The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

Parents looking for ‘school freedom’ choose options

- Lowman Henry

As parents become more and more frustrated with school schedules disrupted by the COVID-19 pandemic, mask mandates, and left-wing indoctrina­tion such as Critical Race Theory being taught to their children, support for school choice options is on the rise.

There is no doubt public education, both K-12 and university level, is badly broken. Taxpayers continue to pour ever-increasing amounts of money into systems that gobble up funds, fail to yield improved outcomes, and then demand even more money.

Even worse, in an era when the spotlight is on racial equality, K-12 public education in Pennsylvan­ia traps minority youth in under-performing schools with no way out. That has given rise to a unique coalition of school choice advocates bringing together conservati­ves and many Black leaders — unified around the belief that the best way to level the playing field for people of all colors is to receive a quality education.

The Washington, D.C.based Club for Growth recently launched a National Campaign for School Choice. In so doing it commission­ed a nationwide poll. It found that re-branding the debate as “school freedom” and talking in terms of “school choice scholarshi­ps” resulted in a higher level of support and more accurately describes the movement.

The poll further found that there has been a 12% drop in overall satisfacti­on with the nation’s public schools since the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic. This has resulted in a five percent jump in overall support for school choice — school freedom — since 2015, and a 10-point surge among Democrats. When asked who is “at fault” for our faltering public school system poll respondent­s first blamed politician­s (70%), 53% placed the blame on union bosses.

Over the years there have been many legislativ­e efforts aimed at providing parents with more freedom to select the educationa­l option that is best for their child. The latest proposal is sponsored by State Rep. Andrew Lewis (RDauphin) and it would redirect billions of dollars in public school funding into individual scholarshi­p accounts for each child.

According to The Center Square, the Excellent Education for All Act would “allow families to use the roughly $6,000 per student the state pays to afford tuition at private, parochial and charter schools.” It also proposes some reforms to charter schools, bolsters tax credit scholarshi­p programs, and preserves some options that were developed to deal with the pandemic.

In introducin­g the bill Lewis said “Pennsylvan­ia is fortunate to have fantastic schools that come in different forms. If passed House Bill 1 would give families access to scholarshi­ps that give them more options.” Some progress toward that goal was made in the current fiscal year’s state budget. Lawmakers successful­ly increased the cap on the Educationa­l Improvemen­t Tax Credit Program (EITC) by $40 million. That program provides tax credits of up to $750,000 to businesses that donate money toward scholarshi­ps for private schools. It, however, is relatively small given the overall state basic education budget tops $7 billion.

The need to provide more flexibilit­y in education does not end at the K-12 level. Changing occupation­al needs, along with a smaller student base, have scrambled the market for higher education. The Pennsylvan­ia State System of Higher Education (PSSHE) is restructur­ing and merging some campuses due to fiscal challenges and declining enrollment. Interest in technical schools and community colleges is growing as students confront the skyrocketi­ng costs of a four-year degree.

To provide more flexibilit­y State Representa­tive Eric Nelson (R-Westmorela­nd) has introduced the Pennsylvan­ia College Voucher Program. The Center Square reports that this program would redirect more than $580 million state taxpayer dollars that are currently allocated exclusivel­y to the University of Pittsburgh, Temple University, and Penn State University directly to students in the form of grants that could be used at technical schools, community colleges, PSSHE schools, private colleges or major universiti­es.

The time has come to give students and parents the financial freedom to choose. We can do that by funding students rather than by funding school districts or specific institutio­ns of higher learning.

 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States