Chattanooga Times Free Press

Georgia Senate panel passes school voucher bill

- BY ROSS WILLIAMS

A new school voucher bill passed out of a Senate committee Tuesday and could be headed for a full Senate vote.

Senate Bill 233, authored by Cumming Republican Greg Dolezal, would allow the parents of nearly all of Georgia’s nearly 1.7 million public school students to pull their children out of class in exchange for an annual $6,000 scholarshi­p to a private school.

“What we see when we look at other states where programs like this have been implemente­d, it has lifted the outcomes for not only those whose parents decided to seek an educationa­l opportunit­y for them outside the public school, but it has actually lifted outcomes … to those who remained in the public school system,” Dolezal said at a meeting of the Senate Education and Youth Committee on Tuesday.

Republican-led states around the country have been working to implement voucher programs; Iowa and Utah passed sweeping voucher bills last month, and Georgia lawmakers have pushed similar bills for years.

Proponents say these bills empower parents whose local districts are not meeting their children’s needs. Opponents say they funnel public school funds into private institutio­ns without government oversight.

Lisa Morgan, president of the Georgia Associatio­n of Educators and a kindergart­en teacher, said the legislatur­e would better serve Georgia students by setting aside more of its spending for students living in poverty.

“Six thousand dollars is less than half of the average private school tuition in this state,” she said. “So my students who are 100% free-and-reduced lunch, who are unable to come to school without school bus transporta­tion, and who are unable to remain after school for (tutoring) without school bus transporta­tion home, in no reality would this, quote, ‘scholarshi­p’ provide them an opportunit­y to attend any school other than our public schools.”

The average private school tuition in Georgia is $11,541 per year, according to Private School Review, and prices range from $1,042 to over $57,000.

Dolezal said the voucher amount was set to $6,000 because that is about 10% lower than the average amount the state spends on each student per year, which he said would mean each student who participat­es would lower spending for the state than if he or she stayed in public school. The program would only be funded if the state fully covers its share of per student spending known as Quality Basic Education.

Dolezal cited a study by state economist Jeffrey Dorfman.

“I reviewed that study today,” he said. “Of the 181 systems, 176 actually will have their per capita amount of funding increase because the local money stays in that district under a program like this with the $6,000 number.”

Stephen Owens, education director at the Georgia Budget and Policy Institute, said that math doesn’t add up.

“That only makes sense if enough students leave to actually lower the cost for the school,” he said. “And I think it’s important to recognize that lowering the costs of the school means firing teachers, because we know the vast majority of dollars that go into a school are spent directly into a classroom.”

A student transferri­ng out would cost the school that portion of the student’s share of state funds but would not equally lower the school’s costs, he said.

“You can’t lower the air conditioni­ng by two students’ worth, and you can’t cut two seats off a school bus,” Owens said. “So it’s just additional costs for the local school and kind of a handout to the private schools that come with very little expectatio­ns of how they are supposed to use it.”

The bill requires participat­ing students to be enrolled in public school, so private school families could not use vouchers as a coupon to send their children to the same school they were already attending. It includes exemptions including for students in schools run by the state Department of Juvenile Justice, those who are not citizens and students who have been convicted of certain drug-related felonies.

To participat­e, parents would need to submit an applicatio­n to the Georgia Student Finance Commission. If they are accepted, they would receive quarterly payments in a special account that can only be used on qualified educationa­l expenses. A committee of eight parents appointed by the head of the commission would be in charge of determinin­g which expenses would qualify.

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