Miami Herald (Sunday)

Is Florida trying to destroy public schools in the name of parental choice? Sure looks like it

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Florida could soon have two separate and unequal school systems. One would be regulated by strict state laws on curriculum, testing, student performanc­e, school grades, safety and even on how teachers can discuss race, gender and sexual orientatio­n.

The other gets to slide by under the motto: “The fewer regulation­s, the better.” Those schools don’t have to be accredited by an outside organizati­on, teachers don’t have to be certified and curriculum requiremen­ts are lax. If those schools ignore evolution to teach creationis­m, it’s not the state’s business, yet taxpayers are still paying for them.

That system already exists, at a small, albeit growing, scale thanks to Florida’s schoolvouc­her programs, which provide scholarshi­ps for students to attend private schools. Promoted heavily by former Gov. Jeb Bush, vouchers were once touted as a lifeline for low-income students in failing schools or who were struggling in a traditiona­l education setting and otherwise could not afford a better education.

Eligibilit­y was limited by factors such as income or disability status, but has been expanded in recent years.

Now the Legislatur­e wants to put vouchers on steroids and make them available to every K-12 student in Florida, whether low-income, middle class or affluent — more than 2.8 million who are in public schools. Students would be eligible for an education savings accounts that could be used for private or home schooling, tutoring and textbooks.

The state, essentiall­y, would leave it up to private entities, with little oversight, the responsibi­lity of educating its citizens. Meanwhile, that’s money being siphoned from school districts, which have had to turn to their own communitie­s in places like Miami-Dade County for help funding essential things like teacher raises.

Republican­s have discovered that “parental rights” will sell almost anything, from the law critics call “Don’t Say Gay” to Gov. DeSantis’ crackdown on classroom discussion­s about racism. It’s likely the voucher expansion will be successful, given House Bill 1 is a must-pass for House Speaker Paul Renner.

THE FINE PRINT

As usual, the devil is in the details. Republican­s have given zero informatio­n on how much this will cost taxpayers. The Herald reported the legislatio­n is being fast-tracked but, “The bill would have an indetermin­ate fiscal impact,” according to a legislativ­e staff analysis. That would depend on how many students participat­e and where lawmakers set per-student spending.

Perhaps the opaque scope of this proposal is not happenstan­ce. But the Herald’s recent reporting put its potential ramtrying to erase a past that all Americans, including Floridians, must come to terms with if this nation is to heal and to make sure it never happens again.

High school students need to learn about Rosewood, lynchings, the genocide of Native Americans and the history of African Americans in this country since 1619. Like those German students, our high school students deserve to know the truth and not have it suppressed for political grandstand­ing.

This is not critical race theory; it is American history.

– Hal Cohen, High Springs

OPEN PRIMARIES

The Jan. 27 letter “Democrats should not give us GOP lite,” calls for Democrats to nominate young progressiv­es to run for office in Florida, where they will be certain to lose. The problem with Florida politics, and the current Republican strangleho­ld of our state government, is the state’s primary election system.

The system disenfranc­hises Independen­t voters, who make up about a third of Florida’s eligible voters, and ensures that the most extreme candidates from both parties go head-tohead.

Effort should be made to reform this system and allow all voters to participat­e in a primary, ensuring that centrists capable of practicali­ty and bipartisan­ship will run. This also will give Floridians better candidates and a true choice.

BOB MCFARLIN

ifications into perspectiv­e:

There are 382,000 students who attend private schools or are home-schooled in Florida. Currently, they do not receive any state money. If only 25% of them took advantage of the program, and those currently in it remained, the cost could reach $600 million and, as the program grows, $4 billion within the first five years, based on calculatio­ns provided to the Herald by Norín Dollard, a senior research analyst at Florida Policy Institute, a left-leaning think tank.

Public schools could lose $2.4 billion to $3.4 billion by the 2026-27 school year, the Institute estimates.

That’s a big chunk of change, so the justificat­ion for expanding vouchers should go beyond the argument for more “school choice.” It is undeniable that many parents are happy with the education their kids get on vouchers, as surveys show, but the effectiven­ess of the program has been hard to measure, as the Orlando Sentinel reported.

Students don’t have to take the same standardiz­ed tests as they would in public schools, and private schools don’t have to disclose graduation rates to the public. The data gathered in different studies points to mixed results. One study by the Urban Institute often touted by schoolchoi­ce advocates showed that voucher students were more likely to go to college, but that the majority of them stayed in the program for less than two

– Joanne Miles,

Hollywood

BASIC TENET

years. Another analysis required by the state found in 2020 that voucher students made as much progress as expected, but that schools with a large number of voucher students saw negative progress, the Sentinel reported.

RULES ARE DIFFERENT

Not all private schools are the same. They can run the gamut, from the well-establishe­d ones known for their special programs to others that have popped up with the single purpose of milking voucher program dollars.

A system like Florida’s allows this discrepanc­y to fester.

Empowering parents, as Republican­s say they are, does little for families when they realize they have enrolled their child in a private school with little academic rigor or in administra­tive disarray. Just ask the parents who showed up to drop off their children at Allapattah Wynwood School in January only to find out the school shut down until further notice because of a feud within the family that runs it, CBS4 reported. Or take Miami’s Centner Academy, whose owners,

If critical race theory teaches only the sordid past of racial injustice but ignores the tremendous progress that has been made, along with the opportunit­ies America provides through education and hard work, then Gov. Ron DeSantis is right to ban the subject from our educationa­l facilities.

– Larry Solomon,

West Kendall

DOCUMENT INSANITY

When we heard that our twice-impeached former president had classified documents, we were horrified but not surprised. When we heard that he told the National Archives he wouldn’t return them because “they’re mine,” I am sure most people laughed at the outrageous­ness.

Then, when we found

MONICA R. RICHARDSON

based on misinforma­tion, told staff not to get vaccinated for COVID-19. Or the schools that took school vouchers while rejecting LGBTQ students, as the Orlando Sentinel reported in 2020. The U.S. Supreme Court last year blasted the door open for vouchers to fund religious schools.

That’s not to say that vouchers don’t have a place in our education system. Arguing for their abolition at this point would not only be foolish given Florida’s direction, and also unsympathe­tic to the parents who credit them with saving their child from a failing public school.

But when vouchers were introduced, they were meant to supplement public education for students with particular needs, not replace it. The latter appears to be the intent of HB 1.

Providing good public K-12 education to all is still a hallmark of a democracy. It is the duty of the state and written into the Florida Constituti­on. We doubt that Florida can achieve that goal when it’s funding two systems with unequal sets of rules and expectatio­ns. out that super-clean choir boy President Biden had some, it felt weird. Now, it’s goody-two-shoes Mike Pence, who also had some documents.

What is going on? If the documents are so sacred, then why is the National Archives so lax about protecting them?

Without Donald Trump’s craziness, we would have never known. So, thanks, Donald . . . sort of.

– Jeff Haller, Cutler Bay

INONEEAR...

Re the Jan. 27 letter “Democrats should not give us GOP lite:” Charismati­c young progressiv­es who will address the concerns of the electorate is an oxymoron. By definition, “progressiv­es” do no such thing.

– Dave Schaublin,

Key Largo

DANA BANKER IN POOR HEALTH

May the juxtaposit­ion of the two articles on page 6A on Jan. 27 — “Rick Scott to run for reelection in Senate” and “Florida leads nation in Obamacare enrollment as people clamor for health insurance” — be the proverbial writing on the wall.

Floridians are 7% of the nation’s population but make up 20% of new enrollment in Obamacare, a low-cost necessity for many.

Sen. Rick Scott, on the other hand, is the lead author of Republican proposals to defund Medicare and slash Social Security, because, he says, the country can’t afford them. Floridians clamor for affordable healthcare while our senator proposes cutting it.

Obamacare and Medicare are not the “concierge” healthcare the wealthy can afford.

But if cutting back those basic plans, including Social Security, helps fund tax cuts, will Scott then think we’ll all be able to afford concierge healthcare?

– Mary Zins,

Miami

AN AWAKENING

In reading the Miami Herald’s many articles about Gov. DeSantis, one question raced through my mind over and over: What is woke?

Then I realized it must stand for White Ones Know Everything.

Since our governor has taken office, every move he has made has been for him and people just like him.

If that’s the definition, then I will not be woke. All men and women deserve equal rights and treatment.

– Diane Rosenberg,

Miami

NANCY ANCRUM

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 ?? Miami Herald ?? In 2021, Centner Academy, a private school in Miami, cautioned that teachers and staff who got vaccinated for COVID-19 would risk losing their jobs.
Miami Herald In 2021, Centner Academy, a private school in Miami, cautioned that teachers and staff who got vaccinated for COVID-19 would risk losing their jobs.

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