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    1. Tommyblockhead20 on

      Cool! Don’t know what to do with this info but it is very interesting and well visualized!

    2. previousinnovation on

      Wow. Surely Hawaii has some kind of smaller units to manage their schools?

    3. reallyjustizzy on

      I’ve only ever lived in Florida and I had no idea that having a 1:1 for district and county was the outlier in the US. Looks like only Florida, Maryland, West Virginia and Nevada have that 1:1

    4. PA resident in yellow. School districts are another layer of government here. They levy and collect their own property taxes (called school taxes) just like the township taxes your home (yes, there are effectively two property taxes). You pay taxes to five levels of government here: federal, state, county, school district, and township.

    5. Charlie2343 on

      Feel like the green-red color scales always implies that one is good and one is bad

    6. Oklahoma be WILD. I’d love to know the enrollment sizes of some of those districts where there are like 6 in a county – do they really need to be all independent??

    7. andrewinminn on

      IIRC there are some places in Arizona and California that have separate districts for elementary and high schools.

    8. We have 43 school districts and 130 municipalities in Allegheny County (Pittsburgh PA and suburbs.)

      Its a lot.

    9. Weird how it’s basically the south + Utah and Nevada. Why does the Mason Dixon line matter here?

    10. Escape_Force on

      One district per county sounds so alien, like a bureaucratic boondoggle for the sake of it.

    11. PomeloPepper on

      The school district for my home address is a different city. I’m about 4 miles from the city limits.

      It’s a weird combination. I live in City B. There’s a City B&C School District. I’m in City A School District.

    12. nymphrodell on

      Each town in Massachusetts has a school committee that runs its schools by default, though they can federate into superintendent unions and regional districts. In many places, elementary schools are run by a completely different body than middle and high-schools and are in completely different districts!

    13. Delicious_Oil9902 on

      Think we have 40 some independent school districts here in westchester county NY (population about 1 million)

    14. footballwr82 on

      Man the mason dixon is so prevalent here.

      Very surprised by Connecticut. I would’ve expected more red here with the amount of regional school districts we have

    15. There’s no reason for duplication of services. My mother grew up in a rural town in the Jackson Purchase (western KY) that never had segregated elementary or middle schools. They were certainly racist, but also a combination of poor and cheap enough to just not afford another two buildings just for the 300 total black students who lived there.

    16. So Hawaii has one school district statewide? Is that what I’m supposed to understand? That’s cool.

    17. Norwester77 on

      Washington has exactly one county that doesn’t share any school districts with a neighboring county.

      >!San Juan County, which consists entirely of islands that are not accessible by bridge!<

    18. AloysiusGrimes on

      Doesn’t the Hanover High district (NH/VT) cross state lines? Or is it separate districts sharing a school?

    19. Mississippi is rife with counties that have one big “city” and two districts: a district for the one city and district for everyone else. Almost invariably the county districts are poor and offer limited opportunities for their students, sometimes with just a single large k-12 school. But their property taxes are low and they have freedumb.

      The city district is usually much better, though I won’t always say “good” because the city levies an appropriate property tax to fund it.

    20. As a non American, can anyone explain what is a school district, and why do they exist? Where I’m from, you can enroll in any school you like, though most people choose one that is close by.

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