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The Water Cooler
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Oklahoma legislators to get 35 percent pay raise
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<blockquote data-quote="SoonerP226" data-source="post: 3284751" data-attributes="member: 26737"><p>I'm not following you here. How does going from 400 superintendents to 40 superintendents add any bureaucracy at all? It significantly reduces the number of highly-paid employees in a layer of bureaucracy that already exists, which sounds like reducing bureaucracy to me.</p><p></p><p>Maybe the boundaries are set at 10K students or the county line. Even that would result in a significant decrease in administrative overhead. </p><p></p><p>I'm not claiming to have all the answers, but I'm not at all in favor of paying more in taxes until I see some evidence of education being good stewards of the money I'm already paying--and a state this size having over 500 school districts is a prime example of them being a very <em>bad</em> steward of my money.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="SoonerP226, post: 3284751, member: 26737"] I'm not following you here. How does going from 400 superintendents to 40 superintendents add any bureaucracy at all? It significantly reduces the number of highly-paid employees in a layer of bureaucracy that already exists, which sounds like reducing bureaucracy to me. Maybe the boundaries are set at 10K students or the county line. Even that would result in a significant decrease in administrative overhead. I'm not claiming to have all the answers, but I'm not at all in favor of paying more in taxes until I see some evidence of education being good stewards of the money I'm already paying--and a state this size having over 500 school districts is a prime example of them being a very [I]bad[/I] steward of my money. [/QUOTE]
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Oklahoma legislators to get 35 percent pay raise
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