
Wall Street Went To Homeroom And Stole The Whiteboard with David I Backer
Varn Vlog
Outro
Varn closes the episode, shares show links and Patreon information, and credits music and production.
What if the real story of American education isn’t test scores or culture wars, but air you can breathe, roofs that don’t leak, and the invisible money pipes that decide who gets both? We sit down with David I. Backer, associate professor of education policy and author of As Public as Possible, to follow the cash from property taxes to Wall Street and back again—and to sketch a better way forward.
We start with how school finance became hyperlocal. Once, statewide property taxes aimed at broad access; over time, home rule and municipal boundaries pulled control downward. That shift tied school quality to real estate markets, creating districts that can tax less and spend more next to neighbors who tax more and get less. State aid helps unevenly, federal support is thin, and court victories often stall when legislatures refuse to act. Then there’s the four-trillion-dollar municipal bond market. Districts borrow for buildings, HVAC, security, and disaster repairs, paying fees and interest that quietly shape decisions about class sizes, salaries, and programs. Credit ratings become a cudgel, and information asymmetry leaves public officials outgunned by financial intermediaries.
Facilities emerge as the missing protagonist. Decades of reform ignored basics like ventilation, temperature, and mold. Data shows over half of schools need significant repairs, and climate stress—from floods to heat to earthquakes—raises the stakes while schools double as community shelters. We explore how costs balloon through compliance, legal mandates, healthcare premiums, pension liabilities, and security measures, all while teachers shoulder unfunded social work. Against that backdrop, David outlines practical options: decarbonize and modernize buildings, revive low-cost public lending modeled on the Fed’s pandemic facility, reform Title I allocations, and create a national investment authority to finance public goods. We dig into tax-base sharing from the Twin Cities, regional joint authorities that share both revenue and debt risk, and even pension funds underwriting school bonds to keep value in public hands.
This is a map for organizing as much as policy. Cross district lines, learn how the money actually moves, and translate moral urgency into precise demands that land where decisions are made. If schools mirror society, then changing the money can change what they reflect—safer, greener, and truly public. If this conversation sparked ideas, follow David at “School Daves,” share this episode, and leave us a review so more people can find it.
Musis by Bitterlake, Used with Permission, all rights to Bitterlake
Crew:
Host: C. Derick Varn
Intro and Outro Music by Bitter Lake.
Intro Video Design: Jason Myles
Art Design: Corn and C. Derick Varn
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