Nobody Knows Anything

Welcome to Diane Patterson's eclectic blog about what strikes her fancy

I got my sticker

Posted on October 7, 2003 Written by Diane

Dropped Sophia off at school, then drove by the polling place with Simon (who ran around while I did my thing). Got accosted by the LA Times pollster outside (first time that’s ever happened to me!) and happily filled out a questionnaire on how I voted.

I am still stunned we’re even having this stupid election. Hello, I had my chance to vote against Gray Davis last year and I did so—last year was kind of my Year of Voting Anarchically: I voted for Camejo (whose policies I agreed with the most, but usually I don’t vote for third party candidates on principle and I have a sore spot in my heart for the Greens in general), I voted for San Fernando Valley secession, I voted for Hollywood secession. Don’t remember who I voted for for Senator, other than NOT DiFi and NOT the Republican. (I’m sure that comes as a shock.)

What stuns me even more than this election is that people are actually voting for Schwarzenegger. Just in terms of policy…um, does he have one? I don’t do cult of personality voting, I don’t understand why people would just trust that “he’ll do the best for us.” WTF? His chief advisor is Pete “I make Davis look good” Wilson, which should be enough to make any thinking Californian run screaming.

I hope the kids take voting as seriously as Darin and I do. Actually, given the nonsense going on right now—you’ve all heard of Diebold, I presume?—I hope we can still vote when they’re older.

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Filed Under: Politics

Quote of the day

Posted on September 27, 2003 Written by Diane

“I knew we were in Looking Glass Land when I started rooting for the CIA.”
     — Tena, in the Comments section of “CIA wants White House investigation” on the Daily Kos.

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Filed Under: Politics

Pay for the school, or the house, or both

Posted on September 22, 2003 Written by Diane

Update: I evidently forgot to include the link of the article I was writing about! I have now included it. Hee hee. Oops.

Some of the school districts around here are called “basic aid” districts, meaning they get so much money from property taxes that they receive only “basic aid” from the state for their schools.

About 5 percent of the state’s 1,048 school districts are “basic-aid,” a designation that provides them with only minimal state funding because their property tax revenue is particularly high according to a complex state formula.

Sometimes it’s because of high residential real-estate values, as is the case with Palo Alto, Hillsborough, Saratoga and Los Gatos. Elsewhere, school districts such as Santa Clara are basic aid because of their large share of commercial or industrial property.

One of Gray Davis’s proposals for closing our budget shortfall was to take the excess funding from these districts and then return money to them. Homey didn’t play that; the plan was scrapped.

So these are well-funded districts, okay? But the state’s budget woes are affecting everyone, even the basic aid districts. So public schools are asking parents to contribute a little to their kids’ education.

With the school year under way, bake sales and box-top drives seem like a quaint vestige of the past. Today, public school parents are being pressed for cash — as much as $600 a child.

For some, the aggressive fundraising is turning what had been a goodwill gesture during boom times into something that feels more like an annual obligation.

The entreaties often frame the issue in simple terms, embroidered with guilt. Their theme: If you don’t contribute, your child’s education will suffer.

In Mountain View, elementary school parents this year have been asked to donate $200 a child. Los Gatos parents were asked for “one dollar a day,” or $365. Parents of Los Altos high school students last year were asked for $350 a student. This year, it’s $500.

I get to look forward to being hit up for contributions not only by the private schools I attended, but by my kids’ public schools? Neat.

“We cannot give $200 right now,” said Robin Kuborssy, whose daughter is a fourth-grader at Landels Elementary in Mountain View. Her husband recently quit his job to pursue a college degree.

“If you don’t give something, they call you on the phone,” said Kuborssy, who worries about how failing to contribute the $200 might affect her daughter at school. “I do feel like I need to do something.”

So she may contribute $50 and volunteer to work at fundraising efforts.

…who worries about how failing to contribute the $200 might affect her daughter at school…

There’s a technical term that means “hitting someone up for money with implied threats.” I’m sure I can come up with it if I think about it long enough…

I definitely had fears about what effect contributing money meant when I was in a private school in San Francisco. Lots of families could (and did) donate a whole bunch of money to the school. Mine contributed my full tuition and considered itself quits (understandably). Does the amount of money affect the school’s appraisal of a student? I don’t know. It’s not like the money’s coming in anonymously; they know who gave what.

Of course, above and beyond that, there are lots of districts filled with families who can’t come up with hundreds of dollars to give to their public school. So their schools will just be slashed even more.

We don’t have equal public education in this country.

What I dislike most about getting the parents to donate money is, of course, that it’s not exactly going to convince Sacramento to change what they’re doing about school funding.

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Filed Under: Politics, Schoolhouse Rock

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