K-12 Tax & Spending Climate: Madison’s high property taxes

Ann Althouse:

One of many reasons we left Seattle after my husband retired was for lower property taxes,” writes mockturtle in the comments to my post about the GOP tax bill, where I mention that Meade and I pay more than $17,000 in property taxes on our house in Madison.

We’re still here, so that means that so far with think it’s worth it, but the high property tax does bother us, and when we think about where else we might want to live, taxation is a factor. But I care a lot about living somewhere that is interesting to me, and I want a house where I can walk out the door and, right from that point, have many interesting walks.

One of the places I’d consider is the one mockturtle says she left: Seattle. Washington State has the benefit of no income tax, but obviously the revenue must be found in some other way.

Sure, there are lots of places with low taxes, but name one where I’d enjoy living. We have many things here that we love, and I would not move to a worse place. $17,000 is a lot, but only the last $X thousand is spent on things I’d carve off the budget if I were given the power to structure the whole thing. And if they tried to hand that power over to me, I wouldn’t even take it. That’s not my line of work and not my expertise or my joy in life.

Madison schools spend far more than most, now nearly $20,000 per student. This, despite long term, disastrous reading results.