OP is just like everyone else who pretends to be a liberal until it affects them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is there really no tuition exhange/in state agreement for DC residents with any schools in MD or VA? I grew up in NY, which has a good state system, and there were certain schools near the border in NY and PA where students could apply from the other state and pay in state rates. Hard to imagine that DC has nothing with any of the schools right outside.
You don’t even have to imagine it because it’s true.
College education is not a priority for DC Mayor & Council. Graffiti on a major downtown street is. I am sure that will have as much of a positive impact on DC kids as a college education.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Doesn’t go nearly far enough. The income threshold is far too low, and the increase is pathetically inadequate.
It should kick in at $150k for singles, and $225k for couples filing jointly. And it should be a minimum of $6k/yr to start, and scale up rapidly from there.
This. OP is just like everyone else who pretends to be a liberal until it affects them.
Anonymous wrote:We moved to VA. It wasn’t just the taxes. It was also no school and no good system of public colleges.
Maybe the small town America should be dealing with their own homeless rather than shipping them off to the "liberal cities" and then disingenuously talking about those cities' homelessness problems. Many of DC's homeless aren't originally from DC.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is there really no tuition exhange/in state agreement for DC residents with any schools in MD or VA? I grew up in NY, which has a good state system, and there were certain schools near the border in NY and PA where students could apply from the other state and pay in state rates. Hard to imagine that DC has nothing with any of the schools right outside.
You don’t even have to imagine it because it’s true.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Charles Allen makes it sound like this proposal will end homelessness. Please every ward 6 voter remember to check in next year and see how that worked out. I guarantee this will have almost no impact on homelessness.
As every liberal big city reveals, the more money they shovel and homelessness, the more homeless people there are. Maybe cities should stop making it so easy for homelesss people to live in the city without a home?
Anonymous wrote:That’s how the WaPo headline writer phrased it.
I’m a DC resident, so obviously I’m not a “low tax” anti-public service zealot, or we’d live elsewhere. I like cities. I like public services. I support taxes and redistribution.
However, with the Trump tax change having eliminated deductibility of SALT, I do believe this is terrible policy.
For my family, we love DC and have many reasons to be here. But with each passing year of paying among the nation’s highest SALTs and not getting a deduction on our fed taxes, we will find it harder and harder to justify living in the District, vs. following the trend of NY’ers who have moved in shocking numbers to FL (sorry, but yuck) or NH… or Austin(?).
This is a major topic of (hard) conversations, among friends, and among the senior mgt of some of the professional service firm employers in the city (where employees/partners are agitating to move to lower tax jurisdictions). We want to stay, but will the city leaders understand that, depending on your fed tax bracket, we’ve all already experienced what is effectively a 50-67% increase in the true cost of our DC income taxes at the current tax rates?
All this by way of saying, the DC Council has their head in the sand about this issue impacting the relative attractiveness and competitiveness of DC in a new era of non-deductibility of SALT. Will be interesting to see if the Mayor does as well.
I suspect this post will get some pushback, but if we want our city to be attractive and competitive vs alternatives, we’d be better off having a city government that was a bit wiser to “state” of things.
Anonymous wrote:Doesn’t go nearly far enough. The income threshold is far too low, and the increase is pathetically inadequate.
It should kick in at $150k for singles, and $225k for couples filing jointly. And it should be a minimum of $6k/yr to start, and scale up rapidly from there.
Anonymous wrote:Is there really no tuition exhange/in state agreement for DC residents with any schools in MD or VA? I grew up in NY, which has a good state system, and there were certain schools near the border in NY and PA where students could apply from the other state and pay in state rates. Hard to imagine that DC has nothing with any of the schools right outside.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Charles Allen makes it sound like this proposal will end homelessness. Please every ward 6 voter remember to check in next year and see how that worked out. I guarantee this will have almost no impact on homelessness.
As every liberal big city reveals, the more money they shovel and homelessness, the more homeless people there are. Maybe cities should stop making it so easy for homelesss people to live in the city without a home?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Charles Allen makes it sound like this proposal will end homelessness. Please every ward 6 voter remember to check in next year and see how that worked out. I guarantee this will have almost no impact on homelessness.
As every liberal big city reveals, the more money they shovel and homelessness, the more homeless people there are. Maybe cities should stop making it so easy for homelesss people to live in the city without a home?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Charles Allen makes it sound like this proposal will end homelessness. Please every ward 6 voter remember to check in next year and see how that worked out. I guarantee this will have almost no impact on homelessness.
As every liberal big city reveals, the more money they shovel and homelessness, the more homeless people there are. Maybe cities should stop making it so easy for homelesss people to live in the city without a home?
Anonymous wrote:Charles Allen makes it sound like this proposal will end homelessness. Please every ward 6 voter remember to check in next year and see how that worked out. I guarantee this will have almost no impact on homelessness.