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School Districts Nationwide Implement Controversial 'Pay To Play' Fees

School Fees

First Posted: 05/30/11 02:03 AM ET Updated: 07/29/11 06:12 AM ET

An Ohio school district is the latest to implement a controversial "pay to play" policy, reports The Wall Street Journal. Medina Senior High, faced with budget cuts and repeated rejection of proposals to increase taxes, has started charging students for, well, just about everything. After-school sports, clubs, electives and even required courses such as Spanish all carry a price tag.

The Dombi family is feeling the strain; education and activities for their four children racked up a bill of $4,446.50 this year. And even then, they had to make some tough choices -- their oldest daughter had to forgo choir as it would cost an additional $200.

"It's high school," Ms. Dombi told The Wall Street Journal. "You're supposed to be able to try different things and see what you like."

In a recent editorial, the Los Angeles Times questions the constitutionality of similar fees in California.

Charging fees to students to offset budget cuts is not legal, just as it would not be legal to announce that in an effort to make ends meet, schools will no longer accept students of Filipino descent, or girls. Student fees deny opportunities to low-income students and put them at an academic disadvantage. Nearly 30 years ago, the California Supreme Court reached exactly that conclusion.

They Supreme Court case they refer to is Hartzell v. Connell (1984), in which taxpayers filed suit against the Santa Barbara High School district when it began requiring students to pay for extracurriculars including band and drama. The court ruled that "Educational opportunities must be provided to all students without regard to their families' ability or willingness to pay fees...This fundamental feature of public education is not contingent upon the inevitably fluctuating financial health of local school districts."

But school fees continue to pop up in districts across the country. The Kansas City Star reports that 28 percent of districts in Kansas have instituted some variation of the pay to play fee. The Shawnee Mission School District is one of these, although its fee takes a different approach: all high school students must pay a $90 participation fee, regardless of whether or not they participate in activities like sports or band.

As is the case across many states and districts, low-income families in the Shawnee district may apply for a waiver or arrange a payment plan for the fee. But advocates for these families say that school fees still put them at a disadvantage, by forcing them to accept charity for what is supposed to be a free education. And, while many states waive academic fees for low-income families, the same is not always true for extracurricular activities.

Those who can't afford to or don't want to pay for extra activities may also be at a disadvantage when it comes to applying for higher education. Not only do advanced academic courses often cost substantially more than their counterparts, but application-enhancing extracurriculars also cost extra money. Reports the Wall Street Journal:

Administrators and parents also worry that fees might affect some students' chances of getting into good colleges. Schools across the country now charge substantial "pay to play" fees not only for sports and arts programs, but also for more modest activities, including community service. Among the charges: $350 to join chess club, $200 to participate in Students Against Drunk Driving, $85 to write for the literary magazine -- and $50 to clean up beaches with the Environmental Club.

To combat these school fees in California, Assemblyman Ricardo Lara (D-Bell Gardens) has proposed a bill, AB 165, to reaffirm that student fees are illegal; it will be considered by the Assembly Appropriations Committee on May 27. If the bill passes, districts that continue to impose fees would be penalized.

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An Ohio school district is the latest to implement a controversial "pay to play" policy, reports The Wall Street Journal. Medina Senior High, faced with budget cuts and repeated rejection of proposals...
An Ohio school district is the latest to implement a controversial "pay to play" policy, reports The Wall Street Journal. Medina Senior High, faced with budget cuts and repeated rejection of proposals...
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Genders
Love, Tolerance, Enlightenment
04:24 PM on 06/01/2011
Free education is the very foundation of a democratic republic. The founders wanted free public education including room and board for all those citizens who need it. Citizens of the Democratic republic must be educated, serfs not so much.
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06:05 AM on 06/02/2011
that sounds largely conclusive and idealist, like an one-size fits all glove and fails to address realistic issues we face as a society
what exactly is 'all those citizens who need it'? for example, what do you say to the argument that we should provide highest levels of education to those with a cognitive advantage, (in terms of IQ or other measures), or refuse edcation to those with 'learning disabilities'? or should we provide education equally among people of a certain age, disregarding people of other age groups? studies shows that humans are most cognitively receptive between the age of 3-13, how should we frame our education policies around it?
and does your definition of 'serfs' include people whom were subjected to bondage and enslavement by their beliefs, by their diety? :]
Genders
Love, Tolerance, Enlightenment
06:16 PM on 06/02/2011
Our founders were very idealistic. Sweden, Germany and Holland all provide lifetime free education and the necessary room and board for those who need it.

Yes, there should be special ed available. You should only be "forced" to go through at least high school, Head start programs are great.

Everyone is constrained by their beliefs, and they are the only ones who can find enlightenment, but the availability of education can help.

You seem to be trying to find problems where there are none.
03:39 PM on 05/31/2011
No one points out what this really means. This is an un-voted for tax increase. Consider if the school budget is $100. They try to pass a budget for $110. It fails, and the next move of the school is to apply $10 worth of fees. Now they have their $110 budget. The voice of the populace as represented in the school budget vote was ignored. I find this intolerable..It seems to that there once was a war fought on the principle of taxation without representation.”
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Protocolor
Have maths, will travel.
03:41 PM on 05/31/2011
Go throw tea bags at `em, Tiger!
03:49 PM on 05/31/2011
Do you really think that this is a partisan issue? Or were you too anxious to toss out a silly comment?
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03:51 PM on 05/31/2011
He's got a point, actually.
They couldn't get the tax increase passed. They can't cut their budget, really, because it would bring too much attention to why they will cut education costs and continue to raise administrative costs, then they'll have to justify their own salary increases while cutting services to children or cutting teachers. So they came up with this less obvious tax.
06:16 PM on 05/31/2011
There are other reasons why all government entities' budgets are out of whack. It isn't always because the employees keep "demanding" more and more. There are bills for utilities, insurance, supplies of all kinds that keep going up and revenues that keep going down. Schools are having to cut muscle and bone from their budgets these days. You should look into it. I'm sure your local school will be glad to explain some of their rising costs to you if you care so much.
12:14 AM on 06/01/2011
You either totally missed my point or deliberately avoided it. Unvoted for tax increase applied as user fees. However, to your other topic - I run a multi-plant business, I'm certain that I do not need your lesson on costs. But let me help you in turn. All the other costs are dwarfed by the labor cost in a labor intensive business (education is one). The school systems in most states (if not all) have seen much larger than inflationary increases for over two decades. And none of the above is relevant in a major recession. It is the time to contain costs, not increase them. Of course, once again, the topic being the application of "user fees". Which I might add, also unfairly penalizes those with less money and creates an unequal "free" education. So not only is it an unvoted for taxation but it is a regressive tax to boot. Nice. You go on and keep defending it.
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sunshine saguaro
for you, a thousand times over
03:26 PM on 05/31/2011
The school district I live in just instituted a pay-for-play system for sports: $50/child, and they can participate in as many sports as they like.

I don't have a problem with this. I did sports through my community center while in school, but was in band
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sunshine saguaro
for you, a thousand times over
03:27 PM on 05/31/2011
What the heck HP! Stop cutting all of my comments off! Grrr, I just typed like 3 paragraphs...
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randyman99
My micro-bio is empty
03:09 PM on 05/31/2011
it is sad that a community is not willing to pay taxes to support the education of their children. Shame on us all.
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MIMom
I snark, therefore I am.
02:34 PM on 05/31/2011
Ridiculous.

If everyone pays a little, then no one has to pay a lot. Vote for the future, people.
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12:48 PM on 05/31/2011
But, "It's for the children".

Yeah, right.
http://reason.org/news/show/corruption-in-public-schools-c

Start putting tax dollars back into the classrooms.
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Mattea Berry
Card carrying member of the professional left
01:22 PM on 05/31/2011
Next time try to find a legitimate source instead of an astroturf organization funded by big tobacco and the school privitazation lobby:

http://www.sourcewatch.org/index.php?title=Reason_Foundation

"The Reason Foundation describes itself as a "libertarian" think tank which challenges strict environmental regulations: "A national research and education organization that explores and promotes public policy based on rationality and freedom."

Reason Foundation and tobacco issues

Jacob Sullum is the senior editor of Reason,, a monthly magazine published by the Reason Foundation. Sullum's positions on tobacco issues have consistenly been supportive of the tobacco industry[...]

The Reason Foundation received at least $10,000 from Philip Morris in 1993. He [Sullum] wrote an article for Forbes Media Critic which was later used in a week-long advertising series by Philip Morris; the report argued that the EPA findings on secondhand smoke were one-sided and represented the "corruption of science by the political crusade against smoking." He also wrote an op-ed for the Wall Street Journal criticizing the EPA, claiming that the agency based its findings on ETS on "several controversial assumptions;" this op-ed was later featured in an RJR advertisement. Both of these articles cited the work of Dr.Gary Huber, a scientist funded by various tobacco companies, who had found the risks of ETS to be only minimal. The Media Critic article also cited the work of Alvan Feinstein, who received at least $700,000 from Brown
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DMDAY44
01:54 PM on 05/31/2011
I'm sure your sources are never biased.
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01:55 PM on 05/31/2011
I'm sorry, the news that is conveyed in the article has been falsely reported?
These scandals really don't exist?

You mistake the message for the messenger and lost sight of what is happening because you are so entrenched in ideology.
12:35 PM on 05/31/2011
Another clueless liberal title. Was public education ever free? I guess if you're a liberal it was. But for those of us who make a living we understand that property taxes pay for a large portion of that "free" education. Will liberals ever get it? SAD
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Mattea Berry
Card carrying member of the professional left
12:40 PM on 05/31/2011
Oh yay, the whole "libs don't pay taxes" meme, how original. Next time, read the article before you come here and make a fool out of yourself.
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03:03 PM on 05/31/2011
Writes the person who denies the truth of information because it does not come from one of her personally approved sources.
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12:49 PM on 05/31/2011
Would those be the same "liberals" who support all the Red State Welfare Queens?
06:25 PM on 05/31/2011
Education is hardly welfare. Our society cannot continue without quality public education available for all of our children. That's right. OUR children. They are the future of our country. If we don't take care of them now, we'll be paying a heck of a lot more for them in the future. Education is cheaper than welfare or prisons. I don't have a source for that, but I could get one. It's true whether you believe it or not.
06:30 PM on 05/31/2011
Ignore that earlier post. I was thinking you were DIMDAY. My anger is with that poster, not you.
11:53 AM on 05/31/2011
Can someone please tell me what's so GREAT about America anymore?
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Protocolor
Have maths, will travel.
01:30 PM on 05/31/2011
America has Walmart!

If we assume that Walmart represents an economic model for future success, then America is also preparing the perfect workforce for that future.

In America, you can have your very own trailer home (America's answer to Mongolia's yurt) painted in your choice of designer colors! Oh, the freedom!

America landed on the Moon! You might be able to squeeze a little more pride out of that one.

America has the oldest formerly-tallest modern skyscraper in the world, so like that Moon landing stuff you can make empty boasts about how you could do it all again if you really, really wanted to.

America's Interstate Highway system (ack! Socialism! Big government!) is still world-class, even if it is operating way over capacity in most areas.

America has the best university science and engineering programs on the planet, even though they have to recruit students from Europe and Asia to fill those classrooms.

America has a few vestiges of greatness left, if you look hard enough.
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07:25 PM on 05/31/2011
There are many GREAT things about America and her people:

http://www.50in52journey.com/
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Mattea Berry
Card carrying member of the professional left
11:20 AM on 05/31/2011
I continue to be astounded, and saddened, to read comments from so many people who seem to view education as some kind of entitlement program. How soon before we go back to the gilded age when education was reserved for the priveledged classes and the rest of us had to bring our children to work beside us in the factories? This "I got mine so screw you" mentality is going to turn us into a third world country.
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randyman99
My micro-bio is empty
03:14 PM on 05/31/2011
F
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randyman99
My micro-bio is empty
03:15 PM on 05/31/2011
Silly computer. I meant to type "F
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kasv
Think... Republicans haven't outlawed it yet.
10:48 AM on 05/31/2011
Just another way to separate the "haves" from the "have nots." Eventually, the "have nots" will not even be able to consider their children playing sports, or joining the drama club. Then the "haves" will "have it all" to themselves.
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MIMom
I snark, therefore I am.
02:39 PM on 05/31/2011
I wonder how many famous people we would have missed out on viewing their talents if they grew up under this system.
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brookier1
10:45 AM on 05/31/2011
Public education is being decimated. We are raising a generation that can take tests, but will miss out on a fair, balanced liberal arts education. It's a travesty. More, more, more, for nothing! Wake up parents and start doing your part. Teachers can not do this alone. This is America's tomorrow that we are teaching!
10:43 AM on 05/31/2011
Perhaps it's time to means-test public education. If your income is abover a certain level, your child doesn't get a free lunch at the public school. Maybe the same should apply to Spelling and Arithmetic. If parents have a high enough income, why shouldn't they pay their fair share for public education.

We're all for taxing the rich, aren't we? Let's start by making them pay for their own kids education in public schools first.
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DMDAY44
10:48 AM on 05/31/2011
Then I suspect the ones that are not already in private school will be going there as well.
10:50 AM on 05/31/2011
The reason they don't do this is because once they start charging, you will see a whole lot of students leaving the public system and going to private ed. If I had to pay extra when I was at public school, I would have been one of the first to leave. The only thing keeping so many students in public schools are the cost.
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MIMom
I snark, therefore I am.
02:40 PM on 05/31/2011
If we are paying for education, I dare say it's no longer "public".
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isee61
~Marine Mom~ and proud of it!
10:28 AM on 05/31/2011
Property taxes there, lottery money here, school levy's there, bonds here, Now fees.

When will this all ends? We would get our monies worth if the school system was not so top heavy. 59% of all jobs in the school systems are not teaching jobs. Why?

Cut from the Top and you can save a Teacher.
11:02 AM on 05/31/2011
Well said, a continuing problem here in Indiana.

Our superintendants are pulling down $195 k per year in fact of the top ten governmental earners in Fort Wayne, 5 of the top spots were held by superintendants (posted in our local newspaper). Imagine the impact of getting rid of top and mid level management that do nothing to improve quality of our kid’s education? Imagine if we pushed those wages down to the class rooms, where it belongs.

Maybe our systems would not be on continual probation. Not that parental involvement is not critical, it is. But if the system was about educating the kids and not about increasing the funding and larger and more bureaucracy, things might get better.
12:12 PM on 05/31/2011
You are implying that 41% are administrative, which is bunk. Janitors, librarians, nurses, cafeteria employees. It takes a lot of people to run a school district, not just teachers.
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12:54 PM on 05/31/2011
Yes, but at the top there is huge waste and corruption.
People that use the school system as their own personal bank.
Nobody is begruding the necessary staff.
But why does a local admin have to make more than the state's governor?
Cafeteria employees? Outsourcing the food to places like Aramark. Less healthy food, costs more, who's getting a kickback?
People don't want to question money going to schools because "it's for the children" but this has lead to huge abuses. My property taxes have doubled in the last four years due to spending on "education", yet we read about scandal after scandal. For the kids, then sure, I'll take the hit. But that's not what is happening.
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Protocolor
Have maths, will travel.
10:26 AM on 05/31/2011
I can understand the argument that having to pay for something will encourage greater effort. After all, having "skin in the game" will make the participants take it more seriously. That said, the principal of universal access to a liberal education remains a good one. A rich and stimulation school experience should be available to all, but only if they're willing to take advantage of the offered opportunities and not sabotage other students' access to those opportunities. How's this for a balance between the two:

If a student fails any class required for graduation (and thus must retake it), their parents must pay 100% of the cost of that class before their child can return to school.
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Chris Wundrow
12:55 PM on 05/31/2011
As if we don't already have too many dropouts!!!!!!!!!
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Protocolor
Have maths, will travel.
01:31 PM on 05/31/2011
Yeah, that's the fatal flaw to the idea.
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DejzaVoo
10:18 AM on 05/31/2011
Nothing wrong with education. Move along. Nothing to see here!
10:52 AM on 05/31/2011
ignorant comment. Nothing to see here folk, move on to the next comment.
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DejzaVoo
11:33 AM on 05/31/2011
So if you post an ignorant comment to point out that another comment was ignorant, does that make you doubly ignorant?

Oh by the way, for Christmas you should ask for a sarcasm detector. Clearly you need one since my comment was 100% sarcastic.