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Legislative News and Views - Rep. Peggy Bennett (R)

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Legislative News From Rep. Peggy Bennett

Friday, January 15, 2021

Dear Friends,

We have finished the 2nd week of the 2021 legislative session. It remains such an honor to serve the people of southern Minnesota, and I look forward to finding solutions to the many challenges our state will be facing.

 

2021-22 COMMITTEE ASSIGNMENTS
Recently I learned my Minnesota House committee assignments for the next two years: Education Finance, Education Policy, and Early Childhood Finance and Policy committees.

Being a former teacher, I am thrilled with these assignments. Helping our children and their teachers succeed over the next two years is critical to Minnesota's future success.

 

EVIDENCE BASED RESULTS NEEDED IN GOVERNMENT DECISIONS
If there is evidence that proves something isn't working, should we just continue to do it?
 
In state government, we create laws and fund thousands of programs.  Most of the time, we just assume those laws and programs are working.  I believe it is the responsibility of government to be accountable to the citizens of Minnesota by making sure that the laws we pass and the programs we fund are working and serving their intended purpose. 
 
Along those lines, I will once again be offering legislation that would begin to create a process to measure and report the effectiveness of government programs, starting with K-12 Education grant funded programs.
 
Under my bill, each program that receives grant funding awarded by the Minnesota Department of Education must provide an educational goal; a summary of the strategies used to meet the goal, data collection process; and a short report summarizing the data and the effectiveness of the strategies in a report to the commissioner of education. The report would also be submitted to the majority and minority chairs of the education committees.
 
The education committees would then be able to look at the data and determine program effectiveness. If it's working well, we can prioritize the program. If it's not working, let's eliminate it and focus our funding on things that work.
 
Evidence-based results should be required across state government. Too often we have programs that take money but return nothing. I'm asking that Minnesota government have the information needed that ensures it is funding the most effective programs. We have tight budgets, and we all want our tax money to go as far as it can and go toward programs that work.
 
This process of evidence-based government should be used throughout government, including for laws, rules, regulations, and mandates. We should never maintain programs and laws just for the sake of doing "something."
 
As an elementary school and special education teacher of many years, I relied on research and data to guide my teaching methods and help my students. I would collect data and chart the effectiveness of the strategies and interventions I used. If what I was doing worked, I kept on. If it didn't work, I discontinued that strategy and chose a different method. Government should operate in that same common-sense way. Sadly, that rarely happens. Government often continues programs and laws into perpetuity, even if the evidence is clear they do not work. 
 
As a lawmaker, one of my goals is to make sure that what government is doing works - and if it doesn't, we should quit doing it. It's as practical as that.

The evidence-based results bill is just one of many bills I'm working this session. I'll be sure to highlight more of them in future updates.

 

GROUNDBREAKING CEREMONY FOR THE NEW MERCY ONE CLINIC

On Thursday I had the honor of taking part in the groundbreaking ceremony for the new MercyOne clinic in Albert Lea.  This has been the accumulation of over three years of hard work by the Save Our Hospital/Healthcare group (now the Albert Lea Healthcare Coalition.)  It's an exciting time for those living in Albert Lea and the surrounding communities who will be able to utilize this new clinic and, into the future, the end goal of a new local hospital.  It was a joy to be able to speak at this event, and to see the many cars full of people in the parking lot who watched the event from their vehicles via their smart devices.  It was fun to hear the "honking applause" too!  I am so proud of our community and how people rallied together to bring this project to fruition.  It certainly shows the strength, compassion, and fortitude of the people who live here. Click here to read the Albert Lea Tribune story. Congratulations everyone!

Have a good weekend,

 

Peggy