• DragonTypeWyvern@midwest.social
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    3 days ago

    As someone that grew up in one of the richest counties in his red state, the public schools were well funded with reasonable class sizes. The system continues to be one of the highest ranked in the nation.

    They also didn’t allow a JROTC program.

    I wonder why it was so important for the county that this be the case, compared to everywhere else in state?

    • reddig33@lemmy.world
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      3 days ago

      As someone who lives in one of the richest counties in a red state, they’ve already gutted the education system so there is no longer a difference between counties.

      That state is Texas.

      • The state claimed all our school funding would be solved by introducing a state lottery. It didn’t do a damned thing. Funding is worse than ever. Oh, but lobbyists have started running commercials for casino gambling with the same promise.
      • The state confiscates and redistributes school taxes.
      • Austin takes in a huge amount of tax revenue, but can’t afford to pay its teachers because the taxes are confiscated and sent to the state.
      • The state gives Austin’s tax money to other school districts so they can build water parks and sports stadiums.
      • What doesn’t get redistributed gets confiscated and held by the state in a “rainy day” fund that never gets spent.
      • Not satisfied with this, the state wants to create a voucher program where tax money will be spent on private schools instead. Those vouchers won’t be spent on teachers or students though. It goes to administrators, and the pockets of investors.

      https://www.texastribune.org/2023/03/13/texas-budget-surplus/

      https://abc13.com/texas-water-park-school-la-joya-isd-funding/4162905/

      https://www.texastribune.org/2025/03/06/valere-public-schools-superintendent-salary-texas

      • BrianTheeBiscuiteer@lemmy.world
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        3 days ago

        And they consistently mislead voters about the effect of vouchers. If attendance in a public school drops, so does their funding. Period. End of story. Maybe the public school budget will stay the same or even increase but public school funding won’t go anywhere but down.

        The math is bullshit. Even if they said, “Schools keep 20% of the original funding,” that’s something like an $8000 loss. Do they save $8000 in transportation, building maintenance, lunches, books, materials, salaries, and extracurriculars because ONE student left?

    • SecondaryAnnetagonist
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      3 days ago

      The divide at that point becomes a class one, where the quality varies intensely by how rich each individual town is.

      The pain comes when a struggling town can barely fund its own schools and the assistance coming from the top down to keep the lights on gets cut.