Posted on 03/16/2008 1:51:39 PM PDT by T.L.Sink
While cities across the nation pass ordinances to seek relief from the devastating toll of illegal immigration, the nation's public school districts will continue suffering from the influx thanks to a federal law that says they must provide a free education to all children regardless of immigration status. There are an estimated 1.5 million school-aged illegal immigrants in the United States and the government spends an estimated $12 BILLION annually to educate them. The biggest chunks are spent by California ($7.7 billion) and Texas ($3.9 billion), where the situation has become a public education crisis with no end in sight. The Lone Star State's public schools have seen a huge increase in illegal immigrant Hispanic students with dismal Mexican and Central American education histories that are contributing to an overall lowering of academic standards across the board. Case in point: The Irving School District, located mostly in Dallas. It has suffered one of the nation's largest increases - 63% - of illegal immigrant students in the last year compared to a 33% increase in 1995.Mexican government statistics reveal that only 50% of Mexicans 15 and older have some elementary school education and working with them requires slowing down and teaching the very basics. Besides spending nearly $6,000 a year to educate each student, the districts also spend more than $1.5 million annually to pay bilingual teachers extra.
(Excerpt) Read more at judicialwatch.org ...
Besides spending nearly $6,000 a year to educate each student,
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
The true cost is likely 2 times the stated amount.
In my state news schools are funded through bond issues and not counted in the annual per child school estimate. My county is building a 50 million dollar high school, and none of that 50 million will be reflected in how much it costs to educate a child.
Also, in my state all retired government teachers are considered retired state and county employees. None of their pensions and health care shows up in school budgets.
The same is true for police protections and many services such as lawn care. These are county expenses.
Welcome to Orwell’s world. Some animals are more equal than others.
Oink!
That 7.7 billion does not include the anchor babies in our schools either. There is no way of tracking that since they are citizens now.
If you added in the costs of the anchor babies........it would be unbelievable.
The problems of police enforced, compulsory attendance government indoctrination camps ( mis-named “schools”) have existed from their inception. The entire premise is flawed.
However,,,illegals are definitely putting pressure on an already immoral system, and it is costing all of us BIG BUCKS!
How do they deal with the physical for entering school?
And McCain's answer to all this? Why, amnesty for everyone! Especially the illegal alien gang members!
You are spot on here, also check out this legislation, which certainly infuriated me to no end!
McKinney-Vento Definition of “Homeless”
Subtitle B of Title VII of the McKinney-Vento Homeless Assistance Act (Title X, Part C, of the No Child Left Behind Act) defines “homeless” as follows:
The term “homeless children and youths”—
(A) means individuals who lack a fixed, regular, and adequate nighttime residence (within the meaning of section 103(a)(1)); and
(B) includes—
(i) children and youths who are sharing the housing of other persons due to loss of housing, economic hardship, or a similar reason; are living in motels, hotels, trailer parks, or camping grounds due to the lack of alternative adequate accommodations; are living in emergency or transitional shelters; are abandoned in hospitals; or are awaiting foster care placement;
(ii) children and youths who have a primary nighttime residence that is a public or private place not designed for or ordinarily used as a regular sleeping accommodation for human beings (within the meaning of section 103(a)(2)(C));
(iii) children and youths who are living in cars, parks, public spaces, abandoned buildings, substandard housing, bus or train stations, or similar settings; and
(iv) migratory children (as such term is defined in section 1309 of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 1965) who qualify as homeless for the purposes of this subtitle because the children are living in circumstances described in clauses (i) through (iii).
Read the full text (77K) of the McKinney-Vento Homeless Assistance Act.
For more information on determining homelessness, visit Determining Eligibility for Services Under McKinney-Vento.
I live in San Diego and just this past week, over 1,000 teachers received their pink slip.
The State and Counties such as San Diego which is the second largest school dist. in Calif is mega millions in the hole. Just the San Diego City school dist. has a 80 million dollar shortfall.
Why? First, the legal tens of thousands of Mexican students, many if not most won’t learn English.
So we cater to them.
Most have a lack of interest in schooling and by the time they have done their damage, they usually leave school by early high school.
Now for the thousands of thousands of illegals in the San Diego school system: First many get a bogus address on this side of the border. Many cross the border each day, and others are just here.
So, over 1,000 teachers in San Diego who just lost their
jobs have the illegals to thank.
It is the same story with hospitals here, social services, etc.
physical for entering school?
heloooo, what physicals. The illegals are here with TB to Measles thanks to liberal laws you can’t ask or do what
was done years ago.
The greatly understates the costs.
First, it ignores children of illegal immigrants, who are born in the US, and granted citizenship through a gross misinterpretation of the 14th Amendment. A very conservative estimate of the number of children of illegal immigrants in the US is 5 million.
Regardless of how one feels about this, these children obviously wouldn’t be here, if their parents had not first come here illegally, so they must be counted as part of the cost of illegal aliens, in the US.
Second, it understates the annual cost of “educating” a school age child in the US. Federal government statistics show that this was in excess of $8,000, per student, per year, in 2005. There has been inflation since then, and California, which has the largest share of these kids, spends much more. What’s more, a large percentage of these children require ESL instruction, which costs (on the average) 20% more per child.
This brings a conservative estimate of costs up to $50 billion, annually.
Now if they’d just give me back the money I pay to support state churches (i.e. public schools).
I think so too. To cite just one example, why should the children of illegal aliens get in-state tuition breaks when a U.S. citizen from out of state gets none - even if the children of ILLEGALS were born here when just off the bus from Mexico City? I know if they’re born here they’re citizens but this is clearly an egregious double standard that gives them preference over citizens.
According to Section 505 of the The Illegal Immigration Reform And Immigrant Responsibilty Act of 1996, they can't. But that only applies to post-escondary education. And some states are weaseling their way around the post-secondary restriction.
This has got to be the most incredible understatement of all time.
There are at least that many in California alone. Nothing is being done to stop it either!
I was surprised to hear that even old RINO Arnold is becoming concerned now that the national guard troops are being withdrawn by Bush. Originally, he was opposed to their border deployment but now that Mexifornia is even more bankrupt than when he took office, I guess he’s finally figured out what one of his biggest financial liabilities is!
I think all the border states and some away from the border have the same issues- in varying degrees of course. I am sure California is really feeling the squeeze, just due to the sheer numbers. We have the same issues of students that are not interested in learning English, and end up dropping out that are not only a big drain financially but also are one of the main reasons that schools have a hard time educating the other students. If a teacher has say 10 students in the class that don’t speak English, and have a spotty school record meaning they are way behind in any language it will be really hard for that teacher to teach to their level as well as the other students. It is insane and I truly wish our politicians would wake up.
Yup, here in NYS.
They’d lie anyway.
1000's of fired California teachers go quietly.
Millions of citizens of Mexico living here deserve support more than us, says union official.
We also educate many students that actually live in Mexico. Mexicans who do not live here and never did- never even intend to ever live here will cross and have their babies for the U.S. citizenship prize. Then our country feels an obligation to educate them, since they are considered citizens. All along the border every single day thousands of students cross the border to attend schools in the U.S.
As if it is not bad enough that we are educating the students that live here- we educate many that live in Mexico. It just boggles the mind.
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