Washington

Washington


By TOM LITTLEWOOD

Illinois' education embassy

THE INTERESTS of the governor and the state superintendent of education are frequently in conflict in Springfield — on budgetary matters, for example. But in Washington their representatives work amiably in the same offices. Paul B. Simmons, director of the State of Illinois Washington office, is Gov. Thompson's eyes and ears in the nation's capital. Sharing office facilities with Simmons and his staff is Allan S. Cohen, an executive assistant with the Illinois Department of Education, which is independent of the governor. "Paul could always close his office door or I could close mine, but it hasn't happened yet," Cohen remarked recently.

The reason why the two separate operations co-exist so easily is that they are seldom working at cross purposes. Their joint objective is more federal funds for Illinois. With the growth of federal aid, the states and more and more local units of government have found it worth their while to maintain a presence in Washington in much the same way that foreign governments establish embassies to represent their interests.

Working as coalition
Cohen's assignment to Washington is particularly meaningful. He came with Supt. Joseph Cronin to Illinois from Massachusetts where he had been the superintendent's top assistant. When the Illinois Board of Education decided that an outpost in Washington could add to the $300 million a year that the state now claims in federal funds, the 32-year-old former Boston teacher was chosen for the transfer.

Newly arrived last December, he was the first tenant in the Hall of the States, a new building at the foot of Capitol Hill occupied by the National Governors' Conference and many of the other state organizations and representatives who cluster near the federal legislature. Cohen and the nine other representatives of state education agencies in Washington gather for weekly brown bag lunches at which they plan collective strategy. Their common mission is to make their views known before federal education laws are passed and then to apply for as much of the grant money as they can get.

When they act in concert, the coalition of education group is a formidable lobby. The Association of Chief State School Officers, the National Association of State Boards of Education and the Education Commission of the States all have Washington offices, with overlapping activities.

Although the last two Republican administrations made an effort to regionalize the decisionmaking process, the educators know that the big decisions are made and the big federal dollars are to be had in Washington, not in the various regional offices. The Illinois Board of Governors of State Colleges and Universities, and the Chicago School Board, are both considering opening Washington offices to be closer to the sources of federal funds and research contracts.

Coalition-building is just as essential for Simmons. The Illinois office is involved in a bipartisan network of regional groups working to increase the share of federal funds that goes to the Midwest and Northeast as against the Sun Belt states of the South and West. Simmons sees this as a consciousness-raising project. "Congress is feeling regional pressures for the first time," he said. "We're trying to get in on the big issues that mean really big bucks to us." Alie Randlett, formerly in charge of Wisconsin's Washington office, is now the Illinois specialist in regional liaison and regional competition for funds.

Simmons, like Cohen, is an Easterner, having worked in the Rockefeller administration in New York. There are five full-time professionals in the Illinois office. They work to "get our voice heard," Simmons said, in Congress, the executive departments and regulatory agencies. They also act as a state service clearinghouse and information bureau for the Illinois congressional delegation, and as the governor's political functionaries in Washington.

Digging in
Defensive measures consume a lot of their time. The Illinois office has been leading the fight against a proposed 12-month limitation on back claims for welfare, health and social services reimbursement. Illinois has over $27 million in public aid claims alone pending for longer than a year. Another priority goal is to avoid the enactment of a federal moratorium on strip mining of coal under prime agricultural land. The proposal is supported by ranchers and environmentalists in the Western states. But, as Simmons contends, "the worst agricultural land in Illinois is better than the best in Wyoming." He believes such a prohibition would have a stifling impact on the coal industry in Illinois.

You won't find an item in the state budget marked "Washington office." The personnel are scattered among various payrolls. Lobbying for the big bucks in Washington might not be something either the legislature or the public would fully understand. For their "connections and expertise," according to Simmons, Illinois pays two part-time consultants who are specialists in transportation and coal gasification. "Access is a lot in this town," explains Simmons. "In their fields, they know the establishment and the bureaucracy."

August 1977 / Illinois Issues / 31


|Home| |Back to Periodicals Available| |Table of Contents| |Back to Illinois Issues 1977|