All the credit is already maxed out from food being too much and wages not going up.
Maybe get a new 35% apr credit card? Probably have too many to get approved for another... luckily, because one more minimum monthly would break that camels back.
And if you're not bankrupt after that, it's time for payday loans cash advance/earned wage loans/early wage/payroll advances/whatever else they're calling themselves now to skirt regulations!
My state of Texas has a "Tax Free back to school weekend" that's mostly exploited by businesses to restock their office supplies and has virtually no impact on children in lower income families going to de-financed failing school districts.
Ohhhhhh... That's what it's for... Yeah I honestly don't really ever understand the tax free week in supplies when it's like 6 more dollars when the cost of supplies themselves and need to individually buy them are clearly the more glaring issue.
Of course it's something to help companies exploit and be supported more.
Hey at least you get the whole summer off work. And you have a nice 9-5 job that never bleeds into your evenings or weekends. Basically a glorified babysitter.
(I'm totally kidding. Teachers are insanely overworked and underpaid.)
It's frustrating because of how much of a lie this is and how persistently it endures. A three month long furlough isn't a vacation. Teachers routinely do work during this period, as part timers in the service sector or as summer school instructors at diminished pay (or as contractors in careers that pay better than education). And that's not even considering the teacher training and prep work that happens before the first day of class.
People aren't this clueless by accident, either. You've got a deliberately malicious rumor mill media that's designed to perpetuate a myth any actual teacher could disabuse people of.
Most schools have lists of must-haves for children going to them that parents have to buy. A lot of companies take advantage of that and jack up the price of those items. There are also a lot of those things that parents have to buy multiples of at the beginning of the year and hand over to the teacher for the student to have access to over the next 9 months.