Letter: School vouchers are the reverse Robin Hood effect

Published: 03-12-2025 4:09 PM

That sucking sound you will soon hear is the sound of money being sucked out of your wallets to pay increased property taxes because wealthy people no longer pay interest and dividend taxes. The repeal of the I&D tax disproportionately benefits wealthy households and hurts the rest of us.

The other sucking sound you will hear is the sound of money being sucked out of public schools to pay well-off parents who already send their children to private or religious schools or have the free time to educate at home. New Hampshire has 20,000 children in private, religious or home schooling. When Republicans pass expanded school vouchers, all those parents will request $5,000 from the state. Who wouldn’t?

20,000 times $5,000 equals $100 million. Where is that money coming from? It will come from our public schools and will eventually require a rise in property taxes. Rural communities are the biggest losers in this school voucher scheme. We suffer the triple whammy of losing public school money from the state, paying more in property taxes and having our school funding sent to towns and counties which have many more private and religious schools. Some private and religious schools are already increasing tuition in preparation for the windfall. There’s a term for this. When wealth is transferred from the poor or middle class to the wealthy it’s called the “Reverse Robin Hood Effect”, and it’s happening in our town, our county, our state and our nation right now.

Cornelia Schneider

Moultonborough

Yesterday's Most Read Articles

Blasting set at Swenson Granite quarry, which may resume full operations this summer
Work continues on new state psychiatric hospital in Concord
As part of sweeping cuts, House budget writers vote to abolish nearly 200 positions from N.H. Department of Corrections
New Hampshire law enforcement to step up traffic enforcement on Route 106
Three arrested in connection with vandalism of Satanic Temple holiday display
A New Hampshire ski resort bets on tech to compete with industry giants