Well everyone has raised great points. I know when we left ny and bought a house for the same amount of money our property taxes went down $6000 a year. We also have no state income tax like n.y. does. We picked this area on purpose, as it was all part of ourearly retirement plan The schools rank close to what they do in ny, poorer urban areas doing poorly, wealthier areas doing better.
I have a hard time with the notion that the educators are in it for the money, As several of my friends who are educators or school nurses work mighty hard, spent a lot of time outsideit just seems to of school hours working, and are not primarily in it for the pay and pension. A school nurse can make much more in many other capacities with less liability. I don't know about the administrators. There still seem to be a lot of them
I used to go to our school board meetings. You learn a lot as the months go by, including some ridiculous state guidelines and some ridiculous decisions. I thought our board needed an overhaul, that was for sure. Many nights, in my district of 4,000+ students, there would be me, a few concerned teachers and a couple crabby people who took issue with everything. Even as they discussed budget cutting, practically no one was there to give suggestions, ( unless it was people trying to savetheir jobs) and few negative and positive opinions. A shame really as everyone complained about it after the fact. I am just so unsure where we are headed and what the outcome will be.