Latest Updates: university of denver RSS

  • Where I Have Been

    Dillon Doyle 11:14 am on November 17, 2009 | 0 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: apathy, bill, c-span, , healthcare, house, ineptitude, poignant, university of denver, update, win

    This was emailed out to a certain committee of mine, but I think it applies here to:

    It has been a long time since I last blogged, so I thought that I would this week explain what a poignant ride the past few weeks have been for me.

    History is not linear; while the arc of history may bend towards what is just and right, without constant vigilance and substantial effort we will not be successful in attaining what we seek.

    As I find my myself watching the House healthcare vote on C-Span, this notion proves itself evident: we have made extreme and great leaps towards health care reform, but not all is as it should be. The Stupak amendment passed, there is no strong and robust public option, and reform is far from single payer. However, I have recently learned that in order to have the energy and will to keep fighting it is necessary to revel in success and frame our substantial progress as a basis for change in the future.

    I have recently been struggling with the gross ineptitude and apathy of our campus; without failure (ha) at the end of every quarter I become so jaded and disheartened by my fellow students that I become very negative in my expressions. I constantly struggle to stave off my building despondence.

    I have come to realize that this, focus on the negative, in the long run is not as effective as a more balanced viewpoint. I personally need to realize the great and positive changes that have been made while still working to improve and protect upon what we have.

    In the past few weeks, I learned that I need to focus on the journey as I seek to fulfill my future and the same is true for each and everyone of you. During this process it is important to realize that everyday is special, and that everyday we have all made a difference. Similar to healthcare reform, we must revel in our successes in order to keep going. For without noticing and living the steps along the way, and the positive changes associated with them, myself and all of us will further become disheartened with our situations.

    I guess what I am trying to say is that we must not be discouraged and we must not give up. I have lately been struggling (as I always do towards the end of a quarter) to gather the strength needed to continue what often times feels like ineffective and unappreciated work. It is important to realize this is not true. Everyday we all make positive change, and everyday somebody’s life is better because of it.

    When we strive (and struggle) to become better than we are, everyone around us becomes better too. It is with this mindset that we must go forward, reveling in our victories, while working to protect and expand upon what we have accomplished. We must not give up in the fight for what is just and right. We must work everyday to better our school and community.

    With continued and vigilant effort, we will win.

     
  • Colorado's Huge Deficit Not Getting Any Smaller

    Dillon Doyle 8:08 pm on July 7, 2009 | 1 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , CCEF, debt, defecit, , fiscal, money, TABOR, university of denver

    So if you haven’t been paying attention to the CO budget, you should start now…

    Here is my attempt to briefly explain (to the best of my ability) the problems. This fiscal year (09-10) the state has to cover $1,800,000,000 of deficit (we started this year ~$384,000,000 in the hole). One might ask how the hell that happened!

    Well, it has to do with a few things.

    Firstly, the TABOR amendment makes it unlawful to increase local property-tax rates without approval of the voters.

    Secondly, in the year 2000 the CO voters passed Amendment 23, which mandated that education funding increased with inflation +1% yearly (the +1% expires 10-11).

    Thirdly, the amount of funds spent on prisons, schools, and medicaid have increased sharply, far outpacing the revenues the state has taken in.

    Because of the way in which our state revenue system is setup, our income (and thus the relative amount of money we can invest in education) is very dependent on the economy, which is good in booms, bad in recession. Many would argue that we don’t tax enough when times are good and tax too much when times are bad (the data for this argument can be found in the CCEF’s report), which I tend to side with.

    A report released today by faculty of our University (http://www.du.edu/economicfuture/) outlines these troubles in far more depth, which includes graphs!

    Most strikingly,

    “the Gallagher Amendment keeping the taxable value of property low and TABOR keeping tax rates from increasing, the property tax share of school funding grows slower than it would other-wise. That growth has not kept pace with Amend-ment 23’s mandated funding increases.”

    Needless to say, according to the authors, we are headed for a “cliff” as is the title of the CCEF report.

    Tomorrow is the first meeting of the Long Term Fiscal Stability Commission on the hill, which is the state’s version of the Center for Colorado’s Economic Future. I can’t wait to see what they have to say, especially in terms of TABOR (more specifically their judgement on the relative merit of TABOR).

    I will write my thoughts on the problem, why I think we got ourselves into this situation, and my suggestions for fixing this mess when I get back (PS I am in DC, and it is awesome!).

    So keep reading, and stay informed and active!

     
  • From a Higher Place

    MJ 10:16 am on May 31, 2009 | 2 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , university of denver

    Graduation is fast approaching and instead of writing that last paper, I decided I’d take a moment to kick off this blog…about education.

    I have spent 17 years in Colorado education, from Adams County School District 50 (in Westminster) to a fine private institution, the University of Denver. In all of those years, I have developed a firm belief in people and in the power of civic engagement.

    These beliefs have been shaped by my experiences in education, and are ones I will continue to fall back on as I enter Teach for America as a corps member in Tulsa, Oklahoma.

    DU’s potential new brand will include the slogan, “from a higher place.” Without debating the implicit meanings of that phrase, I do feel the meaning of it. After four years of an expensive education (thank you, large scholarship!) I am re-entering the world of low education with a unique perspective. 

    In that vein, I have goals for this blog experience, for me, and for you:

    1. To translate that perspective into this blog;
    2. To talk about issues in America’s public education system, and tools to resolve them; and
    3. To encourage all DU Pioneers to use their education to change the world.

    I hope to include pictures, maybe some video along with my writing. I also hope you all comment — whether to agree, or push back — on my thoughts.

    My next post will include a discussion on the Obama platform on education. It’s a Democratic plan, but is it a democratic solution? And what does this plan mean in a post-No Child Left Behind world?

    In the meantime, let’s finish our finals!

    ~MJ

    University of Denver ‘09

    Journalism Studies/Political Science

    former AHUM Senator and Chair of Sustainability, AUSA

    future teacher!

     
c
compose new post
j
next post/next comment
k
previous post/previous comment
r
reply
e
edit
o
show/hide comments
t
go to top
esc
cancel