Article published Tuesday, January 23, 2007
Different circus, same clowns
A PROPOSED ballot issue on school
funding - a constitutional amendment intended to bypass the
Ohio General Assembly - is just one more devious attempt to
direct a never-ending stream of taxpayer dollars straight
into the pockets of the usual suspects.
By usual suspects, we mean the militant teachers' unions,
school administrators, and school boards, all of which are
behind a constitutional amendment with the deceptively bland
title "Getting It Right for Ohio's Future."
The proposal also marks the reappearance of a group
called Coalition for Equity & Adequacy in Education, which
wasted untold amounts of public money in suing the state
over school funding for more than a decade, beginning in the
early 1990s.
Ohioans should be very wary about the potential to
reincarnate anything like the coalition's DeRolph case. It
will only cost them more money.
The proposed amendment - its backers are seeking 400,000
signatures to place it on the statewide ballot next November
- would declare a "high-quality" public education "a
fundamental right" of every child, which is at least more
direct than the constitution's current mandate for a
"thorough and efficient" school system.
Unfortunately, deciding precisely what constitutes a
"high quality" education would be left not to lawmakers but
to a commission appointed by the governor and legislature.
The panel would report its findings to the Ohio Board of
Education, which would determine the cost each year, and the
legislature then would have to determine a tax structure to
pay for it.
The main draw of the amendment, according to its backers,
is that the share of school funding would be gradually
shifted from local property taxes to the state, but it
wouldn't end local levies and it wouldn't guarantee property
tax rollbacks.
While we understand that tax levies are the form of
taxation probably most disliked by Ohioans, the end result
of this Byzantine process almost certainly would be higher
cost to the public and less local control over schools.
Reduce the property tax and the revenue will just have to be
located elsewhere by jacking up other taxes.
What's wrong with asking parents to pay a greater share
of the cost of educating their children?
We absolutely agree with David Hansen, president of the
Buckeye Institute for Public Policy Solutions, a
conservative Columbus think tank, that throwing more money
at public education isn't the answer. As he points out,
public schools in Cleveland, Columbus, and Cincinnati rank
at the top nationally in teacher pay, yet all three
districts perform poorly.
Public school teaching has become one of the most
lucrative middle-class professions. And while exceptional
teachers are worth their pay, mediocre educators protected
by their unions are not.
Unfortunately we don't sense that Governor Strickland has
a plan of his own, other than to coddle the teachers'
unions. No matter how much is spent on the education of,
say, an inner city child in Cleveland, his or her prospects
are gloomy without a solid and wholesome environment at
home.
"Getting it Right" has it all wrong. |