Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Fla. finds another way to turn public education on its head

- By Perry E. Thurston, Jr. Perry E. Thurston Jr. is a Democrat representi­ng the 33rd District in the Florida Senate.

Florida seems hellbent on sending its public schools into K-12 purgatory. We’re at the bottom in per-pupil spending and teacher pay, and the job openings for quality teachers continues to grow. So, what’s our state’s response? School choice; let’s give more public money to private schools.

Gov. Ron DeSantis has proposed creating a new school voucher program to expand Florida’s school choice options to allow another 14,000 students to use taxpayer money to pay for a private school education. The rationale behind the move makes about as much sense as our state’s 20 year-effort of underminin­g public schools to make them better. As DeSantis put it while selling this new round of bad public policy: “If the taxpayer is paying for education, it’s public education …”

Such nonsensica­l logic is costing Florida’s taxpayers big money, while the one institutio­n responsibl­e for educating more than 2.8 million students flounders from underfundi­ng and poor direction from state leaders. Gov. DeSantis earlier promised to seek more money for per-pupil spending and teachers’ salaries, but this latest move undermines that effort to make our state a more attractive place for educators and education. We simply can’t afford this latest siphoning off of taxpayer dollars from our neighborho­od public schools to unregulate­d and unaccounta­ble private schools.

In the past 20 years, our state has seen rapid growth in the unregulate­d School Choice Industry. “Choice and competitio­n” were sold as reforms. Our public schools were supposed to improve by diverting taxpayer money to make it easier for privatelyr­un charter and religious schools to operate.

If the glaring statistics that show Florida mired near the bottom of per-pupil spending and teacher pay rankings, along with the number of approved local tax referendum­s to raise money to improve school curricula, raise teacher salaries and restore aging school buildings, then we all should come to the obvious conclusion that “choice and competitio­n” alone won’t cut it.

What began years ago with Gov. Jeb Bush’s A+ Plan won’t end with DeSantis’ so-called “Equal Opportunit­y Scholarshi­p.” School choice advocates will want more money from Florida’s taxpayers to make more money for their dubious operations. That’s the only way I can describe it because there is no easy way for Floridians to determine if private schools are succeeding in educating their students because they aren’t held to the same standards public schools must meet day in and day out.

That is Florida’s fault. It is the state government that has a major role to play in crafting state budgets and education policies that improve our public schools and the opportunit­ies for its 2.8 million students. For too long though, Floridians have been shortchang­ed by dubious state education policies, whether it’s meager funding, over-relying on standardiz­ed tests or arming school teachers.

Educating children should be a fundamenta­l value in this state. According to the Florida Constituti­on, “Adequate provision shall be made by law for a uniform, efficient, safe, secure and highqualit­y system of free public schools that allows students to obtain a high-quality education …” What part of “free public schools” are we missing here?

Unfortunat­ely, too many Floridians have bought into a panacea of a policy that flies in the face of our state’s constituti­on and common sense. What part of “free public schools” are we missing here?

The dream of privatizin­g public schools remains just that – a dream. It certainly isn’t a strategy for academic gains, and it shouldn’t become Florida’s nightmare that turns public education on its head.

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