There Will Never Be Racial Parity Until Schools Are No Longer Funded by Property Taxes
This post is a continuation of the “Education In America” series begun with:
Let’s stop pretending this country is confused about why some schools look like launchpads and others look like holding pens.
We know why.
We built it that way.
If your home value helps decide your kid’s school budget, then equal opportunity is a fairy tale told to keep poor people quiet and middle-class people obedient.
That is the whole game.
For all the patriotic throat-clearing about “public education,” America still funds a huge share of public schools through local property taxes. In plain English: where you live still helps decide what your kid gets.
And who loves this system?
The wealthy love it because it lets them convert private housing wealth into public advantage for their own children. And, let’s not forget, it keeps their children from having to associate with “them”.
Republicans love it because they can hide behind the phrase “local control” while defending a system that keeps poor districts poor and rich districts comfortable.
And too many Democrats tolerate it because some of their best donors live in the winning ZIP codes.
That’s the real bipartisan scam: one party protects the rigged ladder, and the other too often whispers about fairness while clutching the handrail.
The Lie of “Local Control”
“Local control” sounds wholesome, like a Norman Rockwell town hall with pie on the windowsill.
In real life, it means this: a rich district can tax itself lightly and still raise a mountain of money, while a poor district can tax itself harder and still come up short.
That is not local control. That is wealth control.
So when some smug suit says, “Well, communities should support their schools,” what they really mean is, “Children in poorer communities should accept less because their parents don’t own enough valuable property.”
Dress it up however you want. That’s what it is.
Why This Hits Race So Hard
This is where America’s favorite amnesia kicks in.
People act like today’s property values fell from the sky. They did not.
They were shaped by policy. By segregation. By redlining. By disinvestment. By white flight. By zoning. By lending discrimination. By a hundred little bureaucratic knives, all cutting in the same direction.
So when school funding follows property values, the country is not merely funding schools by geography. It is funding them through the aftershocks of old racial theft.
That is why racial parity never arrives.
Not because Black families or brown families or poor families don’t care enough.
Not because their children “lack grit.”
Not because their culture is broken.
But because America took a racist housing map, turned it into a wealth map, and then turned that into a school map.
And then had the gall to call the result meritocracy.
The Damage Is Not Abstract
This is not some bloodless spreadsheet fight between policy nerds with elbow patches.
You can see the damage.
You can smell it.
You can hear it in classrooms where the HVAC sounds like a dying tractor and the teacher is buying glue sticks with grocery money.
Think about how insane that is.
America has billionaires buying third yachts and vanity media platforms, and the people educating children are subsidizing the classroom with their own wallets.
That is not just unfair. That is obscene.
And the building side is rotten too. The same system that starves operations also starves buildings.
Because property wealth drives facility money too, the gaps get baked into walls, roofs, plumbing, and air quality.
That’s how inequality becomes architecture.
Stop Blaming the Victims
Here comes the part where the usual suspects start barking.
They’ll say the problem is bad families.
They’ll say the problem is teachers’ unions.
They’ll say the problem is school culture.
They’ll say the problem is “woke ideology.”
They’ll say the problem is fatherlessness, laziness, music, video games, phones, immigrants, urban values, secularism, the moon phase, and whatever else keeps attention off the money pipe.
No.
A system that ties children’s educational opportunity to nearby real-estate wealth is a rigged system. Period.
And when Republicans defend that setup, they are not defending freedom. They are defending inherited advantage with better branding.
When Democrats refuse to go to war over it, they are not being pragmatic. They are choosing donor comfort over structural justice.
A party that won’t offend wealthy suburban homeowners is not serious about racial parity.
I said what I said.
What Successful Systems Do Differently
Here’s the part where the “nothing else is possible” crowd starts whining.
That’s not how we do it in America.
Our kids won’t get a good education.
They’re “communists,” “socialists,” “foreigners,” “aliens from outer space.”
Good education is wasted on the poor.
I worked hard to get rich. My kids should get the best education.
Sorry. Other places do this better. Way better.
Top systems do not shrug and say, “Well, sorry, your houses aren’t expensive enough.”
They fund schools by formula, by province, by nation, by need.
We can do that too.
We just choose not to.
The Supreme Court Made This Harder — Not Impossible
Part of the reason this mess survives is that the Supreme Court gave it cover.
In San Antonio Independent School District v. Rodriguez, the Court basically told the country, “Yes, this is ugly, but it’s not our problem.”
Fine.
Then we stop waiting for judges and start forcing the issue through state legislatures, ballot fights, governors’ races, attorney general races, and Congress.
Because “the courts won’t save us” is not the same thing as “nothing can be done.”
Here Are the Solutions
This is the plan.
1. Pool more school revenue at the state level
Take a much bigger share of school funding out of local property-tax silos and pool it statewide. Rich districts should not be their own private ATM machines.
2. Use weighted student funding
A child in poverty usually needs more support, not less. Same for multilingual learners, students with disabilities, and districts facing concentrated hardship. Funding formulas should reflect need honestly instead of pretending every district starts from the same place.
3. Create statewide school-facilities funds
Roofs, boilers, HVAC, plumbing, air quality, science labs, and broadband should not depend on whether your district can pass a fat bond issue. Buildings should be funded as a state responsibility, not a local luxury contest.
4. Make teacher retention a justice issue
If poor districts keep losing experienced teachers, then stop acting surprised when outcomes lag. Pay more for hard-to-staff schools. Support new teachers better. Improve working conditions. Stop asking idealism to do the work of policy.
5. Put a hard federal floor under educational equity
Washington does not have to run every school to say this much: if a state’s funding system leaves poor districts and heavily nonwhite districts chronically behind, that state does not get to call itself compliant and move on. Tie federal leverage to equity.
6. Attack school inequality and housing inequality together
You cannot fix school inequality while ignoring the housing market that helps create it. School reform without housing reform is a mop in a flood.
Does More Money Actually Help?
Yes.
And this is where the “money doesn’t matter” crowd should go sit quietly in the corner.
When schools serving poor kids get sustained, serious funding, those kids finish more education, earn more as adults, and are less likely to stay trapped in poverty (or end up in prison).
So let’s retire one of America’s dumbest political talking points.
Money matters.
It matters when you spend it on teachers, class size, time, materials, buildings, and stability.
What does not work is starving schools, insulting teachers, blaming children, and then acting shocked when the damage shows up in adulthood.
The Blunt Truth
There will never be racial parity in this country while public education is chained to local property wealth.
You cannot build equality on top of a tax structure that mirrors old segregation, old redlining, old wealth hoarding, and old racial hierarchy.
You can’t.
And until this changes, every politician who says they care about racial justice while leaving property-tax school funding mostly intact is either lying, hiding, or scared.
Which is it?
Because the clock has run out on polite nonsense.
If your home value decides your kid’s school, then equal opportunity is a lie.
And the first honest step toward fixing that lie is this:
Stop funding schools with ZIP codes.
Read next in the series:





0 Comments