Stockholm, Secaucus and...Teaneck?
A medium-sized town in Northern New Jersey offers its residents top notch public facilities and social services to rival those of a Scandinavian welfare state without a single municipal tax hike in the last eight years. What's wrong with this picture? Nothing at all! Would that we could enjoy all those benefits without reaching any deeper into our pockets!
Unfortunately, the town in question is Secaucus and not Teaneck. And yet, an article in today's Record compares Secaucus' generous childcare programs to those of, of all places, Teaneck.
Secaucus isn't the only town where the local government has found ways to provide affordable child-care options.
Teaneck's Recreation Department has had a long-standing preschool for 3- and 4-year-olds that costs about $225 a month, or nearly a quarter the cost of some private preschools.
This year there are already 20 children on the waiting list, and the preschool has expanded every session to a full day to meet the increasingly demanding schedule of parents, said Recreation Director Glenna Crockett.
Secaucus' extraordinary ability to cater to its 16,000 residents without raising taxes on them is the consequence of a $1.6 million windfall from a hotel occupancy tax and a massive ratables base from its many office buildings, industrial parks, and retail developments. Teaneck has the hotel occupancy tax, but not much else to alleviate the growing burden on its homeowners.
Should Teaneck be providing subsidized preschool programs that can necessarily serve only a tiny proportion of the population while the tax burden soars? Assuming this benefit costs something, it is hard to argue that this constitutes a good use of Teaneck's limited resources, no matter how wonderful the program may be for the lucky few who are admitted. As the Swedes have already found out, you cannot have it all.