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Public Schools Refuse to Open. Give the Taxpayers Their Money Back
Mises Institute ^ | 03/04/2021 | Ryan McMaken

Posted on 03/06/2021 9:12:11 AM PST by george76

In many school districts across the nation, public school teachers still don’t want to go back to work. Private sector workers have long been hard at work in kitchens, at construction sites, and in hardware and grocery stores. Meanwhile, from Seattle, to Los Angeles, and to Berkeley, California, Teachers' Union representatives insist they simply can’t be expected to perform the on-site work in the expensive facilities that the taxpayers have long been paying for...

This week, for example, some schoolteachers in Colorado’s Jefferson County turned out to protest the district’s plan to return to limited in-person learning later this month. These protestors still insist it’s unsafe, even though the very institutions these people have long parroted in favor of endless lockdowns—the CDC and the World Health Organization, for instance—say reopening schools should be a “top priority.” Moreover, the National Academies of Science, Engineering and Medicine have concluded “The lower risk of transmission of the virus by younger children and reported milder or moderate illness in this age group suggest the appropriateness of in-person instruction for primary and elementary grades."

But that’s not good enough for public school teachers. So, in many cases, parents who actually want or need to send their students to an in-person school must go to the private sector instead. The government schools in these places can't be bothered, but the private schools are racing to serve the public. ..

The most absurd aspect of all this is that even when public schools effectively tell parents and students to "get lost," taxpayers still have to pony up the cash to pay for the public schools. If any private sector industry tried to function this way, it would be denounced in no uncertain terms. But it doesn't happen this way because in the private sector—unlike the public schools—business owners and employees don't get paid if they refuse to work. In other words, the customers can take their money and leave.

This disconnect between the taxpaying public and the public schools has always existed, of course, but the covid-19 panic has made it far more obvious to the general public. The time has come to finally allow parents and taxpayers to pull their money out of these unresponsive and expensive boondoggles.

Private Schools Are Mostly Back in Business..

Compare the public school reaction to that of private schools.

By last fall, it was already apparent that private schools were much more concerned with providing in-person services than were the public schools. As Time reported last August, parents were picking up on the fact that if students were to receive an in-person education, it was probably going to happen at a private school. Moreover, most Catholic schools remain open and offer in-person instruction. In Philadelphia, for example, the archdiocese’s more than a hundred elementary schools have returned to a five-day-per-week schedule. Also, “there’s been no in-school transmission” of covid-19. In Boston, Catholic schools opened while public schools dithered. The local public radio outlet reports:

It’s a stark contrast, one that’s made Catholic schools attractive to families fed up with remote learning and willing to pay for in-person instruction.

The schools’ administrators do not know of a single case of anyone being hospitalized as a result of transmission through these schools..

This is a fairly common experience for Catholic schools. In the archdiocese of Denver, schools were “100 percent open” beginning last fall, and

less than one percent of students and less than four percent of the staff members test positive over the entire fall semester – numbers that are less than overall positivity rate for children and the general population.

Defenders of the public schools’ lackluster efforts have attempted to explain all this away by claiming private schools are just the domain of the wealthy. Many articles point to the tuition rates of boutique schools, like the Germantown Friends school in Pennsylvania, which charges more than $40,000 per year...

This, however, is an outlier. Many private schools charge far less than that. Yes, some Catholic schools—which are 37 percent of all private schools and comprise the largest nonpublic school system in America—are indeed expensive boutique schools run by “private orders.” But most Catholic schools are run-of-the-mill archdiocesan schools that charge under $9,000 per year for high schooling, and even less for elementary school. That may seem like a lot, but it’s well below what many public schools spend on educating each student. Moreover, anyone who is familiar with urban Catholic school knows that these schools hardly cater to the wealthy elites. This is largely because of extensive scholarship programs for lower-income families.

These hapless parents who have been driven to private schooling by the public schools’ Covid shutdowns have to pay twice—once for the public schooling that’s been reduced to Zoom meetings, and once for the actual schooling taking place at private schools.

What If We Ran Grocery Stores like Public Schools?

The private sector could never get away with this.

Just imagine, for example, if grocery stores functioned this way and that grocery stores were government-owned institutions. Funding would come from tax revenues and funding levels would be calculated on the assumption that at least 90 percent of consumers would obtain all their groceries through these stores.1 Taxpayers would be charged accordingly. Just as state governments now spend 20 to 40 percent of state budgets on public schools, state governments would budget a sizable portion of the budget to “grocery finance.” Naturally, taxes would be much higher than they are now. Moreover, since taxes would be much higher—and posttax income much lower—countless Americans would indeed shop at these government stores. They would likely do so even if the quality of the food were lower. "Hey, I already paid for it," the thinking would go, "so I might as well shop there." We’d be told these government grocery stores are indispensable. How could the poor buy groceries otherwise? Of course, your shopping list would have to meet the approval of grocery planners so as to fit within the budget. Don't like the menu that the grocers have selected for you? Tough luck. .

Moreover, given the enthusiasm with which public school staff and officials have abandoned their usual work in the face of Covid, it's easy to imagine a scenario in which government grocery services are even more limited in case of a public health scare.

Admittedly, like the schools, these grocery stores would probably not end all their services. They’d likely still allow some limited shopping. No nonemployees would be allowed to enter the stores, though. As with schoolteachers, these public sector grocery workers would insist that the grocery stores function under numerous restrictions, perhaps with fewer business hours, and even long weekend closures to allow for extensive cleaning. And why not? The staffers and managers will get paid no matter what.

Yes, there would be some private sector grocery stores for those insist on shopping in person or "after hours." If you want to shop for groceries elsewhere, you’ll just have to pay twice: once for the government stores, and a second time for your “private” groceries.

Grocery Vouchers, a.k.a. “Food Stamps”..

If presented with the option of a world of fully government-owned grocery stores, many Americans would consider such a thing to be madness. And rightly so.

Moreover, even when confronted with the question of whether or not low-income people can afford groceries, few advocate for a government takeover of grocery stores. Instead, the taxpayers tolerate funding a system of monthly grocery vouchers for households below a certain income level. These vouchers are commonly called “food stamps.”

Now, many people may take exception to food stamps as a boondoggle. But it’s also hard to deny that if voters and politicians are going to insist that low-income consumers be subsidized, this grocery voucher system is orders of magnitude better than an extensive system of government-owned grocery stores.

Yet why do so many Americans think a system of government-owned schools makes sense?

If the same commonsense thinking that prevents a government takeover of grocery stores were applied to schools, the situation would look very different. Schools would virtually all be private institutions. If a parent doesn’t want to “shop” at a particular school or school district by enrolling his child there, the parent need not spend any money there.

Of course, politicians and many voters would insist that something be done to subsidize education for low-income residents. With this, the less bad strategy is the grocery model: provide the educational version of food stamps for students. These funds aren't tied to any institution or any government districts. They go where the consumers go.

Meanwhile, so long as public schools continue to receive direct funding from government coffers—with no economic connection to consumer choice—the public schools won't have to care what the public wants or needs.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Editorial; Government; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: coronavirus; education; publicschool; publicschools; reopen; school; schools; schoolteachers; taxes; taxpayers; teachers; unions
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1 posted on 03/06/2021 9:12:11 AM PST by george76
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To: george76

Fine print at the bottom: Not responsible for quality of education provided. No refunds.


2 posted on 03/06/2021 9:13:34 AM PST by frank ballenger (End vote fraud, harvesting,non-citizen votingop & leftist media news censorship or we are finished.)
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To: george76

I guess that I misjudged ‘conservatives’, they really do LOVE public schools - otherwise they wouldn’t be demanding that they re-open, so they can send their kids back into those hell-holes.

Oh well, live and learn...


3 posted on 03/06/2021 9:15:20 AM PST by BobL (TheDonald.win is now Patriots.win)
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To: george76
In an odd sort of way, the teachers are right about this.

The government can’t have it both ways — by imposing all kinds of restrictions on people and businesses, and then claiming it’s perfectly OK for teachers to be in classrooms.

If I’m a teacher and I’m told by the government that it’s not safe to go to a restaurant or a baseball game, then I don’t trust anyone from the same government who says I should be in a classroom.

4 posted on 03/06/2021 9:15:55 AM PST by Alberta's Child ("And once in a night I dreamed you were there; I canceled my flight from going nowhere.")
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To: george76

There are many reasons to end the public schools. Now is a good time to get going with better alternatives that are privately funded and competitive.


5 posted on 03/06/2021 9:17:53 AM PST by lurk ( )
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To: lurk

The face-masks inhalation of expelled carbon-dioxide has made the socialist U.S. citizenry even stupider than before.


6 posted on 03/06/2021 9:21:06 AM PST by BrexitBen
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To: BobL

This private school / private Catholic school in Philadelphia has been open all school year, and has had zero in-school transmissions of COVID-19. And its tuition is far less than what the public schools spend. The real reason for keeping the public schools closed has nothing to do with COVID-19..

https://freerepublic.com/focus/f-bloggers/3938693/posts


7 posted on 03/06/2021 9:22:35 AM PST by george76 (Ward Churchill : Fake Indian, Fake Scholarship, and Fake Art)
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To: Alberta's Child

Home Depot, Walmart, Liquor warehouses, supermarkets...they all have never been closed. Teachers who don’t want to teach in person should be able to take a LOA, same with students. Those who wish to teach/attend schools should be able to. I’d like to see us able to make personal choices without big brother calling all the shots.


8 posted on 03/06/2021 9:24:04 AM PST by sanjuanbob
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To: george76

😂🙌💰. Good luck with that. We haven’t had any kids or grands in school for 15+ years. Greats in FL, yes.


9 posted on 03/06/2021 9:24:39 AM PST by rktman (Destroy America from within? Check! WTH? Enlisted USN 1967 to end up with this?)
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To: Alberta's Child

Chicago teacher union official: Keep your kids home … while she lives the pool life in a Caribbean resort .. ~Sarah Chambers... never missed a paycheck from the taxpayers.


10 posted on 03/06/2021 9:24:52 AM PST by george76 (Ward Churchill : Fake Indian, Fake Scholarship, and Fake Art)
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To: Alberta's Child

Teachers are about the most useless, self righteous, and whiney group of no loads that I’ve ever seen. They want their cake and eat it to. They must all be fired like Reagan fired the air traffic controllers in the 80’s. Since nothing of worth is being taught anymore to the kids, I’m sure there are a myriad of able Americans who could replace them and come up to speed fast at the teachers current level of competence.
While they are at it they can declare the teachers union as a domestic terrorist organization.


11 posted on 03/06/2021 9:25:11 AM PST by Rainwave ("Work out your OWN salvation with fear and trembling")
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To: george76

States with Republican legislatures should implement full voucher systems state-wide. Let the parents choose where their children GO to school instead of churning profits for Google Chromebooks and teacher unions. (And the politicians who benefit from teacher union campaign contributions.)


12 posted on 03/06/2021 9:25:29 AM PST by Bernard (“When once the guardian angel has taken flight, everything is lost”. – William H. Seward, 1/12/1861)
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To: lurk

Heck, if the kids are going to do everything on-line, there are numerous FREE courses they can use from K-12. Get rid of all of it.


13 posted on 03/06/2021 9:32:25 AM PST by qaz123
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To: george76

Sounds great. It’ll never happen though because it isn’t about education, it’s about control. Just like the United States postal service isn’t about delivering mail, it’s about control. America would be better off without the post office and without public schools but it would take a revolution to accomplish either of those tasks.


14 posted on 03/06/2021 9:34:31 AM PST by RC one (When a bunch of commies start telling you that you don't need an AR15, you really need an AR15)
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To: sanjuanbob

I was talking with a friend that has two daughters in high school. They’ve been riding that seesaw with the schools opening and closing but in Georgia they’ve opened. And if I’m not mistaken the kids have the option. He was telling me that one of the biggest problems they’ve discovered is the kids that have disappeared. Not showing up in school. Not on line. They’re gone. That spells trouble.


15 posted on 03/06/2021 9:36:01 AM PST by qaz123
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To: george76

If nothing else, Americans are finding out what a lazy, useless group many teachers are.


16 posted on 03/06/2021 9:36:39 AM PST by chief lee runamok (Anti Socialist Derelict at Large)
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Please Support FR
To Donate Hit The Button


17 posted on 03/06/2021 10:28:10 AM PST by DJ MacWoW (The Fed Gov is not one ring to rule them all)
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To: george76; All

Bring it Dinesh

https://www.newsbreak.com/news/2168909841631/dinesh-dsouza-5000-online-college-program-would-crush-liberal-hold-on-higher-education


18 posted on 03/06/2021 10:34:04 AM PST by PGalt (past peak civilization?)
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To: BobL
I guess that I misjudged ‘conservatives’, they really do LOVE public schools - otherwise they wouldn’t be demanding that they re-open, so they can send their kids back into those hell-holes.

Parents, who truly hate their kids, send them to Public "Schools"!

Posted on 2/16/2021, 3:49:30 PM by Navy Patriot

Oh well, live and learn...

19 posted on 03/06/2021 10:40:51 AM PST by Grampa Dave ("The Covid 19 Circus has run out of acts. It’s time to reopen. It’s past time. It’s long overdue. ")
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To: george76
On August 3, 1981, air traffic controllers went on strike ... and ...

President Ronald Reagan called the strike illegal and gave them 48 hours to return to work or he would fire them.

Two days later, on August 5, 1981, President Ronald Regan/the feds began firing 11,359 striking ATC’ers who had still not returned to work ... and ... the FAA placed a lifetime ban on rehiring them, too!

On August 17, 1981, the FAA began accepting applications for new ATC’ers.

Here and now almost 40 years later in 2021, some might say “Boom!”.

But, I just get nostalgic, because I’m remembering that while looking at the current covid madness running amok in our public schools system.

How about opening up those teaching positions to people who want to work, and who can and will teach our children in our now empty schools, again?

The needs of the many outweigh the needs and the fears of a very few.

And, c’mon man ... at some point, common sense demands it, too.

20 posted on 03/06/2021 11:18:26 AM PST by GBA (Endeavor to persevere)
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