Tuesday, June 07, 2005
I'd Like a Table on the Patio, Please
It’s hard to believe that it wasn’t too long ago that Memphis was in the dining dark ages. In those days, Memphians looked with envy at those centers of sophistication which actually let diners eat outdoors at their favorite restaurants.
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2 comments:
The people of Germantown don't invest in schools? Don't they pay county taxes? Isn't the county debt at an all-time high because of the current formula that requires a certain amount to go to the construction of city schools? To be sure, there are significant problems in the equity of funding city services, but to imply that Germantown residents are uncaring and unwilling to pay for schools is disingenuous. And I don't live in Germantown, either.
This was posted to a blog on outdoor dining. But...
The people of Germantown invest in schools through their county taxes, which has more than half of all property taxes going to schools. Memphians have the same amount of their county taxes going to schools, but then, they also pay part of their city taxes to schools. In other words, Memphians are paying twice for the same public service, unlike the citizens living outside of Memphis.
The county debt is not at an all-time high because of the Average Daily Attendance formula, because contrary to conventional wisdom, the city schools, which are older by decades, require more maintenance and repairs.
The county debt is the symptom. The problem, more precisely, is sprawl.
I do live in Germantown, and I would gladly allocate some of my Germantown taxes to pay for schools. That gets me on a level playing field with the Memphis taxpayers' investment in schools and shows the same commitment to education.
Smart City Memphis
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