Obscene

My city of Cape Canaveral has one school that houses PreK to Grade 6. Capeview Elementary was built in the early ’60s to accommodate 600 kids when the space program was gearing up and aeronautical engineers moved their families to this beachside community on the Space Coast. But over the years, Cape Canaveral has evolved away from a family oriented community into a resort destination filled with retirees and hundreds of short term rentals (eg. AirBnbs) and nearly two thousand hotel rooms.

As a result, residential and commercial property values have soared with the almost daily rockets that are launched within eyesight, and families who had owned or rented are no longer able to afford the price of living in this 1.9 square mile community. Many have migrated to more affordable and less “flashy” communities away from the beach, leaving fewer than 300 students attending an elementary public school that the County’s School Board has decided to close at the end of the school year.

The 7.5 acre Capeview School beachside property – owned by the County School Board — will likely be sold to the highest bidder to be developed into yet more beachside vacation condos.

The kids? They’ll be bused to nearby Cocoa Beach which itself is experiencing a significantly diminished student population.

Thus, it doesn’t surprise me when I read this report by John Solomon of Just the News. Public schools have become an anachronism, where families without the means to send their children to private schools, end up with public schools.

While school spending rises nationally, enrollment continues to decline

Total annual public school spending is nearing $1 trillion nationally. Public school enrollment has declined by roughly 750,000 students since 2014. During that time, public school employment has grown by more than 600,000 positions.

Public school enrollment has declined in recent years even as staffing and spending have increased, prompting debate among education leaders over how resources are being used and whether they are improving student outcomes.

Total annual public school spending is nearing $1 trillion nationally, according to a Reason Foundation report.

According to Edunomics Lab at Georgetown University, public school enrollment has declined by roughly 750,000 students since 2014. In that same time, public school employment has grown by more than 600,000 positions.

Only about one-third of students score at or above the proficient level on the National Assessment of Educational Progress in reading, according to the National Assessment Governing Board.

According to the National Education Association, the national average teacher salary reached $72,030 in 2024, up 26.9% from $58,454 in 2015-16.

The highest average salaries are reported in California at $101,084, New York at $95,615, Massachusetts at $92,076 and Washington at $91,720, according to World Population Review.

However, the National Council on Teacher Retirement reported that when adjusted for inflation at 3%, recent salary increases equate to only about 1.5% growth.

Despite pay increases, teachers continue to earn less than similarly educated professionals. USAFacts reports that most public K-12 teachers hold master’s degrees, yet their average pay is $20,000 less than the average pay of a worker with an advanced degree.

The Economic Policy Institute has found that teacher benefits, including pensions, do not fully offset what it calls a growing wage penalty compared to other college-educated workers. The compensation gap for teachers was -17.1% in 2024.

Public school teachers typically work about 180 instructional days per year under annual contracts that include summer and seasonal breaks, though many report additional hours spent on planning, grading and professional development.

In some states, top teacher salaries remain below $60,000, including Mississippi at $53,704, Florida at $54,875 and Missouri at $55,132.

A recent peer-reviewed study published in Politics and Policy found that administrative growth is more pronounced in states with stronger teachers’ union influence.

Becky Pringle, president of the NEA, said declining test scores reflect underinvestment rather than overspending.

“Test scores don’t just reflect what students know — they reflect the consequences of disinvestment in public education,” Pringle said in a statement emailed to The Center Square.

Pringle called for higher teacher pay, smaller class sizes and increased investment in instructional resources.

The NEA, which represents more than 2.8 million teachers nationwide, reported $529.5 million in revenue for the 2022–23 fiscal year, with $374.2 million from membership dues, according to Americans for Fair Treatment.

During the same reporting period, Pringle earned $495,787 — about 8.5 times the salary of the average public school teacher.

Rusty Brown, director of special projects at the Freedom Foundation, argued bureaucratic growth and union influence have reduced efficiency and academic standards.

“When you get a massive bloated bureaucracy that grinds efficiency to a halt,” Brown told The Center Square. Brown added the issue is not only pay levels but how funds are used and whether they produce results.

At the same time, large school districts are fighting budget deficits.

The Los Angeles Unified School District, the nation’s second-largest school district, approved an $18.8 billion budget for 2025-26 despite projecting $15.9 billion in revenue, creating a $2.9 billion deficit.

“Los Angeles Unified is committed to protecting high-quality student learning, even as we face significant fiscal challenges,” an LAUSD spokesperson told The Center Square. “Continued declines in student enrollment, reductions in state funding, and the expiration of critical federal relief dollars are creating substantial budget pressures for the upcoming year.”

“As a result, the district must prepare for responsible and strategic budget reductions to maintain long-term financial stability,” the spokesperson said.

Superintendent Alberto Carvalho earns $440,000 annually under a contract running through 2030, along with additional benefits of a $50,000 annual contribution to a retirement account, and access to private security, cars and a driver.

Since 2002, inflation-adjusted K-12 spending has increased by more than 35.8%, with per-pupil expenditures rising from $14,969 to $20,322.

By Radiopatriot

A former talk radio host turned political activist, diving deep into the intricacies of political warfare and sharing insights on the shadow government and 5th Generation Psy-Ops. RadioPatriot's been diving into political intrigue, from FBI hearings to questioning staged events. Twitter.com/RadioPatriot * Telegram/Radiopatriot * Telegram/Andrea Shea King Gettr/radiopatriot * TRUTHsocial/Radiopatriot

4 comments

  1. Yeah well Michigan “invests” at one of the highest rates in the country and has dropped several positions… now ranking 44 in the US. Whitmer wants to throw more money at it. I want a full audit.

    They blame it on administration BUT I know what a dear friend makes as an Asst Principal ….. it sucks and has NOT risen even with inflation over the last several years.

    Where IS that money going…..,.

      1. Wondered why those beams were so broad………after her performance in Germany, it SHOULD be evident what a failure she is. And she’s probably the best of the three…….im sure they’re back at their cauldron and charging their e-brooms.

  2. Degrees in Education are not advanced degrees: they are BS*it degrees. Employ people who can teach and forget about degrees. It does not take a degree to be a lesbian communist socialist America hater. Let the NEA build their own schools and compete against real schools.

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