Councillor Tobin weighs in on busing Boston students to private and parochial schools in today's Boston Globe:
The Boston public schools, facing a growing deficit that will lead to severe budget cuts, spend more than $2 million a year to bus students to private and parochial schools around the city, even though the school system has no legal obligation to transport most of them.
Many of the buses traverse the city with far more empty seats than students. More than a dozen of the bus routes transport fewer than 10 students, according to a report presented to the School Committee this week. One bus brings a single student to a South Boston Catholic school, while another carries just one student to a private school in Hyde Park.
The free rides, the subject of increasing scrutiny, have pitted some school and city officials against each other in a potentially volatile debate. While officials are desperately searching for budget cuts, they are also wary of the political implications of eliminating the quietly treasured perk.
"It pains me to know that we are transporting private school children while we are cutting math and reading coaches in our public schools," said committee member Helen Dájer. "I don't know how we can defend that to folks in the Boston public schools."
But others, including John M. Tobin Jr., a city councilor from West Roxbury, are arguing to keep the service in place
To read the entire story go to The Boston Globe.
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Busing for private pupils scrutinized
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Re: Busing for private pupils scrutinized
by
Katherine
on Fri 14 Mar 2008 01:42 PM EDT | Profile | Permanent Link
"They should pick them up in limousines," Tobin said. "Their parents are taxpayers who are subsidizing a system [the public schools] they don't use."
Do you really believe that? My children have attended the Curley K-8 School for 6 years. My husband and I and many other parents have spent countless hours supporting the school including countless hours planning and holding fundraisers to buy books for the library and basic supplies for teachers, and to hire the Community Music Center of Boston to provide music instruction to all Curley students every year, etc. etc. So you see, I am subsidizing the public schools in time and money well beyond my tax dollars. When do my children and their classmates get a ride in that limousine? Assuming you do believe what you are quoted as saying, I'm sure you'll soon rush off to the State House to ensure that I won't have to pay any tax dollars to subsidize the public schools starting in 2017 when my children graduate. Come to think of it, I don't use public housing, haven't been in a branch of the public library in years, I've never ridden Bus #28, and I've never driven or walked down St. Rose Street. But surely my tax dollars must be subsidizing all of those public necessities/amenities and many more that I don't use. Where's my limo?
Please keep your comments on topic. If this post is about WiFi, don't change the subject to City Council Policy. Either talk about WiFi, or get your own blog and talk about City Council Policy. I reserve the right to remove off-topic comments.
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