Las Vegas Review-Journal

How education charity can change lives

- JOHN STOSSEL John Stossel is author of “Give Me a Break: How I Exposed Hucksters, Cheats, and Scam Artists and Became the Scourge of the Liberal Media.”

GOVERNMENT-RUN schools fail kids. Teachers unions and education bureaucrat­s say, “We need more money.”

But America already spends a fortune on public schools.

My town, New York City, spends $28,000 per student — half-a-million dollars per classroom. Think about what you could do with that money: Hire five teachers? Pay for private tutors?

Where does the $28,000 go? No one really knows. When government­s run things, money vanishes into bureaucrac­y.

Some charter schools offer better educations for less. But NYC politician­s limit the number of charter schools. As a result, 48,000 kids wait on waitlists.

Fortunatel­y, some charities have stepped in to help.

My recent video features Student Sponsor Partners, or SSP, a nonprofit that helps low-income students go to Catholic schools.

Jeniffer Gutierrez, a parent in the Bronx, was ecstatic to get SSP’S acceptance letter. “I cried so hard when I received that letter because I knew it was an opportunit­y for my son. … High schools in the Bronx are violent. There’s no discipline. There’s no education.”

Her son Tyler didn’t feel safe in public school. “One of my best friends was shot and killed right next to me,” he recalls.

Many Catholic schools, even though they spend much less per student than government-run schools, do better. SSP sent Tyler to Cardinal Hayes High School, where, says Gutierrez, teachers helped her son “excel in life.” Tyler now attends St. John’s University on scholarshi­p. He and thousands of other SSP students are on a path to success.

That’s why I support SSP.

I’m not Catholic, but I’ve paid Catholic school tuition for dozens of kids and personally mentored five.

That mentoring makes

SSP different. SSP assigns an adult to every student. Often these relationsh­ips continue after students graduate.

Jorge Aguilar says his mentor “planted seeds in my brain that I could do big things in life.” Aguilar then became the first person in his family to go to college. Now he’s a doctor.

Eighty-five percent of SSP kids graduate high school, twice as many as their public school peers. Most are accepted by colleges.

All this happened because decades ago, philanthro­pist Peter Flanigan wanted to give parents an alternativ­e to government schools, hoping it would help at-risk teenagers escape poverty.

He started SSP. One of the first kids he helped was Debra Vizzi. “I had been homeless,” she tells me. “I left an abusive foster home and was sort of hopping around from shelter to shelter.”

She met Flanigan at a soup kitchen. He told her he’d pay for her to attend Cathedral High School.

“I was suspicious, especially as a kid on the street, but he was legit,” Vizzi laughs. “He paid $350 for me to go to one of the best high schools in New York City.”

Flanigan’s mentorship gave Vizzi more than a better education. “He helped me trust men, believe in people, helped me have a future. Even helped me become a mother later … something that I hadn’t had.”

Vizzi is now executive director of SSP.

This year, SSP has a thousand students attending different private high schools, helping more kids escape bad government-run schools.

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