We Have Already Passed Peak Public School
As families continue to defect from government-managed K-12, teachers unions are tightening their squeeze on the Democratic Party.

As back-to-school week wheezes into gear for the nation's 54 million or so children between the ages of five and 17, a startling, post-COVID reality is becoming more apparent, even if the implications are still too big to process. It is this: Though the U.S. population continues to grow, the number of kids attending public K-12 schools will likely never again reach its 2019 peak.
The rise of homeschooling—from around 2.8 percent of the school-aged population pre-pandemic to around 5.8 percent now (reliable statistics are hard to come by)—is a chief contributor to that decline, along with ever-decreasing birth rates. Between fall of 2019 and fall of 2030, the National Center for Public Education Statistics (NCES) projected this past February, public school enrollment will decrease by 7 percent, from 50.8 million to 47.3 million.
So surely government spending on those schools, which typically amounts to around 20 percent of state/local budgets, will decrease too, right? Ha ha, no.
The NCES estimates that taxpayer expenditures on K-12 schools will tick up slightly from $693 billion in 2018-19 (using constant 2021 dollars) to $698 billion in 2030-31. Per-pupil spending, adjusted for inflation, will therefore continue its long-term trend of increasing, from $13,700 to $14,800.
The reality is even less fiscally sane than those numbers suggest. First of all, the NCES did not factor into its projections the direct federal injection of $200 billion worth of federal COVID-relief money—$69 billion in two 2020 bills, $130 billion in the American Rescue Plan (ARP)—nor the indirect $350 billion ARP bailout for states to plug whatever budget holes they wished. This taxpayer blowout, extracted with strategic intentionality by the same Democratic Party-supporting teachers unions that kept schools closed in America much longer than those in most other countries, produced the largest one-year per-pupil spending hike in two decades.
So: Taxpayers are paying more money for a service they use less, even without calculating the COVID-19 spending/shutdown debacle. (Reminder: The New York Times concluded in an analysis this March that "extended school closures did not significantly stop the spread of Covid, while the academic harms for children have been large and long-lasting.") Yet still the picture looks worse when viewed in light of the still-dominant operating model for these flagging institutions.
That's because the number of kids attending charter schools—"public" in name, but managed by private entities rather than government—has more than doubled since 2010-11, from 1.8 million to 3.7 million in 2021-22. This is despite Democratic politicians, from the president on down, seeking in recent years to restrict charters' proliferation and even roll them back.
Families, it turns out, have been fleeing government-managed schools since long before COVID-19.
"If you subtract the charter school students," former Houston Chronicle columnist Bill King observed in a trenchant analysis last week, "enrollment in traditional public schools peaked in 2012 and has since declined by 5%."
That decline is almost guaranteed to accelerate. In the past three years, spurred on by the 2022 Supreme Court decision in Carson v. Makin, a dozen states have adopted something close to universal school choice for K-12, allowing taxpayer money to flow into private institutions. More states, including the giant prize of Texas, look likely to join.
It is notable that all of these school-choice states are run by Republicans, just as all of the biggest school-lockdown states were run by Democrats. Education policy has become so polarized as to be unrecognizable from even a dozen years ago.
Back then, President Barack Obama, with his pro-charters education secretary Arne Duncan and their "Race to the Top" initiative, talked enough about introducing competition and firing bad teachers that New York Times columnist David Brooks (prematurely) called him "the most determined education reformer in the modern presidency."
That past is a different planet. Now, hating on charter schools (except when relying on them to do the things your one-size-fits-all system cannot) is an opening bid for national Democratic ambitions, the current president is literally in bed with the teachers unions, and the 2024 party platform states flatly that: "We oppose the use of private-school vouchers, tuition tax credits, opportunity scholarships, and other schemes that divert taxpayer-funded resources away from public education."
The Republican platform, meanwhile, supports universal school choice in every state, expanding 529 Education Savings Accounts, and closing down the Department of Education.
What are teachers unions getting for their 99 percent-plus political-donation spending on Democrats? On the local level, Democratic-dominated polities like the state of New York are still pushing through mandatory class-size reductions, which—surprise!—requires hiring more teachers even as the student population declines. And certainly, muscle-flexing groups like the Chicago Teachers Union (CTU) will find it advantageous in contract negotiations to be bargaining with a former CTU lobbyist they helped elect.
There is still loose change to be found in the national couch cushions as well. The American Federation of Teachers (AFT) and National Education Association (NEA) have been among the loudest voices pushing the Joe Biden/Kamala Harris administration to wipe out student loans, an effort that has produced a dedicated Teacher Loan Forgiveness program. They still want federal action to loosen testing requirements, strengthen union organizing, and enact a Paraprofessionals and School-Related Personnel Bill of Rights.
An underrated instance of recent teachers-union muscle-flexing on the Democratic Party was Harris's selection of Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz to be her vice presidential running mate over the onetime heavily favored Pennsylvania Gov. Josh Shapiro. Walz, a former teacher, was a dues-paying member of both the AFT and NEA, and as governor opposed school choice and favored extended school lockdowns. Shapiro, unforgivably, has supported school vouchers.
So complete has been the teachers union dominance of the Democratic Party that The Nation this week published what amounted to a victory lap. "After decades of serving as a punching bag for the party's neoliberals," the progressive magazine declared in the subhed, "public schools and the people who work in them are back in fashion."
Well, except among their customers. No amount of political backslapping and Democratic influence-buying can overcome the cruelty of math. When public school buildings become too empty, they have to shut down. When the federal spigot runs dry—as it was supposed to this month, though some drops will stick around until next year—state and local governments will be gazing out over a fiscal cliff.
"Throughout the country some of the largest enrollment declines have come in districts that embraced remote learning," reporter Alec MacGillis wrote in a deep-dive ProPublica piece about school closings last month. "In these places, a stark reality now looms: schools have far more space than they need, with higher costs for heating and cooling, building upkeep and staffing than their enrollment justifies."
Public schools had just one job, and they screwed it up. Just wait until all taxpayers—not just the defecting families—begin to notice.
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Between fall of 2019 and fall of 2030
Don't forget the rise of Project 2025.
Or the WEF's Agenda 2030.
It's Welch, he only know republican boogymwn and is absolutely fine with global socialism
This taxpayer blowout, extracted with strategic intentionality by the same Democratic Party-supporting teachers unions that kept schools closed in America much longer than those in most other countries, produced the largest one-year per-pupil spending hike in two decades.
Who cares how many students are sitting in seats?
It is notable that all of these school-choice states are run by Republicans, just as all of the biggest school-lockdown states were run by Democrats.
Hang on... slow down. I can only 'bowf sidez' so fast...
I got nothin'. At least I'm wearing a mask so I don't look like them!
It's Welch, he's the same fag that wanted people opposed to the wuflu fascism to die
"We Have Already Passed Peak Public School"
Not if the democrats get elected again - - - - - - - - - -
Studies have shown that the single biggest impact on student academic performance is parental involvement. One way to make sure parents are involved is to charge tuition.
The single biggest improvement in education would be to shut down all of the public schools, sell the buildings to the highest bidder, and lay off all the teachers and administrators.
Educational entrepreneurs could buy the buildings and hire the best teachers and as many of the administrators as is economically efficient. Parents could then send their children to the school of their choice, with the threat of transferring out if the school performs poorly or pushes an unwanted agenda.
Many people (probably most people) would no doubt object to the idea that students from poor families might not be able to afford school, but so many people are worried about that it should be very easy to establish charitable scholarship funds for needy students.
GI Bill-style funding for the poor (where the funding follows the student, not the institution) is both constitutional and effective. It would still provide all the incentives you want for parental investment but also provides the safety net needed by the truly poor.
The idea everyone needs a liberal arts education is what got us here.
What, exactly, makes 'public school' better for 'the poor' versus a work study program in the trades?
It only worked for hundreds of years, but apparently it's just not sufficient for a modern service industry job. You need at least a bachelors degree to wait tables, after all.
But such money-follows-the-student funding schemes would fail to ensure that money flows to teacher’s unions and from them to Democratic politicians, which is what public school (and government generally) exists to facilitate. So that’s a hard “no” from the good and the great.
lol the Conformity Factory Owners ate their own golden goose.
Teachers unions are gross. I know there are teachers out there who want the best for their students and are underpaid and overworked, but the unions do very little to actually help them. The union represents the union at the end of the day.
All of this could have been avoided by simply not nationalizing education in the United States, but at this point they are too useful to the regime to give up their taxpayer funded indoctrination camps.
At least one good thing came out of the COVID years if people are now seeing that these union members aren't actually working in favor of their kids. Thinking they did want the best for your kids was like thinking the IRS just wants what is best for your business.
not good enough. End public schooling now. by mandate.
So, sometimes you need a strongman?
Not disagreeing with that, by the way, just noting that Reason doesn't seem to grasp why Trump might have said something like that when the writing is ten stories tall and written with neon tubing.
The state apparatus is out of control, and won't just cave in. It's going to be a political fight and weaklings do not win those fights. We have at least 30 years of Republican weakness to underline that point.
I would rephrase it as sometimes you need a strong citizenry.
Yeah, that would be nice.
I would suggest that you need either a strong citizenry or a strongman. The decline of the citizenry is why the Roman Republic turned into the Roman Empire. It might have something to tell us about recent American history and likely future courses of American futurity.
"We Have Already Passed Peak Public School."
Public schools in the US are a joke.
It's time to defund and dismantle them.
Let the parents pay for their kids' education, not the taxpayers.
After all, it was the parents who conceived the child, not the taxpayers.
Ergo, it's the parents' responsibility (there's that damned word again!) to educate their kids, not the taxpayers.
Public schools and the teachers unions are in a death spiral. There will be no recovery, the corruption has been exposed. As the article states, government and unions just haven't been able to process their predicament.