[geeks] geeks Digest, Vol 86, Issue 11
Lionel Peterson
lionel4287 at gmail.com
Wed Jan 20 17:05:43 CST 2010
On Jan 20, 2010, at 4:58 PM, Jonathan Patschke <jp at celestrion.net>
wrote:
>> Did you just describe an 'optional' school tax to help those who's
>> income won't support a self-funded education from the families
>> earnings/resources?
>
> I think the term you're looking for is "charity".
>
>> And who will determine the needs? Discern 'stupid' from 'learning
>> disabled', for instance?
>
> Whomever is running the charity.
So instead of gov't you'd have a charity running schools for those
that can't provide for/fund their own education, requesting funds from
those who can afford to educate their own?
Aside from the ability to opt-out, how is this different from a public
school system? I provide for my sons education outside the public
school district, and I support the education of my neighbor's children
through my tax dollars...
An optional tax/charitable donation would *likely* result in
insufficient funds for the proper education of those with the greatest
needs.
I've mentioned before the student that almost moved into my district -
this child had needs so profound that his education would cost
whatever district he lives in $250,000/year - almost 20x the cost of a
general education student... The reality is few communities would
*likely* be able to cough up that kind of money through any non-
compulsory funding scenarios.
As I recall from your earlier post, I thought non-compete service
providers was a concern of yours - this doesn't seem to address that
issue.
Trust me, I'm all for lowering my property taxes, but the truth is my
son's tuition costs more than I pay in property taxes... Public
education is a bargain for parents of school-age children at the
expense of those without school-age children. If everyone in my town
had two kids in school my taxes would be insane ($30,000 to pay for
two students PLUS my share of the community services).
Lionel
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