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Retired Teacher
Our school taxes are high, as I'm sure yours our. Our schools are Great. That's why we moved here. That's why many move here (and move out when the kids are all out of school-graduations banners and for sale signs go up right around the same timeYou're right that more money isn't the solution. It's the inequity of a system based on property taxes. Wealthy communities like Dublin or New Albany are going to excel as they have lots of money but poor communities like Portsmouth are going to struggle. So how do we spread that money around in an equitable fashion? Or should we? Do we need to look at alternatives to funding our schools based on property taxes? In Ohio the inequalities are extreme as we have some of the best public schools and some of the worst and the difference is directly proportional to the financial prosperity (or lack there of) of those communities.
In other word kids who live in prosperous communities like Dublin are receiving excellent educations (better than most private schools), are fully funded and even have endowments, in beautifully maintained and modern facilities, while poor communities can't even pay for basics like teachers salaries, school supplies and facility maintenance.

A couple of miles away in another direction it's an entirely different world. In every way...