Article with links about Santorum's sweet, under-covered home-school deal: live in Virginia during his US Senate service for Pennsylvania, but home-school some of the kids in a Pennsylvania "virtual" school and reap $100,000 in benefits - - t
he Pittsburgh Post-Gazette said the cost was $33,000-a-tear - - from Pennsylvania taxpayers
As various media outlets from Mother Jones to the Washington Post
have reminded us in recent weeks, Santorum’s record as a home-schooler
is ambiguous at the very least, and arguably hypocritical. From 2001
through at least 2004, when Santorum was serving in the Senate and
living full-time in Loudoun County, Va., five of his children were
enrolled in an online charter school based in Pennsylvania — a public
school, albeit an unusual one — with computers, curricula and other
educational services provided at taxpayer expense. According to the Penn Hills Progress,
a newspaper in Santorum’s suburban Pittsburgh hometown that broke the
story at the time, the local school district had spent approximately
$100,000 educating the senator’s so-called home-schooled children,
although they lived neither in the district nor in the state.
Santorum owned a modest three-bedroom, 2,000-square-foot house in
Penn Hills (and reportedly still does), on which he paid about $2,000 a
year in taxes. But owning a home is not sufficient to prove residency,
and public records, neighborhood testimony and common sense all suggest
that Santorum’s constantly enlarging family — his kids now range from
age 3 to age 20 — never actually lived there. (At the time of the Penn
Hills Progress investigation, Santorum’s wife’s niece and her husband
were registered to vote at that address.)
Appearing to live in
Pennsylvania was distinctly advantageous for the Santorums, because
state law required school districts to pay 80 percent of the online
charter-school tuition for local families who chose it. (No such law
pertained in Virginia.) The Penn Hills district challenged Santorum’s
local residency, and the ensuing dispute only ended when the senator
withdrew his kids from the Pennsylvania Cyber Charter School. Since 2006 the Santorum kids have reportedly been registered as Virginia home-schoolers.
When Penn Hills tried to bill Santorum for $72,000 that the state had
withheld from the local education budget to cover the senator’s kids’
online tuition, he refused to pay. In the end, the Pennsylvania
department of education was forced to refund most of that money to the
local district. In other words, the Santorums presented themselves to
the world as home-schoolers for at least three years, while Pennsylvania
taxpayers picked up the bill for their kids’ education — and they
actually lived in a different state. For a private citizen, this would
have been an embarrassing ethical lapse, but somewhat short of criminal
misconduct. For a politician whose reputation rests upon issues of
character and integrity, it’s considerably more damning.
$100K that's about 6 years of unemployment checks. $395K a year as a director of a health care company that is being that is being sued for fraud.
ReplyDeleteI hope that the religious right figures out that he and Romney are among the money changers that Jesus cast out of the temple.
Makes you wonder: Just who would Jesus cheat?
ReplyDelete