front of a pond with cascading ripples running down hill to places unseen.

    Here I also found a spot to sit, a park bench in the shade in which to take in the leisurely sounds of the waterfall. I sat there and unwound, realizing the troubles at work were worthless matters to be dealt with later.

    As I sat and listened, staring into the pool I caught sight of movement in the corner of my eye. It came from the right.

    I turned to look, finding a woman standing not less than twenty feet from where I sat.

    She was outfitted in a Victorian style dress. Its satin texture reflecting the sunbeams that slipped through the leaves above and hair was pulled back, weaved with curls in the back.

    I couldn’t help notice how dark her hair was; nearly black as midnight.

    Yet her eyes sparkled bluer than robin’s eggs. Her skin was a creamy tan with full red lips.

    I was speechless.

    “Hello,” she said, “My names Rosa.”

    She stuck her hand out. I stood up, grasped it and we shook..

    Suddenly remembering my manners I responded, “I’m Tom, pleasure to meet you.”

    “Are you handy with a camera?” she asked.

    I looked at her left hand and saw the “point and shoot” camera for the first time.

    “Yes I am,” I answered.

    Rosa smiled widely revealing her white teeth, “Could I bother you to take some pictures of me?”

    “It would be my pleasure,” I answered a little too quickly.

    She handed me the camera.

    “It’s all ready to go, jus’ push the little red button on top,” Rosa instructed.

    The woman turned and skipped over the rocks in the pond and came to rest in the clearing near the water fall.

    Rosa posed and I snapped a picture.

    She smiled and said, “Isn’t this fun!”

    I had to admit it was and secretly I was thanking my lucky star to be finding myself in the company of such a beautiful woman.

    “Do you mind if I do a little cheesecake?” she asked.

    “Do whatever you’re planning and I’ll take the picture,” I declared.

    Rosa pulled off her top revealing that she was wearing a corset. She posed and I took her picture.

    She smiled brightly.

    Next she slipped out of her skirt. Under it was a hoop and again she posed.

    And again I clicked away.

    A few seconds later the hoop dropped straight to the ground and like the blouse and the skirt it was piled up on the bench. She struggled to unfasten the corset but got it just as I offered her my assistance.

    “A day late and a dollar short,” I said to myself as she stacked it on top of the growing mound of discarded clothing.

    Rosa was in a set of all white pantaloons. She flexed her body that way, then this way, and I flashed each pose, enjoying the antiquated erotic idea of her undies.

    Without notice Rosa slowly started unbuttoning the long row of buttons that held the single piece outfit together. She stopped just below her navel.

    I  felt my heart pounding wildly as I tried to hold the camera steady for the shot.

    From my hip pocket, I pulled a handkerchief and dabbed my forehead. The afternoon’s heat had returned along with my libido, so I found myself sweating without mercy.

    When I looked up, my face flushed red as the blood that coursed through his all-American veins. Rosa was standing before me in the clearing in all her wonderful glory wearing only button up high-heel boots and ankle socks with fringe.

    I could not help but stare as I felt as if I had entered a dream world or fallen down the rabbits hold.

    Slowly, I raised the camera to my eye to take the picture. This gave the beautiful Rosa time to pick a large white daisy with its butter like yellow button, and use it as a prop.

    It was something to hold in her hands and to look at.

    I placed the tiny dot midway between a spot under her breasts and above her hands, then breathed out and as if firing a rifle, squeezed the button downward, snapping the picture.

    Rosa smiled brightly at me as she skipped back across the rocks and towards her clothes.

    “Thank you so much,” she chirped as she pulled on the blouse and shirt.

    She gathered up the corset and hoop, not wishing to be tortured by them any further. I handed her the camera and she kissed me on the cheek.

    “Thank you again,” she said.

    Then she turned and disappeared down the trail from which she came.

    I sat down on the bench after splashing myself with some water from the pool. I chuckled lightly, as I thought, “Maybe I should have told her there was no film in the camera.”

  • Grace

    Running ten minutes late as usual, I pulled up to the sidewalk.  I set the brake and turned off the motor.

    No one else was on board but I did not want to take chances, especially since a company vehicle had been stolen in Las Vegas three days before. I opened the side door and stepped out on to the sidewalk.

    I could hear voices from jus’ beyond the hedge bush. One of them sounded like Harold’s.

    It sounded as if Harold was defending himself. So I walked around the hedgerow and discovered three teenage boys picking on the much old and mentally retarded Harold.

    “Get out of here,” I shouted.

    And bullies being what they are, they turned and ran away down the street.

    “You okay?” I asked Harold.

    “Yes, I’m okay Mr. Bus driver,” Harold answered.

    He wiped his tear-stained face. As he did I helped him to his feet.

    Together we walked back to the vehicle and climbed on board. I made a note of the incident so I could report it later, then we were on our way to High Sierra and Harold’s job.

    As we drove across town, I looking in my overhead mirror thought, “What if that was me?”

    I was looking at Harold, who kept glancing up into the mirror and smiling at me.

    Fifteen minutes later, we turned into the Longley Drive address driveway. I stopped the van, set the brake and turned off the engine.

    I stepped down from the last step and assisted Harold down as well.

    That’s when Harold reached up and gently patted me on the shoulder and said, “It’s okay Mr. Bus driver, there but for the grace of God go I.”

    With that Harold disappeared behind his employer’s door.

  • The Glass Eye

    “Roger that,” the engine operator said as he slipped the gear into drive. The large fire-rescue truck moved forward, slowly building up speed.

    Reaching over, I flipped on the lights and sounded the siren. I then pulled out the map book and started thumbing through the index for the street name.

    “You don’t have to bother with that,” said the operator, “I know where were going, I drink there all the time.”

    We entered onto the highway then exited at the next off ramp. The fire-rescue truck made a left hand turn and proceeded straight.

    I sounded the siren again as the operator slowed for the upcoming intersection. The light was red as we approached.

    Leaning forwarded in the cab and looking to the left I could see that no vehicles were approaching. The lane was clear.

    Looking to my right, I saw that there were no cars or trucks coming from that direction either.

    I double checked to the left again and said, “Clear left, clear right, clear left.”

    The engine operator stepped down on the gas pedal and the truck picked up speed again. We completed this ritual three more times before we made a right hand turn.

    “Quarter of a mile—on the left,” the operator stated.

    There was a sheriff’s vehicle already in the parking lot.

    “He must have called it in,” I thought.

    The dispatcher said it was a possible heart attack and that CPR was already in progress.

    A second rig pulled up right behind us. I opened the cab of the truck and climbed down.

    I put on my white helmet and walked towards the lounge, pausing to look around to take note of how many crew people I had on hand.

    A third crew truck pulled into the gravel driveway and parked. All total there were firefighters and other emergency personnel.

    I stepped inside. Two firefighters were right behind me.

    The scene appeared surrealistic. The jukebox was playing an upbeat county-western song while two patrons sat at the bar drinking as two sheriff’s deputies did CPR on a man lying at the foot of the bar.

    “You two take over for the deputies,” I directed.

    A third firefighter came in carrying oxygen and a defibrillator. I looked at the firefighter with the equipment and said, “Set up the bag valve mask at 15 liters.”

    The firefighter did as instructed.

    Once relieved from doing CPR the two deputies walked over to me, “How’s it going?” one of them asked.

    I smiled, “Great. How long were you at it?”

    “About five  or six minutes,” the bigger of the two answered.

    “How long was he down before you got here?” I continued.

    They looked at each other, then back at me and the bigger one answered again, “A couple of minute’s maybe. We were across the street at the diner.”

    “Thanks guys, good job,” I told them, “One last thing, can you clear out the two lumps sitting at the end of the bar?”

    Both deputies nodded and said, “Yeah.”

    They immediately walked to the end of the bar and asked the two drinkers to leave. Both of them started to put up an argument, but then thought better of it.

    I walked over and unplugged the jukebox as it started into its second song. By this time the defibrillator was set up and ready to go. With the ambulance still 5 minutes away this was the victim’s only chance.

    I nodded a go-ahead to the rescuers as they prepared to deliver the first shock. The man jerked slightly as the energy coursed through him.

    Nothing changed.

    The firefighters went back to doing CPR. They did this three more times and each time they had the same end result.

    The man’s heart beat did not return. Yet the rescuers continued.

    Seeing an opportunity for an on the job lesson, I looked around the room and pointed to the two newest members of the volunteer fire company.

    “Come here, you two need to take over for these two,” I said as I directed their attention to the two rescuers at the man’s side.

    One of the firefighter’s said, “But I can’t remember how…”

    I cut him off mid-sentence, “I know, but I’ll talk you through it.”

    They both moved in and took over the breaths and chest compressions. I continued to direct of them.

    The radio crackled and the dispatcher said, “Your ambulance is less than two minute away.”

    Lifting the the microphone to my lips I calmly answered, “Ten-four.”

    Then I returned my attention to the new firefighters doing CPR.

    “I want you to stay right where you are, but switch roles,” I directed.

    They did as they were instructed.

    Upon the third compression there was a strange sound. Something popped loudly.

    I was standing next to the bar at the victims head when it happened.

    The two rookies jumped up and away from the body, as did another firefighter across from me.  I jumped too, but emabarrassingly it was onto the bar.

    The room was silent, except for the sound of a marble rolling across a linoleum tiled floor.

    Then I noticed the man’s face.  His left eye socket was slightly sunken and a chest compression was just enough pressure to cause a man’s glass eye to pop out.

    “Get that eye over there,” I directed one of the firefighters.

    “Not me! I ain’t touching that thing!” he exclaimed as he quickly exited the barroom. His hand was covering his mouth as he pushed his way passed other crewmembers, who stood transfixed on the little white object with the light blue dot.

    The two rookies moved back to their positions and continued CPR as I hopped down from the bar top and over to the glass eye, scooping it up jus’ as the ambulance crew came in the front door.

  • Chased Down

    1997

    The wind howled hard
    An’ carried my father’s voice.
    I did not want to listen
    Though I had no other choice.

    The winter blow comes bitter
    An’ chills me to my bone.
    I hear my father’s voice
    With his unmistakable tone.

    My horse paws the ground
    As the wind bites an’ howls.
    I push him to the ‘ole trail
    With scratchin’ from my rowels.

    He hears him too, like me, or
    Does he sense my tension ’cause I fear it?
    Bein’ chased down by a winter wind,
    Or is it my father’s haunting spirit?

  • Dog House

    1997

    He’s in the dog house now
    After drinkin’ too much hooch,
    He kicked his wife,
    An’ kissed their pooch.

  • Dear Comrade Socialist-Friends

    Our dear, departed leader, Nikita Khrushchev was correct when he said, “America will destroy itself from the inside.”

    Now that the Supreme Court of The United States (SCOTUS) has spoken saying  what is commonly referred to as “Obama-care,” is constitutional since Congress has the right to impose taxes on citizens, it’s time to see what sort of tax is in the bill.  Joyfully, the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (PPACA) includes 20 new and/or higher taxes on American families and small businesses.

    These took effect last year:

    1. Medicine Cabinet Tax: Americans no longer able to use health savings account (HSA), flexible spending account (FSA), or health reimbursement account (HRA) pre-tax dollars to buy non-prescription, over-the-counter medicines (except insulin). Bill: PPACA; Page: 1,957-1,959.

    2. HSA Withdrawal Tax Hike: Increases more tax on non-medical early withdrawals from an HSA from 10 to 20 percent, disadvantages them relative to IRAs and other tax-advantaged accounts, which stay at 10 percent. PPACA; Page: 1,959.

    These are taking effect this year:

    3. Excise Tax on Charitable Hospitals: $50,000 per hospital if they fail to meet new “community health assessment needs,” “financial help,” and “billing and collection” rules set by HHS. PPACA; Page: 1,961-1,971.

    4. Codification of the “economic substance doctrine.” This provision allows the IRS to disallow legal tax deductions and other legal tax-minimizing plans just because the IRS deems that the action lacks “substance” and is merely intended to cut taxes owed. Reconciliation Act; Page: 108-113.

    5.  Cellulosic Biofuel Producer  tax hike. This is a tax increase on a type of bio-fuel made from wood byproducts. Reconciliation Act; Page: 105

    6. Tax on Innovator Drug Companies: $2.3 billion annual tax on the industry imposed on a share of sales made that year. PPACA; Page: 1,971-1,980.

    7. Blue Cross/Blue Shield Tax Hike: The special tax deduction in current law for Blue Cross/Blue Shield companies would only be allowed if 85 percent or more of premium revenues spent on clinical services. PPACA; Page: 2,004.

    8. Tax on Indoor Tanning Services: New 10 percent excise tax on Americans using indoor tanning salons. PPACA; Page: 2,397-2,399.

    9. Employer Reporting of Insurance on W-2: Preamble to taxing health benefits on individual tax returns. Bill: PPACA; Page: 1,957.

    These take effect in 2013:

    10. Surtax on Investment Income: Creation of a new, 3.8 percent surtax on investment income earned in households making at least $250,000 ($200,000 single). This would result in the following top tax rates on investment income: Bill: Reconciliation Act; Page: 87-93.

    2012 Capital gains: 15-percent, Dividends: 15-percent; *Other: 35-percent.

    2013+ Capital gains: 23.8-percent, Dividends: 43.4-percent; *Other: 43.4-percent.

    *Other unearned income includes gross income from interest, annuities, royalties, net rents, and passive income in partnerships and Subchapter-S corporations. It does not include municipal bond interest or life insurance proceeds, since those do not add to gross income. It does not include active trade or business income, fair market value sales of ownership in pass-through entities, or distributions from retirement plans. The 3.8-percent surtax does not apply to non-resident aliens.

    11. Hike in Medicare Payroll Tax: Current law and changes: First $200,000 for a single individual or $250,000 if married. PPACA, Reconciliation Act; Page: 2000-2003; 87-93.

    12. Tax on Medical Device Manufacturers: Medical device manufacturers who employ 360,000 people in 6000 plants across the country. This law imposes a new 2.3 percent excise tax and exempts items retailing for less than $100. PPACA; Page: 1,980-1,986.

    13. Raises Medical Itemized Deduction from 7.5-percent to 10-percent of Adjusted Gross Income (AGI): Currently, those facing high medical expenses are allowed a deduction for medical expenses to the extent that those expenses exceed 7.5 percent of AGI. The new provision imposes a threshold of 10 percent of AGI, which is waived for taxpayers 65 years and old in 2013-2016 only. PPACA; Page: 1,994-1,995.

    14. Flexible Spending Account Cap – aka “Special Needs Kids Tax”: Imposes cap on FSAs of $2500 (now unlimited). This is indexed to meet inflation after 2013. PPACA; Page: 2,388-2,389.

    15. Elimination of tax deduction for employer-provided retirement Rx drug coverage in coordination with Medicare Part D. PPACA; Page: 1,994.

    16. $500,000 Annual Executive Compensation Limit for Health Insurance Executives. PPACA; Page: 1,995-2,000.

    These take effect in 2014:

    17. Individual Mandate Excise Tax: Starting in 2014, anyone not buying a qualifying health insurance plan must pay income surtax according to the higher of the following:

    2014: 1 Adult: 1-percent AGI/$95; 2 Adults: 1-percent AGI/$190; 3 or more Adults: 1-percent AGI/$285.
    2015: 1 Adult: 2-percent AGI/$325; 2 Adults: 2-percent AGI/$650; 3 or more Adults: 2-percent AGI/$975.
    2016+: 1 Adult: 2.5-percent AGI $695; 2 Adults: 2.5-percent AGI/$1390; 3 or more Adults: 2.5-percent AGI/$2085.

    Exemptions for religious objectors, undocumented immigrants, prisoners, those earning less than the poverty line, members of Indian tribes, and/or hardship cases as determined by HHS. PPACA; Page: 317-337.

    18. Employer Mandate Tax: If an employer does not offer health coverage, and at least one employee qualifies for a health tax credit, the employer must pay an additional non-deductible tax of $2000 for all full-time employees. This applies to all employers with 50 or more employees. If any employee actually receives coverage through the exchange, the penalty on the employer for that employee rises to $3000. If the employer requires a waiting period to enroll in coverage of 30-60 days, there is a $400 tax per employee or $600 if the period is 60 days or longer. PPACA; Page: 345-346.

    19. Tax on Health Insurers: Annual tax on the industry imposed relative to health insurance premiums collected that year. This will be phased in gradually through 2018. This is immediately and fully-imposed on firms with $50 million in profits. PPACA; Page: 1,986-1,993.

    This one takes effect in 2018:

    19. Excise Tax on Comprehensive Health Insurance Plans: Starting in 2018, a new 40 percent excise tax on health insurance plans of $10,200 for one person or $27,500 per family. This includes higher threshold ($11,500 single/$29,450 family) for early retirees and high-risk professions. This is based on collateral protection insurance, plus a one-percent point index. PPACA; Page: 1,941-1,956.

    Fortunately the SCOTUS failed to address the fact these new taxes — as the Justices referenced them – originated from the Senate and not the House of Representatives as the U.S. Constitution requires. Nor did they review the fact the same document says taxes are to be raised for the “expressed purposes of creating revenue,” not as a punishment for failing to purchase a qualifying insurance policy.

    Americans  have lost even more of their rights with this ruling and do not yet know it, with that said, Socialist everywhere can rejoice. But be warned — the battle has jus’ begun for the control of freedom-loving peoples everywhere.

    Do not forget to send a note of thanks to Chief Justice John Roberts for turning this into a victory for us by changing the argument from “Interstate Commerce,” to a federal taxation issue. He’s simply brilliant!