April, 2010
April 13, 2010| Posted in Current Issue - Frontpage
The Minnesota Student Bill of Rights – Highlights
Overview:
Minnesota has a long tradition of excellent public schools. Despite underfunding, a governor whose only definition of reform is “spend less money,” and increasing mandates and pressures, our schools are still producing amazing successes.
However, we face significant educational challenges. ALL of our children deserve the best possible education that will allow them to compete and be engaged citizens in the 21st century. The achievement gap in Minnesota is embarrassing and inexcusable. Burgeoning class sizes are making it difficult for our schools to serve as anything but warehouses. Our curriculum is being squeezed by government mandates that erode local and teacher control.
We cannot simply tinker around the edges – adopting quick-fixes instead of a real investment in great teachers, manipulating the funding formula, or giving small nudges to early childhood education. It is time to act on a bold new vision for our children. They deserve the same opportunity to succeed that we had. As a result, I am proposing a reinvention of and reinvestment in our children’s future that maintains the best of what we are doing now and encourages educational innovation.
The Minnesota Student Bill of Rights:
1. Every child in Minnesota will receive a high-quality, 21st century education, regardless of where they live, what race they are, or how much money their family has.
2. The State of Minnesota will fulfill its Constitutional obligation to fully and fairly fund public education from early childhood through college.
3. Every child in Minnesota has the right to the early care and learning opportunities necessary to start school successfully.
4. Our children will have access to high quality after-school and summer programming that promotes their success in school.
5. Every Minnesota student will have access to, and be prepared for, higher education that meets his or her learning and career preparation needs.
6. Our schools will offer a broad curriculum that includes core competencies in math, science, reading and writing, but also emphasizes the arts, citizenship, technology, physical health and foreign languages.
7. Every Minnesota child will be taught by high-quality, dynamic teachers who are well-trained, certified, and supported.
8. Class sizes in Minnesota will be reasonable so that our children, and their parents, can build personal relationships with teachers who know them and understand their individual strengths and learning styles.
9. School Boards, school administrators and teachers will be given local control to make decisions that best protect the children in their communities.
10. Parents and the broader community will be invested and involved in Minnesota’s schools.
Key elements of the plan
Close the Achievement Gap:
The achievement gap is a complex problem that cannot be solved with simple, silver-bullet proposals. Instead, it is time to take a comprehensive approach to tackle social, cultural, and institutional forces behind the achievement gap. That means moving beyond the blame-the-schools game while recognizing that our schools do need to greatly improve their ability to reach and teach diverse students.
Targeting comprehensive, early childhood and family education (element 3) by improving both the readiness and health of children and families will give our children the skills they need to start school on a level playing field.
Providing after school activities (element 4), parental involvement, and an engaging curriculum (element 6) to classes that are reasonably sized so that teachers can form personal relationships with students (elements 8 and 7) is also critical to closing this gap.
Minnesotans have a proud educational tradition that is being marred by the racial achievement gap. We owe our children more than a legacy of educational inequity. It’s time to take on the achievement gap as a state.
Make a real investment in our future:
We’ve been expecting more and paying less for education in Minnesota. Despite claims on both sides of the aisle that education will be “held harmless,” funding for our schools has only kept pace with inflation once in the past decade.
Our children deserve better than hollow promises. They deserve a real investment in their and our future (element 2).
While we have to be realistic about budget constraints, a 5 year, phased-investment in our children benefits all of us. Funding a quality education at all levels – early childhood, K-12, and higher education will build the intellectual capital or our state (elements 2, 3, and 5).
In conjunction with local control (element 9) and fewer mandates, our schools will be given the support they need to succeed.
A comprehensive, community-based approach:
We know that our children succeed when they live in safe, stable communities and have parents who are involved in their schooling (elements 9, 10). Instead of focusing exclusively on school outcomes, let’s also take responsibility for what we’re putting into our schools. It is time for all of us to make a personal commitment to our children’s success.
A broad, 21st century curriculum:
Growing mandates, testing regimes, and inadequate funding have put pressure on schools to reduce course offerings. We need rigorous offerings in the basics, but we also know that our children need to be equipped with dynamic, diverse, and adaptable skills to compete in a global economy (element 6). Our schools are preparing them for jobs that haven’t even been invented yet. Let’s inspire our children with a broad curriculum that prepares them for a successful future.
You can access the full plan here.
| Posted in Press Releases

For Immediate Release, Bloomington, MN – April 13, 2009 – Contact: Carrie Lucking
Thissen releases education plan – ‘Student Bill of Rights’
State Representative Paul Thissen, DFL candidate for governor, announced his comprehensive education plan today in honor of American Education Week. The wide-sweeping plan proposes much higher education funding, an aggressive strategy to close the achievement gap, and an effort to broaden the curriculum that Minnesota students learn.
“It’s time to stop bashing teachers and start proposing real solutions for our children,” Thissen said. “We’ve been pretending that starvation is school reform for nearly a decade. It is time to comprehensively address the challenges of underfunding, the achievement gap, and accountability in ways that make sense.”
The “Minnesota Student Bill of Rights,” as outlined by Thissen, is as follows:
1. Every child in Minnesota will receive a high-quality, 21st century education, regardless of where they live, what race they are, or how much money their family has.
2. The State of Minnesota will fulfill its Constitutional obligation to fully and fairly fund public education from early childhood through college.
3. Every child in Minnesota has the right to the early care and learning opportunities necessary to start school successfully.
4. Our children will have access to high quality after-school and summer programming that promotes their success in school.
5. Every Minnesota student will have access to, and be prepared for, higher education that meets his or her learning and career preparation needs.
6. Our schools will offer a broad curriculum that includes core competencies in math, science, reading and writing, but also emphasizes the arts, citizenship, technology, physical health and foreign languages.
7. Every Minnesota child will be taught by high-quality, dynamic teachers who are well-trained, certified, and supported.
8. Class sizes in Minnesota will be reasonable so that our children, and their parents, can build personal relationships with teachers who know them and understand their individual strengths and learning styles.
9. School Boards, school administrators and teachers will be given local control to make decisions that best protect the children in their communities.
10. Parents and the broader community will be invested and involved in Minnesota’s schools.
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You can read a summary of the plan here.
Paul Thissen represents Richfield and South Minneapolis in the Minnesota Legislature. He is a DFL candidate for Governor.
April 9, 2010| Posted in In the News, In the News, News Media
Proposals to change Minnesota-run mental health care draw fire
House leaders want say in less costly plan
Updated: 04/08/2010 09:30:34 PM CDT
A reorganization of state-run mental health facilities proposed by Gov. Tim Pawlenty’s administration is drawing increasing fire around the Capitol, as health care leaders in the House said Thursday that they would seek final say on any such move.
The changes, which include shuttering facilities, affect sites in Anoka, Cambridge, Eveleth and elsewhere and aim to saving $17 million while providing better services for those suffering severe mental illnesses. Announced in March, the plan was to be rolled out over the next 14 months.
But it drew fire from lobbyists concerned about what the plan means for patients, including those who may be forced to seek services away from their families, and from unions, which object to a plan to lay off 200 workers.
“The entire mental health community is not supportive, and that’s a problem,” said Sue Abderholden, executive director of the National Alliance on Mental Illness-Minnesota.
Rep. Paul Thissen, DFL-Minneapolis, held a news conference Thursday, flanked by a handful of other lawmakers, and accused the Minnesota Department of Human Services of expanding a mandate to examine services at facilities only in Anoka and Cambridge.
“They took that charge and spread it across all state-operated services,” said Thissen, chairman of the House Health Care and Human Services Policy and Oversight committee, referring to a group of state-run programs and facilities focused mainly on the mentally ill.
Thissen said he would
try to amend a budget bill to prohibit the department from making changes without legislative approval.
Rep. Tom Rukavina, DFL-Virginia, said he was worried about changes to a behavioral health center in Eveleth, on the Iron Range.
“This is frightening, and it’s got to be stopped,” Rukavina said.
But Human Services Commissioner Cal Ludeman said the administration was within its rights to make the changes, which would help the department close its share of a projected $1 billion statewide budget deficit. Capitol lawmakers and Pawlenty already have agreed on more than $300 million in cuts.
Ludeman said the department provided too many beds in some cases and offered unnecessary levels of care in others. The changes will include revising the services at several facilities, and six — including a handful of state-run dental clinics — would close.
In their place, new psychiatric care centers would provide 24-hour stays for patients, and facilities would help them recover and go home. A new 24-hour system also would help conduct faster assessments and placements of mentally ill people.
“We need to be able to provide better care, but at lower cost,” Ludeman said.
Several unions oppose the move, including AFSCME Council 5, which said last month that the cuts and resulting job loss would harm patients and put staff in danger.
The union pointed to staffing cuts at the St. Peter Regional Treatment Center, saying assaults on staff members have increased dramatically.
“The human cost of understaffing is unconscionable,” council director Eliot Seide said.
Read the rest of the article here.
April 6, 2010| Posted in Karen's Corner

Phoning, Phoning, Everywhere!
From morning till evening, in the office, at home or in the car, Paul and I are on the phone non-stop, intent on talking to every delegate and alternate to the State Convention! The warm weather has allowed us to do a little calling out in the yard so we can enjoy a bit of spring while we talk! Without fail, each delegate is taking their decision very seriously, and is making the time to talk through the issues and share what is important to them. We’re struck by the fact that there are a lot of people facing difficult times, and that the stakes are very high in this crisis election.
April 3, 2010| Posted in In the News
4/03/10 by Dave Mindeman
I get home from work on the Saturday evening before Easter. I pick up a few things getting ready for supper. I hear the doorbell ring…pick up a newspaper and glance at it as I go to the door. Finally look up and there, towering in the window stands …..
Paul Thissen.
Wow. Now that’s some serious doorknocking. Drives down to Apple Valley and hits a few delegate doors. We talk for a bit. He has big Easter planned tomorrow with his young’uns. We talk a little about the legislative session and about his principled stand on the GAMC “fix”. Just yakkin’ away.
Paul Thissen.
My wife is with me, talking as well. When Paul walks out the door, she says….”Now, if I was a delegate — that would impress me.”
Well, I have to say…I was impressed as well.
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