No Arizona Tax Money for Private Schools

by David Safier (TASL) Arizona’s appeals court handed down an important ruling — that a 2006 state law giving state money to private schools for the education of foster children and children with disabilities is unconstitutional. To me, the concept is very simple. Be generous with public money in support of public schools. Use private … Read more

In (Modest) Praise of Charter Schools and Microsoft

by David Safier The link between charter schools and Microsoft is tenuous at best, but this is a grab bag post, so I decided to throw them in together. Tucson’s BASIS Charter School called best public school in the nation. You read that right. Newsweek has put the Tucson charter school in the top ten … Read more

A Tax and Spending Pledge? Where Do I Sign Up?

by David Safier (TASL) When I learned in Tucson Weekly that a group of concerned citizens was asking people to sign a Tax and Spending Pledge, my heart pounded and my hands shook. I couldn’t link to the Arizona Federation of Taxpayers website fast enough. Imagine my heartbreak when I discovered the group wants city … Read more

The Star’s Self Satire

by David Safier The Star indulged in self satire in today’s paper, but I’m the only one who knows it, so I want to share the moment with you. The Star printed my letter in today’s paper. The point of the letter is, The Star has studiously avoided publishing information about McCain’s questionable connections to … Read more

Nearly $2 Million Worth of TUSD Fixed Assets Missing in One Year

by David Safier

Tasl_sm(TASL) It’s amazing what you can learn when you attend an open meeting of a TUSD committee. Thursday I was the sole observer at the Tucson School Board’s Audit Committee meeting. Here’s what I found out:

• About $2 million in Fixed Assets — items whose value is somewhere between $500-1000 or higher — went missing from various sites — read, schools — around the district last year.

• The number of items missing varied wildly from school to school. One high school reported something like 500 of these high value items were missing. Another high school reported 6.

• For the past 17 years, this issue has not been looked at carefully by the District. The losses have been reported, then basically filed away.

• It’s unclear where the buck stopped, so to speak. The inventory lists came in to Asset Management, but whether A.M. sat on them, or whether they were reported to higher authorities and nothing was done, cannot be known unless the District looks into the matter.

The losses were discussed in the outside District Management Audit which was finished earlier this year and got a lot of press for getting the figures on the savings for school closures completely wrong. The Fixed Asset Management section begins on page 3-59. The missing items were mainly electronics stuff — computers, cameras, camcorders, projectors, etc. — though one Gator Tractor, 4×2, valued at $5,228, was listed.

According to the Audit Committee, the total value of the District’s fixed assets items is about $74 million, which means we’re talking about something in the order of a 2.5% loss. I don’t know how that ranks, whether it is high or low for school districts in general. But I do know if there are huge discrepancies between the number of items lost at different schools, that should immediately send up a red flag, and someone should figure out what’s going on. Maybe there’s a good reason why some schools appear to lose more items than others, but ignoring the problem won’t answer the troubling questions.

The TUSD Board meets today, Friday, to review the outside audit at 3:30pm in the Badger Room, Tucson Magnet High School, 400 S. Second Ave. The Audit Committee said it plans to submit a report about these fixed assets issues to the Board, but I don’t know if the report will be in the Board’s hands or if that item is on the agenda.

(Conflicted Emotions Disclosure below the fold.)