Illinois' public school districts are roughly $20 billion in debt, a staggering figure fueled in part by decades of special deals in Springfield that have given districts exemptions so they can keep borrowing beyond limits set by law.Isn't it time to admit public education doesn't work because there is no accountability?
Today, that debt exceeds long-term school borrowing in most other states. It equates to about $10,000 for every Pre-K to 12th-grade public school student in Illinois, a Tribune investigation has found.
All the borrowing is a drain on taxpayers who have to repay the debt, as well as school budgets that must steer billions of dollars annually to principal and interest payments — money that could be targeted to classrooms. In some districts, more local tax money is collected for debt payments than for teacher salaries and student instruction.
Districts throughout the Chicago area took advantage of legislative maneuvers, as did several downstate districts given leeway to amass more debt, the Tribune found.
Saturday, April 16, 2016
With help of lawmakers, Illinois public schools now $20 billion in debt
The Chicago Tribune reports: