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Mohammed--
Actually, there's no evidence that vouchers have resulted in any improvement in education.
In places like D.C., the voucher users are self-selected -- parents who are more involved in their children's education choose them. These are children who would do better than average even if they stayed in public schools.
There are two cases (Cleveland and Milwaukee) where voucher recipients were randomly selected (because the demand for vouchers was higher than the...
And the next step would be to compare these numbers with other demographically similar school districts over the same period.
I suspect that we'd look a lot better than Denver, for instance.
Actually, NCLB has MANY categories of Federal ('Title') aid in it, so virtually every school district can come under it unless it chooses not to accept Federal aid for special populations of any sort.
Well, at least fuzzy.
A slight aside:
One of the anti Dayton ads mentions 'the Democratic Mayor of Washington D.C.' as criticizing Dayton as a Senator.
I assume that that was Marion Barry.
So, was that before or after Barry's cocaine conviction? Appears the abusers stick together ;-).
The real point is not rates, but actual payments. Because of various loopholes, the 'rich' may have a higher marginal rate but still pay less in terms of actual proportion of income.
Same thing with corporate taxes -- the marginal rates are high, but the actual payments by corporations are much lower. There were years when GM actually received tax rebates!
While I don't like the whole idea of corporate contributions to politicians, it has just become constitutional.
What I fail to see is what's unusual about Target in this case.
A business made a (modest as such things go) contribution to a 'pro-business' Republican who has espoused (allusion intended) the GOP party line on the definition of marriage.
So what's new? Emmer is no more homophobic that most Republicans; probably less than many.
The cuts in public services...
In fact, private schools not only do not educate special needs children, they send them to the public schools for that service.
They can also expel any student who is hard to teach and let the public schools worry about them.
Education is cheap when you cherry pick your students.
Mohammed--
You'd also have to look at demographics.
What are the special needs populations, school lunch aid eligible populations, etc., in Hennepin and Ramsey counties (funding goes to school districts, not municipalities) compared to the suburban ring?
I know that in higher education the Minnesota State University system has been described as going from state supported to state assisted to state located.
When I started out at MSU,M 40+ years ago, the state paid about two thirds of a student's tuition. When I retired two years ago it was down to about one quarter. The difference was made up primarily in tuition, although there has been some attempt to bring in outside funding.