Quote Originally Posted by OneGuy67 View Post
I listen to Caplis and Silverman in the afternoons and Dan Caplis is always arguing this point. Privatization means competition means better schools. Okay, I can agree to that. However, he fails to acknowledge two points, one of which you mention. Parents do have the option to put their kids into any school they want to. Its called open enrollment. You live in Boulder and want your kids to go to school in Cherry Creek, you can. You just have to figure out how to get them there. You want them to go to a private school, you can. You just have to pay for it.
Problem is, many (most) people with kids in failing schools can't afford to send their kids to a private school.

The second point Dan Caplis doesn't mention in his privatization argument is, he wants the state to give the parents the state and federal money allocated for the individual student and have them spend it where they want to. I have issue with this. If you want to send your kids to a secular school, have at it, go forth and conquer, but don't expect taxpayer money to support it. Same with home schooling.
The GI Bill has been paying for veterans to go to religious schools for decades, so that precedent has been set. Why shouldn't the tax money that is set aside for a kid's education follow the student to whatever school is chosen?

Your point about not paying for the school district unless you have kids is interesting and one I've thought about. I, as a homeowner pay taxes directly to the school district as part of my property taxes, and as a consumer, a very, very small amount of my income and sales taxes are allocated to school funding. However, a large amount of people live in apartments or rented homes and do not pay property taxes. One would argue they pay indirectly as their payments probably cover the actual owner's property taxes, but that isn't a certainty.
Did I really read that???

Of COURSE rent payments cover the taxes; it most definitely IS a certainty. A landlord must recover ALL his costs of the building when he rents it, and one of those costs is property taxes. So, while a renter doesn't directly pay taxes, the landlord does, and that money comes directly from the tenant.

The argument has been made for decades that society benefits as a whole if the population is educated and paying for that education is a societal requirement. I, owning a home directly pay into the school district and the mother with 5 kids living in an apartment does not.
We all do benefit from a publicly-funded education program (though there are huge doubts about how effective the government-run programs are working). And only taking money for education from people with kids in school would make it prohibitively expensive for many of those parents.

Vouchers would change all that. The money that's earmarked for a student could follow that kid to the school of choice. Poor parents would more likely be able to send their kids to a better (or private) school. The schools would have to <gasp> compete for their business. Different schools could tailor their curriculum to the demographics they wish to lure; one school might emphasize the arts, while another might specialize in business, and yet another on the skills necessary for engineering. Some could lean to the Left, others to the Right. The parents would have a choice on what they want their kids to be exposed to.

The education would still be publicly-funded, and spread around a large tax base.