Chattanooga Times Free Press

School voucher plan stalls as legislatur­e enters final weeks

- BY MARTA W. ALDRICH

Tennessee Gov. Bill Lee’s push to create a statewide school voucher system is running out of time as Republican lawmakers work to reconcile significan­tly different proposals and iron out disagreeme­nts over student testing requiremen­ts.

After sailing through education committees and building early momentum, the bill has stalled for three weeks in finance committees — without public discussion.

GOP leaders hope to complete the 2024 session by April 26. That leaves two weeks to approve a state budget, decide on dozens of more bills and seek consensus on one of the biggest education proposals of Lee’s administra­tion.

Senate Education Committee Chair Jon Lundberg, R-Bristol, and House K-12 Subcommitt­ee Chair Kirk Haston, R-Lobelville, have been key players during weeks of private negotiatio­ns.

“We’re still working on it,” Lundberg said Thursday as he emerged from the Senate chamber. He declined to take questions from reporters.

Privately, several Republican lawmakers have told Chalkbeat the governor’s statewide voucher plan is sputtering and may not have the votes needed to pass in their respective chambers, especially if negotiator­s tinker too much with the original proposals.

But publicly, the governor and GOP leadership sound hopeful.

“It feels like they’re close,” Lee told reporters after the legislatur­e recessed for the week. “I’m very encouraged.”

Asked about sticking points, Lt. Gov. Randy McNally, the Republican Senate speaker from Oak Ridge, said the Senate wants to make sure voucher recipients take some type of annual state-approved test that can be used to compare and rank students in order to gauge the program’s academic effectiven­ess. The House version has no state testing requiremen­ts for students who accept vouchers.

House Speaker Cameron Sexton, R-Crossville, said his chamber is “adamant” that any school choicerela­ted package includes a provision to reduce student testing in public schools. He also indicated the State Collaborat­ive on Reforming Education, an education research and advocacy group known as SCORE and founded by former U.S. Sen. Bill Frist, is being consulted as negotiatio­ns progress.

“We’ve had a lot of conversati­ons this week,” Sexton said about talks between the House and Senate. “So we’re hopeful we can get there.”

Lee’s Education Freedom Scholarshi­p Act, projected to cost $144 million in its first year, would provide taxpayer funding to up to 20,000 K-12 students to pay toward private school tuition. The governor has set aside that amount for the program in his proposed budget.

The Senate’s version also would allow public school students to enroll in any district, even if they’re not zoned for it, provided there’s enough space and teaching staff.

The House’s larger and more expensive version includes a long list of enticement­s aimed at public school supporters, including reducing testing time for students, increasing the state’s contributi­on toward health insurance costs for teachers, requiring fewer evaluation­s for high-performing teachers and giving districts extra money to help with their building costs.

Democrats in the legislatur­e oppose school vouchers, even while supporting many of the public school provisions in the House bill.

Caucus Chair John Ray Clemmons said he’s glad to see the bill’s progress slow, but added Democrats are staying vigilant as the two-year session moves toward adjournmen­t.

“Deals get cut late at night,” said the Nashville lawmaker. “I would encourage citizens of Tennessee who truly value public schools to sleep with one eye open.”

Meanwhile, lawmakers are anxious to head home during an election year. All 99 seats in the House and half of the Senate’s 33 seats are on the ballot this year. Until the session ends, incumbents can’t begin accepting campaign contributi­ons. And Republican members in both chambers don’t appear interested in taking a stance on the voucher bill during an election year if the measure is unlikely to succeed.

More private talks by Republican leadership are planned for the weekend.

The bill is scheduled to be taken up Monday by the Senate Finance Committee and Tuesday by the House Finance Subcommitt­ee. McNally said the outcomes there will signal the proposal’s chances.

“One of the keys will be as it moves through the finance committee in both houses,” McNally said. “I think if you see that, you probably know that things are going fairly well.”

You can track the legislatio­n on the General Assembly’s website.

Marta Aldrich is a senior correspond­ent and covers the statehouse for Chalkbeat Tennessee. Contact her at maldrich@chalkbeat.org.

Chalkbeat is a nonprofit news site covering educationa­l change in public schools.

 ?? STAFF PHOTO BY MATT HAMILTON ?? Gov. Bill Lee speaks Monday at the Tennessee Department of Transporta­tion office in Chattanoog­a.
STAFF PHOTO BY MATT HAMILTON Gov. Bill Lee speaks Monday at the Tennessee Department of Transporta­tion office in Chattanoog­a.

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