Business Community Calls for Adoption of Governor’s Education Reform Package

Reforms Needed to Ensure Academic Improvement, Economic Competitiveness

The state’s largest business organization today urged lawmakers to adopt Governor Malloy’s education reform package, calling his legislative proposals “an opportunity to realize meaningful reform.”

“We need to do better,” John Rathgeber, president and CEO of the Connecticut Business & Industry Association, told the Education Committee. “Every student in Connecticut deserves a chance to reach their potential.

“With the largest achievement gap in the United States and with our overall performance slipping relative to states like Texas and the Dakotas, it is time to act.”

Speaking in support of SB 24, An Act Concerning Educational Competitiveness, Rathgeber said the measures outlined in the bill should be addressed as a package.

“The recommendations in this bill are well thought out and offer the opportunity to realize meaningful education reform that will improve overall academic outcomes and close the achievement gap,” he said.

“However, it is critically important to understand that these measures work together to form a framework for reform; they are interconnected and we urge this committee and the legislature as a whole to pass this bill substantially as drafted.”

Rathegeber noted that with 10,000 members, CBIA represents the broad diversity of Connecticut’s private sector enterprises, national leaders in productivity and innovation that rely on a vibrant workforce to remain economically competitive.

“CBIA’s membership faces numerous challenges as they compete in the the global, 21st century economy,” he said. “One of the most profound long-term issues Connecticut businesses face is the lack of skilled help to fill positions that require proficiency in math and the sciences as well as training in highly technical fields like precision manufacturing.

“Adoption of this package is a necessary and significant first step down the road to educational excellence. Connecticut’s businesses are relying on our public schools to graduate the best and the brightest in the country, and our children are depending on all of us to ensure that they have access to a world class education in order to live rich, fulfilling lives as citizens of our great state.”

John Rathgeber’s complete testimony (pdf) >>

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CBIA is Connecticut’s largest business organization, with 10,000 member companies. For more information, please contact Ann Marie C. Raymond (860.244.1957; annmarie.raymond@cbia.com) or visit cbia.com/newsroom.

Credit Conditions Show Signs of Improvement in 4Q2011; Still Low Based on Historical Statistics

CBIA/Farmington Bank Survey Finds Possible Boost for Business Lending

Connecticut’s credit conditions are showing signs of improvement according to the Fourth-Quarter 2011 CBIA/Farmington Bank Credit Availability Survey, with the credit availability index rising more than five index points to 22.9.

With economic activity improving, many economists now believe the prospects for rising profits may boost business lending at a critical time in the business cycle, thereby further reducing the risk of recession in 2012.

“Achieving an actual step up in economic growth in Connecticut requires more favorable credit conditions, with ample credit being made available for both consumers and businesses,” says John Patrick, president and CEO of Farmington Bank.

“To the degree that Connecticut businesses can gain timely access to credit, they will be able to increase inventories, hire new employees, modernize facilities, and finance day-to-day operations.”

According to state economists, better credit conditions are extremely important in promoting overall economic recovery for many small and midsize businesses.

“In 2011, Connecticut showed encouraging economic signs,” says CBIA economist Peter Gioia. “Unemployment was down; spending power, business confidence, and holiday spending were up; and interest rates were at record lows.

“As a result, many of Connecticut’s small businesses are beginning to show more optimism about near-term business projects.”

Don Klepper-Smith, chief economist and director of research at DataCore Partners, adds, “The current data on overall credit conditions is encouraging and adds to a body of evidence pointing to a stronger economy. Having access to timely credit in ample amounts will surely help us build on this rising tide of economic momentum and hopefully increase business confidence statewide.”

The fourth-quarter 2011 survey showed that 46% of all businesses polled now expect the outlook for their individual firms to improve in 2012, while 37% anticipate better economic performance nationally over the next three months.

Other key findings:

  • Only 23% of respondents expect conditions to improve over the next three months.
  • 33% anticipated some degree of improvement within the next three months in their own industry, while only 18% expected industry conditions to weaken.
  • More than one-third (36%) of respondents replied that they used financing within the past three months to meet capital needs, and 64% said they had not sought financing.
  • One-third of respondents stated the financing needed most by their firms was for working capital for day-to-day operations, while another 15% cited machinery and equipment purchases.
  • 48% stated that if available, credit would be used for new plants and equipment; 19% would use it for expansion into new stores, branches, and operations; 17% said they would use credit to maintain current workforce; and 24% said they would add new hires.
  • More than one-third (36%) of respondents stated that inability to secure adequate credit would mean they would be unable to finance increased sales. Well over half (60%) stated they would be unable to grow or expand their businesses.

“The state of Connecticut’s economy is slowly showing signs of improvement,” says Marie O’Brien, president of the Connecticut Development Authority (CDA).

“In order to continue that trend, it is imperative that Connecticut companies have access to timely credit availability, which is critical for job growth and business expansion.”

The Fourth-Quarter 2011 CBIA/Farmington Bank Credit Availability Survey was emailed to 1950 Connecticut businesses in early January 2012. A total of 211 executives responded, for a margin of error at 95% confidence at +/- 6.7%.

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CBIA is Connecticut’s largest business organization, with 10,000 member companies. For more information, please contact Ann Marie C. Raymond (860.244.1957; annmarie.raymond@cbia.com) or visit cbia.com/newsroom.

CBIA Business Minute – Mark Soycher Discusses Social Media in the Work Place

Social media has changed the way many people live.  Instead of holding vacation photo-viewing parties, people post pics on websites such as FaceBook and Twitter.  The way people discuss their work lives has also changed with the popularity of social media.  What used to be discussed around the water cooler is now tweeted or pasted as a status update.  Employers need to know how to deal with social media and their employees, in order to make sure the innovative trend doesn’t end up costing them.

Mark Soycher One – Water Cooler Talk Moves Into Cyber-Space
Mark Soycher Two – Defining Social Media Rules in the Work Place
Mark Soycher Three – Laws Pertaining to Social Media
Mark Soycher Four – Social Media Policies
Mark Soycher Five – Interanational Issues Pertaining to Social Media

CBIA Business Minute – Mark Soycher Discusses Disaster Preparedness

The winter of 2012 has been relatively mild, but no one is forgetting the disruptions to both life and business caused by the snow of 2011 or October of 2012, or Tropical Storm Irene.  These storms caused new challenges to employers who may prepare for major issues such as hurricanes, but not the long-lasting power outages or ice shelves on roofs due to feet of snow we saw within the last year.  In this week’s Business Minute, CBIA’s Mark Soycher discusses how a business can best prepare for the unexpected, before they happen.

Mark Soycher One – Risks of Asking For Employee Help for Storm Clean Up
Mark Soycher Two – Potential Income Responsibility Questions after Work Disruption
Mark Soycher Three – Making the Decision for an Early Dismissal or Shut Down
Mark Soycher Four – Communications Planning for Business Continuity
Mark Soycher Five – Planning for Unexpected Disruptions

Six Prominent Connecticut Education and Business Groups Announce Common Goals for 2012 Legislative Session

Every student in Connecticut has a right to a high-quality education, regardless of his or her race, ethnicity, wealth, or zip code. Unfortunately, every student in Connecticut is not receiving a high-quality education, as demonstrated by our state’s largest achievement gaps in the nation and by the gap between what our highest-performing students learn and what they need to know to meet international benchmarks for learning.

The primary reason for this unacceptable situation is the fact that the education system in Connecticut is not designed to guarantee that every child will learn what he or she needs to lead full and productive lives. We, therefore, must take bold actions that change the system if we want to ensure a brighter future for our students, our communities, and our state.

It is in this spirit that our organizations, the Connecticut Association of Public School Superintendents (CAPSS), Connecticut Association of Schools (CAS), Connecticut Association of Boards of Education (CABE), Connecticut Business and Industry Association (CBIA), Connecticut Council for Education Reform (CCER), and Connecticut Coalition for Achievement Now (ConnCAN), come together, for the first time, to form a common position on important educational challenges facing our state.

Each of our organizations has our own individual agendas and we may not always agree on how to solve problems in our education system. However, we do share common positions on the following issues and we jointly call on our state leaders to take action on these goals during this legislative session.

EDUCATOR PREPARATION AND CERTIFICATION

Our current systems to prepare and certify teachers, principals, and superintendents must be improved and become more flexible in order to find the best possible candidates for the jobs.  Preparation programs, both traditional and non-traditional, must be more clinically oriented, with both preparation and certification based primarily on demonstrated ability to perform well on the job. 

TEACHER EVALUATION AND SUPPORT

The goal of an evaluation system must be two-fold: to develop and support teachers to become highly effective, and to dismiss ineffective teachers at any career level, including those who do not or cannot demonstrate improvement with support. Recently, the State Board of Education approved a set of guidelines for evaluation systems that include four levels of performance and multiple measures of a teacher’s effectiveness, with a clear focus on student learning. These guidelines were developed by the state’s Performance Evaluation Advisory Committee (PEAC).

We support the principle evaluation guidelines as adopted by the PEAC and the State Board of Education.

In addition, we believe that:

  • Reductions in force, when necessary, should be guided primarily by teacher evaluation results. If dismissals are needed, they should occur within levels of performance, beginning first with ineffective teachers and working up from there.
  • Teacher tenure should be earned and kept based on satisfactory evaluation results. At any point, teachers who do not consistently receive at least a proficient rating should be dismissed. We support an expedited due process that is focused on whether the evaluation procedures were followed fairly.
  • Teachers who consistently receive the highest evaluation ratings should be eligible for recognition, including promotions along a career ladder and salary increases.

PRINCIPAL EVALUATION AND SUPPORT 

Principal evaluation systems should mirror the goals for teacher evaluations: to develop and support principals to become highly effective, and to dismiss ineffective principals, including those who do not or cannot demonstrate improvement with support. We believe that principals must be held accountable for their performance and, at the same time, be given the training, autonomy and authority to build the capacity needed to ensure fair, objective, and effective teacher evaluations. We support the principle evaluation guidelines as adopted by the PEAC and the State Board of Education.

In addition, we believe that:

  • Growth of student achievement in the building or instructional unit for which the principal is responsible should be the most significant element in principal evaluation.
  • The principal must have high-quality training and support in teacher evaluation.
  • The principal should have a significant voice in deciding who is employed in his/her school or instructional unit.

RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN TIME AND LEARNING 

We need to measure student learning not by time spent in classrooms, but by mastery of content.  The first step in moving toward such a system is to allow local boards of education to award students credit for evidence of work and experiences that demonstrate mastery in relation to the Common Core college- and career-readiness standards, rather than Carnegie Units earned or “seat time” accumulated, regardless of the time required for such mastery. Flexibility in meeting student learning needs must be used both for remediation for students who need additional learning time to master content, and for enrichment opportunities for advanced study.

SCHOOL AND DISTRICT ACCOUNTABILITY 

We support a system of differentiated accountability for schools and districts that provides varied support and interventions based on where schools and districts fall across a range of student performance levels. We know that many schools and some districts are consistently underperforming. It is imperative that we improve these schools and districts, and provide their students with high-quality education right away. This goal can be addressed by:

  • Developing a system in which our lowest-performing schools and districts receive immediate and intensive support and intervention.  
  • Ensuring that any increases in funding to these schools and districts is aimed at increasing student achievement. 
  •  Recognizing our high-performing, highest-need schools and replicating their success. 
  • Supporting innovative models to address the learning needs of every student.

PRE-KINDERGARTEN

All children should have access to programming beginning at age three that is developmentally appropriate and staffed by highly effective teachers, with initial priority given to low-income students. In addition, families need clear information about the quality of their prekindergarten options.

EDUCATION CONTRACT NEGOTIATIONS

During contract negotiations, we encourage the parties to consider new ways of structuring contracts to focus on student learning needs. In education contract negotiations, if the school district and the local teachers union cannot come to agreement, the decision goes to binding arbitration. We believe that the state law on binding arbitration must be amended so that students’ learning needs are the primary factors that guide the binding arbitration process.

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CBIA is Connecticut’s largest business organization, with 10,000 member companies. For more information, please contact Ann Marie C. Raymond (860.244.1957; annmarie.raymond@cbia.com) or visit cbia.com/newsroom.

Connecticut’s Economy Shows Progress; Too Early to Lose Caution

While Job Numbers and Business Confidence Begin to Rise, Housing Market and Budget Issues Cause Concern

Connecticut’s economy is showing signs of improvement according to a new survey of businesses in the state, but issues at the international and national levels remain concerns.

The Connecticut Business & Industry’s Fourth Quarter 2011 Economic Survey found that businesses were more optimistic in the fourth quarter than they were in the third quarter of last year.

“The fourth quarter survey was a welcome change to the results of our third quarter report,” says CBIA economist Pete Gioia. “While too early to determine a trend, the survey shows optimism for growth on par with a steady economic recovery.”

The survey shows 46% of respondents see their own firm improving over the next three months, with only 14% expecting a worsening. In the third quarter survey, only 29% of respondents saw the potential of improvement and 28% instead saw the potential that their firm would worsen.

The survey also saw executives expecting more growth nationally first, then locally. Thirty-seven percent of respondents expect the US economy to improve, while 19% expect further worsening. Although still better than last quarter, expectations at the state level are weaker. Twenty-three percent of respondents see the state economy improving while 34% expect continued deterioration.

“While this survey shows business leaders are beginning to gain confidence, there are challenges to be met going forward. That’s why it’s important for our policymakers to continue to lean the cost of state government, reform public education, reduce and address barriers to economic growth, and modernize state infrastructure,” Gioia says.

Fourth quarter economic survey key performance indicators:

  • 47% expected increased production and sales for the next quarter, up from 35% in the third quarter
  • 46% of respondents see future gains in productivity and wages
  • 23% expect to add workers and 13% expect to decrease workers over the next quarter, compared to only 16 percent saying they expected to add last quarter and 22% who expected to cut jobs.

CBIA’s fourth quarter 2011 economic survey was emailed to 1,950 Connecticut businesses in early January, 2012. A total of 216 executives responded, with an 11% response rate and margin of error of
+/-6.8 percent.

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CBIA is Connecticut’s largest business organization, with 10,000 member companies. For more information, please contact Ann Marie C. Raymond (860.244.1957; annmarie.raymond@cbia.com) or visit cbia.com/newsroom.

Business Community Reacts to Governor Malloy’s State of the State Address

Connecticut Business & Industry Association president and CEO John R. Rathgeber said today that Governor Malloy’s State of the State address highlighted many of the business community’s priorities for the 2012 legislative session, including:

Fiscal responsibility and accountability:

“The governor emphasized that we must continue to make state government leaner and more efficient, reduce our long term liabilities, and move to GAAP accounting,” Rathgeber said.

Improving the state’s business climate:

“Governor Malloy recognized that the private sector investment is essential for job creation and economic growth in the state,” Rathgeber said. “And he acknowledged that revitalizing our economy means promoting an environment that encourages business expansions, start-ups, and relocations.”

Education reform:

The governor proposed a series of reforms designed to ensure we have the best teachers and principals in our schools, that we address habitually underperforming schools, and provide more transparency in how education dollars are spent.

“Every child deserves a great education and the chance to pursue rewarding, productive careers,” Rathgeber said. “And Connecticut cannot compete in today’s global economy if it does not enact broad reform measures.”

Moving forward

“The key is what happens next,” Rathgeber said. “Will the legislature have the political will to exercise fiscal responsibility, help create a better climate for business investment, and make meaningful reforms to our public education system?

“If these issues are to be addressed successfully, lawmakers will need to work together in a bipartisan manner, just as they did last fall during the successful special jobs session.”

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CBIA is Connecticut’s largest business organization, with 10,000 member companies. For more information, please contact Ann Marie C. Raymond (860.244.1957; annmarie.raymond@cbia.com) or visit cbia.com/newsroom.

New Energy-Related Training Program Opens Doors to Energy Careers

Orientations Held Feb. 3, 2012 and Feb. 10, 2012 to Determine Eligibility into Academic Skills Enhancement for Energy-Related Careers Training Program

The new Academic Skills Enhancement for Energy-Related Careers training program, beginning on February 27, offers skills enhancement to individuals living in the Hartford and Enfield labor markets. The program will help prepare participants for careers in the energy industry.

With the impending retirement of many baby boomers, as well as new innovations and system upgrades, the energy industry is set for growth in Connecticut.

“Many Connecticut residents are searching for work, and they aren’t aware of the growing opportunity in the energy sector,” says Judy Resnick, Executive Director of CBIA’s Education Foundation. “These individuals must be prepared with a solid foundation of academic skills to work in the energy sector. And this program is a first step to a rewarding career in energy.”

The free six-week training program begins with attendance at one of two orientations to take place at CREC, 34 Sequassen Street in Hartford from 1:00 pm to 3:00 pm on Feb. 3 and Feb. 10. Attendance at one of the orientations is a mandatory first step to take part in the training.

Upon acceptance to the training program, students will attend six weeks of full-day classroom and online training courses designed to increase critical thinking, math, and applied technology skills, help prepare the student for pre-employment aptitude tests and academic placement tests, and give them the ACT National Career Readiness Certificate (NCRC), a national credential identified by the Center for Energy Workforce Development as the entry-level standard for the energy industry.

In addition, twelve of the participants who successfully complete the program will be selected to participate in a 10-week electric/ gas utility training program beginning on April 16, 2012 at Northeast Utilities, leading to industry-specific training and certificates.

“This is a unique program, created using information on industry-specific needs given to us by the very businesses that will need new employees,” added Resnick. “The training will allow these individuals to enter the workforce with the potential to move into good high-skill, high-wage jobs.”

Individuals who want to be considered for the program have to meet specific criteria:

  • Be at least 18 years of age
  • Reside in the Hartford or Enfield labor market
  • Be unemployed, or under-employed with an annual income of less than $44,700
  • Have a high school diploma or GED
  • Be drug free
  • Have no felony convictions
  • Have a valid CT drivers license and reliable transportation
  • Have a minimum CASAS scores of 245 and/ or complete KeyTrain pre-tests at level 3
  • Commit to the six-week program
  • Attend a program orientation to complete program application and assessments.

“The different doors this program could open are life-changing,” says Deb Presbie, CBIA project coordinator. “While students gain knowledge and skills specific to the energy industry, they also earn a workforce credential that verifies they have core employability skills that are valuable across all businesses and industries. Each person is given a career advisor, the chance to network, and job placement assistance. There aren’t many opportunities like this out there.”

The Academic Skills Enhancement for Energy-Related Careers program begins on Feb. 27, 2012 and runs through April 6, 2012. Classes will be held for those who are enrolled Monday through Friday 9:00 am – 3:30 pm at CREC.

These programs are made possible by a grant from the Workforce Solutions Collaborative of Metro Hartford, with the support from the CT STEM Jobs Project. There is no cost to attend.

To learn more and see if you are eligible, sign up for a two-hour orientation session. Orientation sessions will be held Feb. 3 and Feb. 10, 1:00 pm to 3:00 pm at CREC, 34 Sequassen Street, Hartford. You must sign up for one of these dates in order to participate in the program. To save your spot, call Deb Presbie at 860-244-1932, or by email at deb.presbie@cbia.com .

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CBIA is Connecticut’s largest business organization, with 10,000 member companies. For more information, please contact Ann Marie C. Raymond (860.244.1957; annmarie.raymond@cbia.com) or visit cbia.com/newsroom.