While I have agreed in the past that taxes are about comparable to Baltimore County, that is as a whole. The difference in Baltimore County is that you are paying property tax. Therefore, the perception is that you are being taxed on your land, and the county will do with the money as they please. Sure, not ‘ideal’, but that’s the way it is. The big difference and appeal was the actual price of real estate, not the taxes...at least for us.
However, when you move to PA, and the taxes are completely broken out as they are, and you have a ‘school tax’ that is designated for your school district (and not the county district), your perception is that the money will be going to the schools. When our taxes rise astronomically like they have, and at the same time you have people complaining that the schools are too small, not expandable, there are rampant drug issues in and around the schools and we want to build a new stadium, you put the brakes on. You start to wonder “What the hell is all of my money going to support?”
Certainly I’m aware that there are maintenance issues, salaries, and all of the normal expenditures. But after hearing that salaries for our school district are below the average, the classes are starting to get crowded, kids are sharing lockers, the possibility that if the school does need to expand it will have to move, etc., you begin to wonder “HUH?” You (not you, but the board) have taken all of this extra money and done what with it? Mismanaged it?
Sure, everyone out here on this thread along with all of the ‘Bus stop mamas’ that complain to each other have the option to run for school board. But, as you know from serving on the council, it is a job that will require a good number of hours, with no compensation. Not to mention that the job itself is, I’m sure, demanding in its’ nature, thereby not cut out for everyone. And not everyone would have the qualifications and/or experience needed to correct the problems. In the meantime, we’re stuck with this.
IMHO, I don’t necessarily think ousting the current board and getting a new one will solve the problem. In fact, it could throw the situation into utter chaos. Especially if an unprepared inexperienced board manages to get elected/appointed based solely on the premise of ‘out with the old/in with the new’. We need a school board that knows what they need to do and how to go about getting it done.
Alex brought up a really good point about not having any commercial industry in SESD. There’s nothing. And let me say right now, I’m perfectly alright with that. I moved to Stewartstown for a reason, and that reason is because I didn’t want to live in Shrewsbury. However, we all live in York County. Many of the school districts are in completely rural areas and probably suffer the same effects as we do. There are probably also districts that are quite OK with money, based on the population, and ‘supplements’ (all of them) that they receive. Why not join together, and help even each other out. There’s the issue of taking on other districts ‘problems’. Are we that narrow minded not to see that other districts would be taking on our problems as well?
I don’t think that this system itself (many little districts) works, anymore. Certainly at one time it did and was a good setup. But times change and in order to keep in line, sometimes we must change, and, Heaven forbid, the government around us. Think of the possibilities if you combined the school districts together.
Not to mention that if we had county wide standards, there would be an evenness across the board. That would touch on salaries, education level, activities, etc. Maybe there are sports or activities that don’t draw a huge crowd in one area or another. But collectively, there would be enough to support it county wide. Why limit what options our children have to a local level?