The Los Angeles Times continued its investigation into the L.A. School District's purchases of iPads for high school students:
"Our youth deserve the best we can afford," Deasy said.
The tablet chosen by L.A. Unified — the iPad 4 with 32 gigabytes of storage — has since been discontinued as a retail product, but the price under L.A. Unified's contract with Apple Inc. was locked in.
What is worse is that in Los Angeles, the money used to buy the iPads came from construction bonds.
2 comments:
You have to admit that selling bonds to pay for normal operating expenditures is a brilliant scheme for the financiers and their school administrator butt puppets.
Luckily something like this could never happen in Joplin.
No, no one at Joplin would ever do such a thing as that. Wait--why are we cutting corners on the buildings? Funny, no one has denied that is happening, just as they have never denied any of the other charges presented in these blogs. If I were innocent of these crimes, I would openly address them before people start digging.
Too late.
Must be why the rats are fleeing the ship.
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