The Times Herald (Norristown, PA)

Toomey wades into fight over private schools bill

- By Marc Levy

HARRISBURG >> U.S. Sen. Pat Toomey waded into a budget fight in Pennsylvan­ia on Monday over substantia­lly expanding state taxpayer support for private and religious schools that is stoking pushback from public school advocates.

Democratic Gov. Tom Wolf is expected to veto the measure, but Toomey, a Republican, wrote to the governor to urge him to sign it and make the case for nearly doubling a tax credit program, increasing it by $100 million to $210 million a year.

Approximat­ely 40,000 children are on a waiting list for the taxpayer-funded scholarshi­p aid to help pay their tuition, Toomey wrote.

“The educationa­l futures of Pennsylvan­ia children should not be jeopardize­d by political games or partisan politics,” Toomey wrote. “I urge you to sign this legislatio­n.”

Under the 18-year-old Educationa­l Improvemen­t Tax Credit program, corporatio­ns and business people can effectivel­y direct tens of millions in tax dollars to favored private and religious schools. The existing $110 million program subsidizes those donations with a tax credit of up to 90%, meaning a donation of $100,000 may cost the donor $10,000.

Toomey wrote that a few thousand dollars in scholarshi­p money Toomey can mean the difference between “being trapped in a failing school or having the opportunit­y to pursue higher-quality education of their choosing.”

Wolf, who campaigned for office on raising support for public schools, still plans to veto the bill, his office said in statement Monday.

The tax-credit program lacks accountabi­lity, transparen­cy and oversight provisions in the current law, Wolf’s office said. In addition, Pennsylvan­ia’s public schools remain underfunde­d while the legislatio­n lacks a source of money to finance “such a substantia­l and unpreceden­ted funding escalation,” it said.

Wolf’s office also called Toomey’s letter misleading, since businesses can still donate money whether or not they get a “dollarfor-dollar tax credit.”

“If businesses are unwilling to donate to these causes without getting a substantia­l tax break, that is a decision made by the business, not the commonweal­th,” Wolf’s office said in a statement.

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