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Wednesday, August 01, 2007
Terry Jeffrey :: Townhall.com Columnist
A Teaching Moment From the District of Columbia
by Terry Jeffrey
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The District of Columbia deserves the gratitude of taxpayers everywhere for giving the nation a lesson in governance. It is proving that spending more on public schools is a waste of money.

That was the unintended lesson of the press conference District Mayor Adrian Fenty called this week to announce that half the District's public schools would not have proper textbooks for opening day and half the school buildings would not have air conditioning.

This is not because the District has been frugal. Its public schools wallow in cash.

Their profligacy is made possible, in part, by federal taxpayers, who according to the National Center for Education Statistics (NCES), provided a subsidy of $2,383 per student enrolled in the District's primary and secondary schools in the 2003-2004 school year. That was more than the per-pupil subsidy for any state and almost three times the national average of $864.

The District also spent a lot of its own money, racking up a combined local and federal total of $15,414 in spending per pupil in average daily attendance. That, too, was more than any state, nearly doubling the national average of $8,899.

Given that half the District's school buildings don't have working air-conditioners and half the schools won't have their books on time, you might be tempted to guess that the District spends more money on, say, teachers than on facilities and administrators. Don't give in to the temptation.

In 2003-2004, says NCES, the District spent $1,869 per student on "capital outlays." That was money "for the acquisition of land and buildings; building construction, remodeling and additions; the initial installation or extension of service systems and other built-in equipment; and site improvement."

Additionally, the District spent $1,464 per student on "operation and maintenance." This included "salary, benefits, supplies, and contractual fees for supervision of operations and maintenance, operating buildings (heating, lighting, ventilating, repair and replacement), care and upkeep of grounds and equipment, vehicle operations and maintenance (other than student transportation), security, and other operations and maintenance services."

That means the District spent a total of $3,333 per student to make sure there were enough new and remodeled buildings and sufficient maintenance staff to keep the air-conditioners going. Of all the states, only frozen Alaska approached this level of spending for facilities and maintenance, spending a combined $3,220 per student on these two categories.

Now, you might be tempted to think that the District spent so much buying and maintaining buildings that it could not afford the crack administrators needed to order textbooks. Don't give in to that temptation, either. Continued...

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About The Author

Terence P. Jeffrey is the editor-in-chief of CNSNews

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©Creators Syndicate
re" my "racist" comment
It is indeed interesting that over 2 weeks later no white liberal has identified her/himself as being in a racially or ethnically mixed marriage with mixed children.

Is this simply another case of hypocrisy: advocating multi-ethnicity for other people while clinging to homogeneous marriages for oneselves?

What about children's education? How many liberals who are opposed to charter schools, vouchers, and home schooling send their children to good/elite private schools rather than local public schools?

Do liberals take advantage of the economic opportunity to send their children to better schools yet attempt to deny that same right to others with less economic resources?

Are these examples more evidence of Janus-faced liberals?

D.C. Education
Maybe if the district had "grade" stamps, ala food stamps, someone might use them. The point is that many people in this day and age, if the product isn't given to them, won't take advantage of it. So maybe what needs to be done is to convince people education is a form of entitlement (for which they don't have to work, of course) that they can use for more entitlements in the future.
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