So if your neighborhood has freshly paved streets or a shiny new park, that means you get a reduced head count for your local fire station?
I don't think the funds should be fungible in that manner.
I am not going that far. But if the cities DPW handles both trash collection and graffiti removal, I have no problem with different neighborhoods each using their limited DPW funds in different ways.
This thread reminds me of an incident from high school:
A black activist from the urban city next to my suburban town was making a huge stink about the inequities of the two school systems, including that despite my school being fourth the size inner city school my school had 3 AP English classes to the other schools only one. Could this fact be related to another statistic: that 1/3 of the kids in the city high school were in ESL, while my town had several elementary aged kids in ESL but due to the combined effort of the school and PARENTS absolutely none in the upper grades? (A question only pondered in an opinion piece in my high school newspaper but nowhere else.) The editorial writer was born in Cambodia moved my town in 1st grade knowing only 6 words of English. Two weeks after they moved here his parents barred the speaking of anything but English in the house until all the kids were out of ESL and in mainstream English. He was now a senior and getting an A in AP English. Over 60% of the ESL students in the urban school were born in the USA and over 30% were second generation or later.
Another "FACT" about how the schools got disparate treatment was the desks & lockers. Photos were shown of the student desks and lockers. One set looked like they were battered destroyed and about 100 years old, the other set looked practically new.
This second poin bothered one of my classmates ( and as an inspiring investigative reporter and using the freedom of information act she did some research.) Here are the facts she uncovered: the lockers in the suburban schools were 12 years old, the lockers in the urban school 7. The average age of the desks in the suburban school 8, in the urban school 3. She also uncovered a wide disparity in the level of enforcement regarding school vandalism.
This and more about the actually funding allocations were published in my high school's newspaper on the front page.
The original allegations made the front page of the local paper and the lead story on all the local TV stations. My classmates investigation made none of the TV stations and was got a small article buried inside in which the newspaper said something to the effect of, "a student a XXX is alleging but we have been unable to independently verify" this despite the fact she provided all the media outlets with photocopies of the FOIA reports she had obtained.
When the adviser of school paper contacted the various media outlets about the lack of coverage of the follow up report most ignored him, but one told him the truth, "if we pay attention to her report we will be accused of being racist." The lack of news converge was the lead story in the high school newspaper the following month, but noticed nowhere else.