Quote:
Why should I trade one **** show for another?
well, on the bright side, no real harm done if the new plan is a s-show.
Quote:
Why should I trade one **** show for another?
sanangelo said:
The ESAs will cost $10 billion a year within 7 years. Just imagine how much the TXLEGE could drive down property taxes for $10 billion a year? Probably enough for some to pay for private school tuition. The rest of us whose kids are out of the house could buy nice cars, a boat and maybe an airplane.
I don't believe we will see any savings from ESAs. In 50 years, if Texas taxpayers can earn enough money (or drill enough oil) to pay all of the taxes, the state will not just be spending $100 billion a year on the Foundation Schools Program, but a second $100 billion a year on vouchers. Gotta pay all of the ESA vendors who are campaign donors, ya know?DD88 said:sanangelo said:
The ESAs will cost $10 billion a year within 7 years. Just imagine how much the TXLEGE could drive down property taxes for $10 billion a year? Probably enough for some to pay for private school tuition. The rest of us whose kids are out of the house could buy nice cars, a boat and maybe an airplane.
Taxpayers are now paying $15,503 per year for public school students. There will be an adjustment period, but $10K or $2K per student will eventually be a net savings.
There will be a lot of little Johnnys I fear.MaxPower said:
Another dirty little secret, if little Johnny gets kicked out of private school for any reason public schools are required to take little Johnny back with open arms so the taxpayers get to pay for him to attend private and public school at the same time. Brilliant!
MaxPower said:
Nope, little Johnny getting kicked out is one of MANY issues with SB52. Notice Abbott isn't trying to reform anything. There's no lobbyists for that so why both. God forbid a politician simply out on his noodle and try to fix a problem. People complain too much is spent on admin and not enough on teachers. Maybe reducing instead of growing regulation would help? Don't like bad kids staying in schools? See my previous solution. Take away the ability of parents to litigate. Don't like growing taxpayer burdens to support education? I've got some real bad news for you about State's that have adopted school vouchers turning budget surpluses into deficits.
It's almost like we should let our independent school districts be, uh, you know, independent.agsalaska said:
I don't think anyone is arguing anything different. Competition clearly works. The lack of competition is more of a problem than the fact that the schools are public.
A&M and t.u. are public.
Want to fix the schools:
1. Eliminate the federal government's involvement
2. After that unwinds have a comprehensive de-regulation program
3. Eliminate zoning and allow public schools to compete with each other for students
4. Pay teachers on merit.
5. Allow the tax money to follow students, public or private.
It would probably take 5-8 years.
This voucher program by itself will do almost nothing
I like this blueprint. It will work, too. The best part of it is this has potential to save money, not spend billions to build a new, large bureaucracy around ESAs tied to an entitlement for suburban baby mamas.agsalaska said:
I don't think anyone is arguing anything different. Competition clearly works. The lack of competition is more of a problem than the fact that the schools are public.
A&M and t.u. are public.
Want to fix the schools:
1. Eliminate the federal government's involvement
2. After that unwinds have a comprehensive de-regulation program
3. Eliminate zoning and allow public schools to compete with each other for students
4. Pay teachers on merit.
5. Allow the tax money to follow students, public or private.
It would probably take 5-8 years.
This voucher program by itself will do almost nothing
For the first time in our state’s history, the Texas House has the votes to pass a universal school choice program.
— Greg Abbott (@GregAbbott_TX) February 26, 2025
75 members of the House co-authored Chairman @BradBuckleyDVM's House Bill 3 to create a universal school choice program in Texas.
School choice will soon be law. pic.twitter.com/1CD3vUivbD
Howdy, it is me! said:
HB3 scheduled for public hearing on March 11.
I wonder how many more lies and posts stretching the truth Abbott can squeeze in between now and then.
Logos Stick said:Howdy, it is me! said:
HB3 scheduled for public hearing on March 11.
I wonder how many more lies and posts stretching the truth Abbott can squeeze in between now and then.
How do you feel about opposition strategy now that it's going to pass? I suspect this is just the beginning and we will see it expanded in the future.
Logos Stick said:For the first time in our state’s history, the Texas House has the votes to pass a universal school choice program.
— Greg Abbott (@GregAbbott_TX) February 26, 2025
75 members of the House co-authored Chairman @BradBuckleyDVM's House Bill 3 to create a universal school choice program in Texas.
School choice will soon be law. pic.twitter.com/1CD3vUivbD
oldag941 said:
It's not anywhere near universal. But he needs the political win so it'll be called that no matter what. The state can't afford "universal". Fiscally or politically. Water, electric grid and transportation are needing that extra funding.
the most cool guy said:Logos Stick said:For the first time in our state’s history, the Texas House has the votes to pass a universal school choice program.
— Greg Abbott (@GregAbbott_TX) February 26, 2025
75 members of the House co-authored Chairman @BradBuckleyDVM's House Bill 3 to create a universal school choice program in Texas.
School choice will soon be law. pic.twitter.com/1CD3vUivbD
Universal school choice? Is this the one that will hand out money based on a lottery system because it only has enough money for 1% of school going kids?
the most cool guy said:oldag941 said:
It's not anywhere near universal. But he needs the political win so it'll be called that no matter what. The state can't afford "universal". Fiscally or politically. Water, electric grid and transportation are needing that extra funding.
I am an Abbott fan, but I wish he would crusade for true universal school choice.
What does this bill actually cover?
the most cool guy said:Logos Stick said:For the first time in our state’s history, the Texas House has the votes to pass a universal school choice program.
— Greg Abbott (@GregAbbott_TX) February 26, 2025
75 members of the House co-authored Chairman @BradBuckleyDVM's House Bill 3 to create a universal school choice program in Texas.
School choice will soon be law. pic.twitter.com/1CD3vUivbD
Universal school choice? Is this the one that will hand out money based on a lottery system because it only has enough money for 1% of school going kids?