U.S. Schools Face a Crisis as the Number of Children Drops

(nytimes.com)

18 points | by Teever 20 hours ago ago

14 comments

  • esbranson 18 hours ago ago

    Areas and institutions that lean Democratic politically. Plus a few GOP areas with long-running demographic decline.

  • skinfaxi 19 hours ago ago

    Are property taxes going down in those areas? How much does a house cost for a young working couple looking to start a family to move into?

    > “People are choosing to raise kids somewhere other than in the city — moving to suburbs or places where they have access to affordable housing,” she said. “So it’s not just about losing students, it’s about the city of Portland losing families.”

    All of the schools seem to be in metro areas where there are probably opportunities for consolidation.

    > Even some affluent school districts that draw families because of high-performing schools, like in Palo Alto, Calif., and Montclair, N.J., have struggled to maintain enrollment.

    The affluent in these places don't send their kids to public schools and Montclair public schools are in a gigantic financial scandal anyway.

  • vannevar 20 hours ago ago

    Clamping down on immigration will go down as one of the greatest policy blunders in US history. The American people are about to find out the hard way that national economies are essentially pyramid schemes.

    • esbranson 18 hours ago ago

      Wishcasting. The US could let in tens of millions of immigrants in a single year.

    • slaw 20 hours ago ago

      It is better to stop pyramid scheme earlier than later.

      • rexpop 19 hours ago ago

        Yeah, I am generally viscerally horrified by the procedures of ICE/CBP but I am still somewhat disgusted by liberals counterargument that we need immigrants to do jobs that are beneath us.

        Nothing is beneath us, except what's beneath everyone.

        • ungreased0675 15 hours ago ago

          Yes and, very little of the billions in AI spend seems to be aimed at boring, dangerous, or low-paying jobs.

    • like_any_other 19 hours ago ago
      • QuadmasterXLII 19 hours ago ago

        Immigrants to europe are not statistically similar to immigrants to the US.

        https://www.astralcodexten.com/p/political-backflow-from-eur...

      • none2585 19 hours ago ago

        lol quoting Kirkegaard here should tell you all you need to know about your slant on this topic

        • like_any_other 3 hours ago ago

          It's convenient dismissing data based on disliking the person that cited the data, isn't it? Anyway, you can just read the study itself if you don't like Kirkegaard, which says the same.

      • belviewreview 18 hours ago ago

        The US is much better at integrating immigrants into its society and making them economically productive.

      • esbranson 18 hours ago ago

        [flagged]

  • burnt-resistor 6 hours ago ago

    Because people don't want to have kids in a sad, unsafe, uncertain, unaffordable country without a safety net like universal healthcare that hollowed out the middle class and brought massive inequality by disastrous tax cuts and neoliberal policies.