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FridayMusings Friday, September 23, 2022    Helping define Livonia Quality of Life

20,000 absentee ballots are set to go out next week. With that in mind, the typewriter is making partisan endorsements today for Congress, State Senator, and State Representative. On Monday we will be endorsing for Livonia Board of Education, County Commissioner and the statewide ballot proposals.


Endorsements made by FridayMusings come after talks with a cross-section of Livonia residents, Republicans, Democrats, and Independents, but the ultimate endorsement comes from you election day.

One Election can make a big difference for Livonia in Lansing.

One hometown. Two outstanding State Senators.

FridayMusings Endorsements for 2 Livonia State Senate Districts 


State Senator Dayna Polehanki seeking a second term. District 5

State Representative Mary Cavanagh seeking the office of State Senator. District 6

Livonia this November will transition from one State Senator, Dayna Polehanki, to two. Each of the two districts has candidates who will bring a commitment to taking Livonia values to Lansing while working to understand our residents, listening to both those who are supporting and those who are opposing them, listening to all sides of an issue but continuing to show consistency from their prior service on support for quality public education, appreciating and standing with our police, fire, and nurses, and making sure that our environment is protected not only for our generation but for generations to come.


FridayMusings is proud to endorse incumbent State Senator Dayna Polehanki, seeking her second term in a new district that includes the southwest portion of Livonia and all of Canton Twp, Westland, Garden City, and InksterState Representative Mary Cavanagh, seeking her first term in the State Senate in a district that includes the eastern portion of Livonia, part of Redford, a portion of Detroit, and part of Farmington.


These two will be bringing seniority, one from the Senate and one from House, to the table which will be a benefit to Livonia. Two members of the State Senate fighting for a return of our tax dollars, supporting small business legislation that will help ensure job creation, and standing tall with the need for increased support for our public schools without the siphoning of tax dollars to the for-profit charter schools.


We know Dayna Polehanki, an outspoken fighter for a clean environment, common sense gun laws, and a fierce advocate for teachers, students, parents, and public schools. We will get to know Mary Cavanagh who supports prioritizing equitable per pupil Funding, providing Universal pre-K funding, and transparency in Michigan's for-profit Charter Schools.


Emily Bauman (R) Westland, is running against Polehanki. Ken Crider (R) Livonia, is running against Cavanagh.


No other community will have the leadership in Lansing that will be provided Livonia with the re-election of Dayna Polehanki and the election of Mary Cavanagh.

One Election can make a big difference 

One outstanding Member of Congress.

FridayMusings Endorses Tlaib for Congress


Rashida Tlaib (D) is being challenged by Steven Ellliott (R) in the newly drawn 12th Congressional District. 


A partial listing of endorsements for Rashida Tlaib shows a broad cross-section of key groups; League of Conservation Voters, SEIU, Michigan Teamsters #43, Planned Parenthood, Jewish Voice for Peace, UAW, Sierra Club, AFSCME Council 25, MEA, among others.


Tlaib is considered by many as a controversial member of the United States Congress. That being said FridayMusings is a long-time advocate that one cannot be a leader without taking stands on issues that not everyone agrees with. Takes positions and remains consistent without playing to the crowd.


There are many reasons for supporting Tlaib but the typewriter has identified two strong reasons for her re-election, 1) Tlaib works at taking on fights for community needs, at standing up for individuals having trouble with federal programs, and 2) Tlaib puts residents first with proven results.


Tlaib represents Detroit as the base of her district, and she represents Detroit well. FridayMusings fully expects Tlaib to be visible in our hometown Livonia, listening to our needs to determine how she can help bring funding to our hometown and standing up for our neighbors.

Musings has seen her in conversation with neighbors, like here with a group at the Livonia corn roast, and rather than argue she listens, interested in what her constituents have to say. She wants to spend time learning while meeting people in her new district.


She is a leader who has been breaking barriers her whole life growing up the eldest of 14 children in a working-class family in Detroit, making history as the first Muslim woman ever elected to the Michigan Legislature, one of the first two Muslim women in the U.S. Congress, and the first Palestinian-American woman to serve in Congress.


She focuses on helping her constituents get through everyday challenges while holding corporate polluters accountable for taking advantage of the communities she represents.


A bold, transformative leader and public servant, Rashida is fighting for families of all backgrounds, especially people who’ve been left out and marginalized.


Musings expect Livonia residents to spend time with Tlaib, expressing views on the issues affecting us, just as Musings expects Congresswoman Tlaib to spend time with Livonia residents listening to our needs and concerns.


FridayMusings is proud to support and encourage Livonia residents to vote to re-elect Rashida Tlaib for Congress.

Vote. Run. Serve. sponsors

Meet and Greet October 1

Vote. Run. Serve will be hosting their first in-person event - a Family-Friendly Candidate Meet & Greet co-hosted by the Livonia Democrats and the Livonia Republican Club. This bipartisan event is non-partisan and everyone, including kids with whom they will have activities, is welcome to meet the candidates for Congress and the State Legislature.


Join them on Saturday, October 1st from 10 am to 12 pm at Mies Park for this retail politics event. Face-to-face and handshakes beats dark money mailings everyday. 

Endorsements

United States Congress


Rashida Tlaib (D) Detroit 


FridayMusings

League of Conservation Voters

SEIU

Teamsters

Planned Parenthood

Jewish Voice for Peace

UAW

Sierra Club

AFSCME

MEA


Stephen Elliott (R) Southfield


No endorsements listed or found


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District 5 State Senate


Dayna Polehanki (D) Livonia


FridayMusings

Livonia Police Officers Association

Sierra Club

Michigan Nurses Association

MEA

UAW

Mayor Maureen Miller Brosnan

Mayor William Wild

Commissioner Glenn Anderson

Police Officers Association of Michigan

Professional Firefighters Union


Emily Bauman (R) Westland


Lifespan

NRA

Former State Rep. John Pastor

Former State Senator Patrick Colbeck

Citizens for Traditional Values


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District 6 State Senate


Mary Cavanagh


FridayMusings

Mayor Maureen Miller Brosnan

State Rep. Laurie Pohutsky

Carpenters & Milwrights

Michigan Chamber of Commerce

Teamsters


Ken Crider (R) Livonia


Mi Health Choice Alliance

Citizens for Traditional Values

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District 17 State Representative


Laurie Pohutsky (D)


FridayMusings

Plan Parenthood

Sierra Club

Clean Water Action

Gun Sense Candidate

Michigan Nurses

MEA

AFL-CIO

Mi Professional Firefighters Union 


Penny Crider (R)


No endorsements listed or found for this cycle

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District 22 State Representative


Matt Koleszar (D) Plymouth


FridayMusings

Mayor Maureen Brosnan

Councilman Jim Jolly

Councilman Brandon McCullough

Police Officers Association of Mi

UAW

MEA

AFL-CIO

Michigan Firefighters

Michigan Nurses


Cathryn Neracher (R) Northville


Right to Life of Michigan

NFIB

Councilwoman Laura Toy

Councilman Rob Donovic


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District 16 State Representative


Stephanie Young (D) Detroit


FridayMusings

No other endorsements listed or found this cycle


Keith Jones (R) Detroit


No endorsements listed or found in this cycle

The First Day of Fall

Mail Address
19514 Livonia 48152
E-mail address
Cell address
734-674-5871

PTSA sponsors school forum

September 29

Let's not be blinded by the partisan ideologues using candidates for school board to destroy our original public schools

It started during the past two years of the pandemic: Schools being closed, anger. Children being forced to wear masks, anger. Talk about vaccine mandates, and anger.


Parents showed up at school board meetings across the country, anger.


Steve Bannon got into the picture by espousing that the only way to save our nation was through the schools.


Schools are now open and mask mandates have long expired. There were never any Michigan k-12 schools that adopted a vaccine mandate for students ― but parents, now driven by partisan ideologues are even more angry, even those without children in a district school.


This year's school elections are expected to be different with candidates piggybacking partisan candidates who are trumpeting the mantra that our schools are failing.


In Western Wayne County the Northville school board President was removed and censured following controversial remarks he made online regarding COVID-19 and reopening schools. 


He has not set on the sideline. He is actively involved in supporting school board candidates in Northville, Plymouth/Canton, and Livonia.


In Livonia the candidates running as a part of a "take back" Wayne County are Pamela Morgan, Jeffrey Ferguson, and Reina Vendramini.


Individually I have no doubt they are well-intended. Collectively, as a part of the "take back" movement, having been a part of a Livonia rally with Tudor Dixon, Matt DePerno, Kristina Karamo this past weekend, they appear to align with the extreme cultural element in our state.


Aligned with the movement in Michigan to support more choice in education--read that to mean more charter schools siphoning off original public school funding. 


For some reason, candidates who are a part of the partisan ideologue are aligning with the belief that our schools are not working, that our districts are supporting LGBT policies, teaching critical race theory, or that as Nancy Kaffer wrote on Sunday that our schools are changing and these candidates do not like it.


We have four great candidates running--Liz Jarvis, Colleen Burton, Mark Johnson, and Emily Keith. We need to vote for any three of these. 


There are also three who are a part of the Tudor Dixon, and Betsy DeVos extreme cultural element in Michigan--Pamela Morgan, Jeffrey Ferguson, and Reina Vendramini.


It is time to move on and acknowledge the greatness of Livonia by selecting three solid pro-public school candidates. 


More about that on Monday when FridayMusings endorses for the Livonia Board of Education.

Livonia School Board Candidates

Liz Jarvis does have a site inadvertently left off:   https://sites.google.com/view/electlizjarvis/home

IGNORE SCHOOL REFORMERS


As we move closer to the absentee ballots being mailed FridayMusings will be sharing thoughts on our Livonia Board of Education election with an endorsement coming this Monday.


This article was submitted by livonia resident Al Churchill. His salient points are important and need to be shared.


This typewriter agrees that we have some great Livonia schools and that we should elect Trustees who have our district, a great district, in mind; Not candidates who would have you believe that our system is failing. 


For a considerable while we have been told that America’s schools are not doing well. We need charter schools, vouchers, standardized tests. Punish educators and unions. Create online courses. Grade our schools A-F. Unfortunately, for those making that case, our schools are, largely, not failing. They are doing pretty darn good as a matter of fact. Schools that are not doing well, generally, exist in the midst of poverty.


Commissioned by the U.S. Office of Education, James Coleman of Johns Hopkins University studied 600,000 students and teachers. The gist of the Coleman Report suggested that one-third of student success is determined by the quality of the school, while two-thirds of student proficiency is to be found in factors outside of the school. Other studies concur.


Parental education, parental involvement in student school activities, neighborhood environment, health care, nutrition, home stability and so on provide the underpinning of student school proficiency.


Indeed, according to former Assistant Secretary of Education Diane Ravitch, “…American schools, in which fewer than 10 percent of the students were poor, outperformed the schools of Finland, Japan and Korea”, top performers in the widely watched Program of International Student Assessment (PISA). 


But you’d never know it when alleged “reformers” savage American schools. Frantically, they howl that we’re losing the race. Our schools are failing. Let’s do something, anything!


That aside, Finland, a perennial top performer on PISA, provides a good example of what can be done to achieve educational merit. The Finns have no charters, no vouchers. They do not have a testing obsession like we do. Finnish children are exposed to high-stakes testing a grand total of one time during the entirety of their school experience. They do not evaluate teachers and schools, based upon one high-stakes test given annually. They do not grade their schools A-F. They have strong unions. In a word, they do absolutely nothing that “reformers” in this country promote.


Finland’s teachers are trusted to do whatever it takes to educate their kids. They spend much more of their school day planning and collaborating with other teachers than we do. Their schools are smaller than ours. They put a premium on recess time. There is much to be learned from Finnish schools.


Can American schools be improved? You bet! For a start, we might refocus on teacher training and development. We might also concentrate more on creativity and problem solving, critical thinking generally, assessing those skills in the classroom and quantifying them on standardized tests.


But, contrary to the assertations of errant critics, American schools have done exceptionally well in meeting their mission of developing productive, responsible citizens in a democratic society. Our schools, including Livonia, have played a huge role in making us the world power we are today.