by now most people have heard all about how my wonderful Senator
Santorum was making the Penn Hills school district pay for his children to go to a cyber charter school. this cost the school district about $38,000 a year. he just decided to home school his children instead, but the teachers at the charter school offered to teach his kids for free. ok scandal over right?
well not really. there was a great
editorial in the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette today.
The two-bedroom house that the Santorum children called home for education purposes and that gives Mr. and Mrs. Santorum the right to vote in Pennsylvania lacks an occupancy permit. And the property tax break from the homestead exemption claimed by the Santorums on the Penn Hills house is allowed under law only if the dwelling is their "permanent home."
so let me get this right, he forced a school district to pay for his kids to go to school, based on his ownership of a house that isnt legally allowed to be lived in. and he is breaking the law claiming a property tax break. loveley. this should piss off the hard working people of W. PA.
It's a strange case of political turnabout. In his initial House race against Rep. Doug Walgren in 1990, challenger Santorum attacked the incumbent from Mt. Lebanon for buying a house and raising his children in McLean, Va. Now Rick Santorum of Leesburg, Va., is saying that he is and he isn't a resident of Pennsylvania.
Well, which is it?
good question. this better come back to bite you in the ass in '06.
All of which begs a much bigger question: Is Rick Santorum R-Pa. or R-Va.? No one should represent Pennsylvania in the U.S. Senate because he once lived here or because he visits all 67 counties every year. A traveling salesman can do that.
Article I of the U.S. Constitution says, "No person shall be a Senator ... who shall not, when elected, be an Inhabitant of that State for which he shall be chosen." Rick Santorum last won election in November 2000, when he owned the house at 111 Stephens Lane in Penn Hills plus a house in Virginia. Where he was an "inhabitant" at the time only he can say.
He faces re-election in 2006, but if that election were held today, the two-term Republican would be hard-pressed to convince voters that he inhabits a house on Stephens Lane. Sure, he and his wife pay taxes on the house. They also use the address for voter registration, but so do two other people. When a Post-Gazette reporter visited the house last Friday, a young man came to the door and declined to comment. He wasn't Rick Santorum.
so let me get this straight, Rick, his wife, the six kids, the unknown couple all "live" in a 2 bedroom house? thats what i thought.