Chattanooga Times Free Press

Gov. Kemp signs school voucher bill into law

- BY JEFF AMY

ATLANTA — Proclaimin­g that “education is truly the great equalizer,” Gov. Brian Kemp signed a law Tuesday that will give up to $6,500 a year to some Georgia families to pay for private school tuition or home-schooling expenses.

It’s a victory for the Republican governor, whose support helped push a bill across the finish line that failed in 2023, delivering a priority that had eluded conservati­ve activists for years. The achievemen­t burnishes Kemp’s conservati­ve credential­s if he runs for the U.S. Senate or president in the future. The Georgia effort is part of a nationwide GOP wave favoring education savings accounts.

Kemp signed other education-related bills Tuesday, including one requiring parents to give permission before children younger than 16 could create social media accounts. Similar measures have been blocked in other states by legal challenges.

Kemp portrayed Senate Bill 233, the Georgia Promise Scholarshi­p, as part of an “all of the above” strategy that also supports traditiona­l public schools, noting teacher pay raises, increased school security spending and efforts to help children read better. But he said parents should take the lead in deciding how children learn.

“We know it’s not the government’s role to dictate to families what the best choice is for their child,” Kemp said. “It is our job to support them in making that decision.”

Opponents argue the voucher program will subtract resources from public schools, even as other students remain behind.

“This bill robs the poorest students in Georgia’s poorest schools of the funding they need,” said Lisa Morgan, president of the Georgia Associatio­n of Educators, one of the state’s largest teacher groups.

The bill would provide $6,500 education savings accounts to students leaving public schools that rank in Georgia’s bottom 25% for academic achievemen­t. That money could be spent on private school tuition, home-schooling supplies, therapy, tutoring or even early college courses for high school students.

The program won’t begin handing out money until the 2025-2026 school year, and lawmakers will have to agree next year on how much money to allocate. Spending would be limited to 1% of the $14.1 billion that Georgia spends on its K-12 school funding formula, or $141 million. That could provide more than 21,000 scholarshi­ps. Eligible students are supposed to have attended a low-performing public school for at least two consecutiv­e semesters, or be about to enter kindergart­en at such a school.

Students from households with incomes of less than four times the federal poverty level would be prioritize­d. Four times the federal poverty level is about $100,000 for a family of three.

Georgia already gives vouchers for special education students in private schools and $120 million a year in income tax credits for donors to private school scholarshi­p funds.

Kemp also signed Senate Bill 351, which would as of July 1, 2025, require children younger than 16 to have their parents’ explicit permission to create social media accounts.

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