erincon23
<font color=blue>Everyone must have gotten a life
- Joined
- Sep 25, 2008
- Messages
- 2,788
I live in a fairly large school district that is financially stable (unlike several other districts in the area), in a state that is among the worst, if not THE worst, financially (owes $ millions and millions to school districts). Short of moving, I don't think there's any way around the fees we will have to pay. Our reg fee is $65, plus $25 for a gym uniform, and probably around $40 additionally for the books. Then there's yearbook (which we will buy), an activity pass (which we will not, probably, since DS is not interested in sports), and some other fees that are optional for other activities (Band fee is $40 -- we paid that the last four years for my now-graduated DS18, DS14 will not be in band; choir is $25 to rent a tux or dress, DS14 is not in choir. I think these both are reasonable charges).
My problem is that our income has been cut in half this past year, but we still don't qualify for assistance. Of course, they don't care that we just this week spent $400 to put freon in the a/c (which didn't fix it, I'm sitting here sweltering, but it could be $800 or more to actually get the repair done), $150 to repair DH's brakes, $1500 for DS18's first college payment... It's going to be very difficult to come up with the money on Monday, but we'll pay it.
Yes, we all assume public school should be free -- but it isn't any more, that's just reality, and we have to face up to that. I can't imagine the attitude I've heard that "I'm not going to pay, you can't make me, public school should be free." If you feel that way, do your research, and find a district that IS free! Then move! I'm sure your neighbors who are paying their fees -- and supporting your children that way -- won't miss you. Yes, you have a right to question fees and if you don't get the answer you want, you counter that by getting yourself on the school board (or at least attending all the meetings) and understanding the district's funding structure and needs, organizing other parents to get the school district to shift funding from things that aren't as necessary to things that absolutely have to be paid for, not by deciding not to pay your fees! That seems to me to be a very juvenile attitude. If your school district really doesn't have enough money to support the educational programs it offers, and needs to charge these fees to make up the difference, what are your options? They're probably not your own PERSONAL options, they're choices that the taxpayers need to make as a whole -- raise taxes, find some way to force the district to reevaluate programs and fees, fundraise, whatever!
This is a very touchy subject, and it's obvious that school funding is not uniform throughout the country, or even throughout states and even counties. There aren't any easy fixes to any of this, and the current economic climate makes it even harder on many, many families.
My problem is that our income has been cut in half this past year, but we still don't qualify for assistance. Of course, they don't care that we just this week spent $400 to put freon in the a/c (which didn't fix it, I'm sitting here sweltering, but it could be $800 or more to actually get the repair done), $150 to repair DH's brakes, $1500 for DS18's first college payment... It's going to be very difficult to come up with the money on Monday, but we'll pay it.
Yes, we all assume public school should be free -- but it isn't any more, that's just reality, and we have to face up to that. I can't imagine the attitude I've heard that "I'm not going to pay, you can't make me, public school should be free." If you feel that way, do your research, and find a district that IS free! Then move! I'm sure your neighbors who are paying their fees -- and supporting your children that way -- won't miss you. Yes, you have a right to question fees and if you don't get the answer you want, you counter that by getting yourself on the school board (or at least attending all the meetings) and understanding the district's funding structure and needs, organizing other parents to get the school district to shift funding from things that aren't as necessary to things that absolutely have to be paid for, not by deciding not to pay your fees! That seems to me to be a very juvenile attitude. If your school district really doesn't have enough money to support the educational programs it offers, and needs to charge these fees to make up the difference, what are your options? They're probably not your own PERSONAL options, they're choices that the taxpayers need to make as a whole -- raise taxes, find some way to force the district to reevaluate programs and fees, fundraise, whatever!
This is a very touchy subject, and it's obvious that school funding is not uniform throughout the country, or even throughout states and even counties. There aren't any easy fixes to any of this, and the current economic climate makes it even harder on many, many families.