Chattanooga Times Free Press

Bill would pay parents for private school,

- BY TY TAGAMI

A floor leader for Gov. Brian Kemp has signed on to legislatio­n that would create a direct state payment for a limited number of Georgia students to attend private school and cover schooling expenses.

House Bill 301, introduced last week, would establish so-called “education scholarshi­p accounts” giving parents state money, not unlike school “vouchers” in other states.

Eligible students include anyone enrolled in a Georgia public school the prior year, a requiremen­t that wouldn’t apply to certain groups, such as lowincome families, the learning disabled or victims of bullying. Recipients would be entitled to the state portion of the funding their local school district gets per student, which on average is 54 percent of the total when counting local and federal dollars.

Students with disabiliti­es would be entitled to whatever their education program would have cost in the local school.

Recipient parents and guardians would have to sign an agreement promising to provide an education ”in at least the subjects of reading, grammar, mathematic­s, social studies, and science” and to use the money only on qualified educationa­l expenses, such as tuition, textbooks, tutoring, transporta­tion and technologi­cal devices.

The lead sponsor is Rep. Wes Cantrell, R-Woodstock. He has introduced such bills unsuccessf­ully in prior legislativ­e sessions. This time, though, the second co-signer is someone with an influentia­l ally: Rep. Jodi Lott, R-Evans, is a floor leader for Kemp, who campaigned for governor as a proponent of school choice.

Georgia already has a scholarshi­p subsidy program for private schools, but in that one the funding path is less direct from the state. Capped at $100 million a year after the Legislatur­e nearly doubled it last year, taxpayers “contribute” money to designated private schools through nonprofit organizati­ons and get their money back in a state tax credit.

Some of the money goes to schools with a religious affiliatio­n. A taxpayer lawsuit claiming this was unconstitu­tional failed to convince the Georgia Supreme Court, which issued a unanimous opinion in 2017 upholding the program. The court ruled the plaintiffs had no standing because the money from the tax credits was not public.

The current proposal would use state money, though.

School choice advocates favor such measures because they give kids a way out of neighborho­od schools that are not working for them and, they argue, improve education overall.

“Competitio­n can be a rising tide that lifts all boats,” the Georgia Public Policy Foundation, a conservati­ve research institutio­n, wrote in December.

Critics contend that such programs peel away the easiest students to educate while draining away money from constraine­d public school budgets.

The Profession­al Associatio­n of Georgia Educators, the largest teacher advocacy group in the state with nearly 100,000 members, has long opposed the tax credit program, likening them to vouchers despite the high court ruling. The associatio­n likely will go to war against House Bill 301, but Margaret Ciccarelli, the group’s legislativ­e affairs director, opened with diplomatic language about the bill.

“We have concerns about it and will be working with policymake­rs,” she said.

The legislatio­n caps participat­ion at half a percent of the state’s total enrollment, or fewer than 9,000 students. But that cap would rise over time.

Critics of vouchertyp­e programs complain private schools aren’t always held to the same accountabi­lity standards as public schools, which are mandated to give standardiz­ed state tests.

House Bill 301 would require participat­ing private schools to give scholarshi­p students nationally norm-referenced tests to be selected by the Governor’s Office of Student Achievemen­t, the agency that would oversee the program.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States