School Taxes

Quote from Scataphagos:

Most of the money for "school tax increases" goes to fund a more lavish teachers' retirement plan.

We need the states to officially go BANKRUPT... so that union contracts can be dissolved and renegotiated.... reasonably, sanely this time.
Maybe CA, NJ, and elsewhere but NOT rural central FL. Surgical fix is recommended, NOT broad brush cuts. Perspective.
 
Quote from Scataphagos:



We need the states to officially go BANKRUPT... so that union contracts can be dissolved and renegotiated.... reasonably, sanely this time.

GM needed to do the same thing and they didn't, with BO and the Dems in charge, no union is going to get BK'd on...
 
I used to live in NJ and I'm glad that I live in Georgia now. New Jersey property taxes are ridiculously high. I pay only $2,300/year in property taxes in Georgia for a 3 bedroom 2 1/2 bath home with a 2 car garage, and the public schools are great. My friend who still lives in NJ pays $8,000 per year in Howell for his 3 bedroom 2 1/2 bath home.
 
Quote from nutmeg:

2008 school taxes = X

2010 school taxes = X + 42%

.....When does this end or how will this end?

With a new constitution and/or a new revolution.
 
In my view, school taxes in the States (I know, I know, I'm a forreignerrr, but please don't flame me) have two problems:

1) Being locally based (yes, you also have State and Federal funding, but a large chunk depends on what locality/county you live in).

2) Being labeled as such. When you do your taxes you know how much you're paying for education (even if you don't have children), whereas you don't know how much you're paying for the military (even if you disagree with the wars or the size of the standing army) or farm subsidies (even if you don't have a farm), etc.

http://www.visualeconomics.com/how-countries-spend-their-money/
 
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