Do Public Schools Need More Money?

States do poor job of monitoring funding

  • by:
  • 03/02/2023
ad-image

Among the universal truths of life are “death,” “taxes,” and “public schools need more money.”  Of these three, two are true.  Let’s discuss the third “truth,” which is anything but true.

You may be thinking - everyone knows the schools are under funded.  You probably ARE thinking that because there’s a steady drumbeat of news releases and studies emanating from the education establishment designed to convince you of just that.

The Texas Legislature is again being called into special session to find a way to fund the state’s money-starved schools.  But before it and similar bodies in the other 49 states convene to find a way to hand out property tax relief and (at the same time) give several billions more to the school system - let’s consider the facts.

First, if you believe that any state can implement significant property tax cuts while spending massive additional sums on schools, then perhaps you might be interested in purchasing a large bridge in New York.  There is a way to do it, but that involves soaking every taxpayer in a state - and that may be exactly what is about to happen.

Another myth is the idea that schools are dying for lack of funds.

A Dallas Morning News poll revealed that 52 percent of taxpayers surveyed would be quite willing to ante up more cash if the state of Texas would invest it in education.  Another poll, conducted for the Texas State Teachers Association, unsurprisingly had the figure at 69 percent.

Regardless of any possible bias in the way these surveys were taken, the people who answered obviously care about education.  But would they be so willing to pay higher taxes if there was more reporting of the facts?

In his book “Education Myths,” Jay P. Greene points out that education spending has been on the rise for fifty years.  The Department of Education’ s own records show that after World War II, in today’s dollars, we spent about $1,214 per student.  By 1955, that had doubled to $2,345.  By 1972, it doubled again to $4,479.  Since then, it has doubled yet again to $8,745.  And ABC’s John Stossel, in his recent series entitled “Stupid in America,” says the per-student outlay has now reached $10,000.

So how could you do with a class of 25 kids and a budget of a quarter of a million dollars? The schools say it isn’t enough.

But the schools have the teachers unions and massive numbers of lobbyists, all working to preserve the government schools’ monopoly and to get unfriendly politicians un-elected. For that, they seem to have the cash.  The unions represent the teachers’ interests, but who speaks for the children?

The children are not served by a system in which cookie-cutter school superintendents are handed rock-star contracts loaded with perks that most of us could never imagine. Remember Dallas Superintendent Michael Hinojosa’s car allowance that he got along with a car and driver?

And what about former Dallas Superintendent Mike Moses, who always insisted that his job was not about money?  He walked away with $233,000 in unused vacation pay and retirement incentives. In Fort Worth, Thomas Tocco was reassigned after a billing scandal involving about $16 million.  But guess what!  His iron-tight contract still allowed him to collect his salary of $314,212 plus compensation for unused sick time and vacation days.  So the taxpayers of Fort Worth forked over another $196,350.

Then there’s the incredible cost of educating children who are in the country illegally. According to the Federation for American Immigration Reform (FAIR), the total national expenditure from grades K-12 for educating illegal immigrant children is about $12 billion per year.  If you add the cost of those children who are born to illegal parents, the cost skyrockets to more than $28.6 billion, and $3.9 billion of that is borne by the taxpayers of Texas.

Presumably, if we didn’t accept illegals in our classrooms, we wouldn’t need bilingual education and another fortune could be saved.  In California, they tried that with Prop 227 and tests scores shot up!  But the bilingual lobby is working to return the status quo!

And so it goes.  If schools really hadn’t gotten significant increases and if they didn’t waste money like drunken sailors, we taxpayers would obviously want to do our part.  But before the soaking begins, would the state legislatures please take a look at how our money is currently being spent?

Image:

Opinion

View All

Polish border guard acquitted after firing at a group of migrants, judge ruled he was fulfilling his duty to Poland

"The law cannot yield to lawlessness…The soldier was sent to the border to protect its inviolability,...

BREAKING: Body cam footage released from Southampton police arresting Henry Nowak after he was brutally stabbed by Vickrum Digwa

Body camera footage released by police shows the final moments of Henry Nowak before he lost consciou...

JACK POSOBIEC: Tyler Robinson's attorneys want a 'conspiracy of censorship' as judge allows cameras in preliminary hearing

"They don't want you to see anything. They want you in the dark. They want a conspiracy of silence, a...

Father of murdered UK student Henry Nowak speaks out as killer Vickrum Digwa sentenced to life in prison

“I couldn’t help Henry in his final moments and there is nothing I can do to bring him back."...