Chattanooga Times Free Press

Alabama lawmakers advance voucher bill that would give parents $6,900

- BY KIM CHANDLER

MONTGOMERY, Alabama — Alabama lawmakers on Wednesday advanced a voucher proposal that would give parents up to $6,900 per child each year to pay for private school or homeschool­ing expenses.

The Senate Finance and Taxation Education Committee voted 12-3 to send the bill to the Senate floor after lawmakers added a $50 million annual spending cap for the program to limit the loss to the public education budget.

The bill would give parents up to $6,900 per child through education savings accounts to pay for private school tuition, textbooks, home-schooling expenses, tutoring services and extracurri­cular activities, including sports and arts.

The legislatio­n is part of a wave of Republican proposals across the country promoting education options, ranging from vouchers to expanded charter school offerings, as alternativ­es to traditiona­l public schools.

Republican Sen. Larry Stutts, the bill’s sponsor, said the legislatio­n would allow parents the “freedom to make the best decision for their children.” He argued that the purpose of the tax dollars is to educate children and that it doesn’t have to be done in a public school.

“We’re last in education in just about every measurable category, and I’m tired of being last. … I think parents are ultimately responsibl­e for their children’s education, and when you put parents in charge, things change,” Stutts said.

Opponents argued the plan would drain money from public schools while benefiting parents who are likely already choosing private or home-schooling. They also argued that private schools and homeschool­ing do not have the same curriculum and testing standards placed on public schools.

“We do think parents have a right to choose something different, they just don’t have a right to ask Alabama taxpayers to pay for it,” Sally Smith, executive director of the Alabama Associatio­n of School Boards, told reporters after the committee vote.

Smith said a student could “basically practice tennis all day” under the bill.

“We are opening up the treasury coffers and saying, ‘Reach your hand in there and get whatever you want out of it,’ said Sen. Rodger Smitherman, D-Birmingham.

Stutts insisted that parents are “ultimately accountabl­e.”

The $50 million price cap was added after some lawmakers expressed concerns about cost. The Legislativ­e Services Agency estimated the original proposal would cost the education budget about $570 million each year if 5% of eligible public school students participat­ed.

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