Winterborn wrote: ↑Wed Jun 22, 2022 6:18 am
GannonFan wrote: ↑Tue Jun 21, 2022 11:50 am
I don't have any particular problem with the SCOTUS ruling in the Maine case. Maine has a program where they provide money to families to attend private schools of their choice in really remote parts of the state where there isn't a public school option (so the state hasn't provided a public school for these areas). The Maine law said you can have the money, but you can't use it to go to a school that has any religious aspect to it. IMO, once the state has abdicated on the task of providing public education, and I'd keep it pretty tight to the issues in this case specifically that there weren't any public schools available, then it's really up to the parents on where to send their kids with the money provided.
Outside of specific instances, and mainly in inner-cities, where I would support vouchers for school choice, I am not a voucher proponent, whether the private school be religious based or not. But that presupposes that there is a public school option actually there. In this case of sparsely-populated Maine, there is no public school option. I would read the opinion that way, as a more narrow ruling. And I'm still opposed to school vouchers pretty much everywhere else.
Can you explain your position why not?
In the spirit of openness, I will state I am all for school vouchers and allowing parents to decide to allow their tax dollars to follow their kids.
There's an economy of scale when the public, as a whole, gets together and does something as the public. For schools, for instance, it's not merely the sum of every parent's tax money that results in school funding. Obviously, too, there are plenty of people with no skin in the game (i.e. no kids) who pay the same school tax as well. In my school district, the price per student to educate them is about double what I pay myself in school taxes. I'm getting the benefit of the public deciding that public education is worth the investment since I have multiple kids and I don't pay anything extra for having kids, let along multiple kids, attending public school. And on the whole, public schools work. Can they be better? Of course they can, I don't know of anything that can't be improved upon.
But once people can pull out their money (and they're not pulling out just the money they themselves pay in taxes, they're taking out the per pupil share that the public has decided to spend on them in the public school setting) then the system begins to suffer. The marginal cost to educate one more student is nothing in the existing public school setting - we're already paying for the buildings, the land, the utilities, etc. One more student, or one less student, doesn't change that. But if we were to give out vouchers, at the full per pupil cost to educate, and let people use that for private schools of their choosing, it would disproportionately hurt what's left behind. A family that decides they want their 3 kids to go to private schools, would now get to pull out something close to 6x the amount they pay in taxes (in my case, I pay 1/2 the cost to educate 1 student, but I would be pulling out the cost to educate 3 students while still just paying that 1/2 cost for 1). So they get more than their share and the public school their leaving behind now has less money per student than they did before with no real change to the marginal costs to do business. The more and more people who pull their kids out, the greater the negative impact on what's left behind.
I have no issue with people deciding that they want something different than public school for their kids. I didn't make that choice, the public schools where I live are more than adequate for a K-12 education (and we moved here on purpose because we knew the schools were that way), and when the schools have needed to be improved in some way we've advocated for or, in some cases, directly supported whatever needed to be improved. It's how collective public endeavors work. However, as a tax payer, I don't feel that I should have to financially support someone who chooses to go a route different than the public option, especially when their decision costs more than what they're putting into the game. If you want private school education, then pay for it yourself, don't look for taxpayers to subsidize your individual decision.
And my position is only slightly different for the inner city schools, or something comparable, where the public institutions have failed so spectacularly that now children are actually suffering to have to stay in that setting. In those rare cases, I'm fine with vouchers because you're talking about kids that don't have the luxury of time for the public institutions to be rebuilt and reestablished so that they can provide an adequate education - by the time that happens the current kids will have already lost their opportunity to be educated. But those are rare in the public school model today.