Yuma Sun

Education Secretary pushes school vouchers at Arizona event

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SCOTTSDALE — U.S. Education Secretary Betsy DeVos on Thursday touted her $5 billion plan to fund tuition for private school students, telling a room of supportive parents and lobbyists that it would improve the quality of education.

DeVos praised Arizona’s devotion to school choice programs that provide public funding for private and charter schools.

“Arizona is a real leader in giving parents and students the kind of freedom that they need to find their right fit for education, and I’m so grateful for the example that you are setting here,” DeVos said, seated next to Republican Arizona Gov. Doug Ducey on the sidelines of a conference of conservati­ve legislator­s.

DeVos is pushing her plan to create “Education Freedom Scholarshi­ps” allowing businesses and individual­s to get 100% federal tax credits for donations to scholarshi­p-granting groups. The Republican is a major backer of school vouchers and formerly led the American Federation for Children, which promotes the programs in Arizona and other states.

Arizona has a similar program that uses tax credits to fund private school tuition scholarshi­ps. It also has an “Empowermen­t Scholarshi­p Account” school voucher program that takes state general fund money and funnels it to more than 6,000 private or home-schooled students.

Arizona public school teachers revolted in 2018 and persuaded voters to block an expansion of the state’s school voucher program enacted by the GOP-controlled

Legislatur­e and endorsed by Ducey. Voters rejected the expansion by a nearly 2-1 margin. Tens of thousands of teachers also went on strike that year over low pay and school funding and won big pay raises from Ducey and Arizona’s Republican-dominated Legislatur­e after he had rejected them earlier.

Despite the voucher program rejection at the ballot box, Ducey praised the program and urged DeVos to take it nationwide.

“Empowermen­t scholarshi­p accounts work and there’s no better time to scale this successful model to the rest of the country,” he said.

DeVos says her new $5 billion tax credit program allows parents to choose the best education for their children. Democrats pronounced it dead on arrival in Congress, but DeVos hasn’t given up.

Her plan would allow states to design their own programs or use the credits in existing programs, with parents allowed to use the funds for education costs, including school tuition, tutoring, special education costs and home schooling.

Public education backers have said vouchers and private school tax credit plans drain tax dollars that should support public schools.

Later Thursday, DeVos carried a similar message to a conference held by the American Legislativ­e Exchange Council, a group of conservati­ve lawmakers, business interests and others on the right who promote the advance of conservati­ve legislatio­n. The group known as ALEC drew protesters from several liberal groups and teachers at the start of the threeday event on Wednesday.

“Families in every state need more opportunit­ies,” DeVos said, adding President Donald Trump’s administra­tion will back efforts in the states to expand school choice.

She also criticized the existence of her own agency, saying education should be left to the states.

“Federal taxpayers contribute less than 9% of total education funding in this country,” DeVos said. “So why is a federal agency of more than 3,000 employees needed to administer it at all?”

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? U.S. EDUCATION SECRETARY BETSY DEVOS SPEAKS at a roundtable discussion on school choice with Arizona community leaders, educators, parents and students Thursday in Scottsdale. DeVos talked about her $5 billion plan to fund tuition for private and charter school students, prior to addressing the American Legislativ­e Exchange Council.
ASSOCIATED PRESS U.S. EDUCATION SECRETARY BETSY DEVOS SPEAKS at a roundtable discussion on school choice with Arizona community leaders, educators, parents and students Thursday in Scottsdale. DeVos talked about her $5 billion plan to fund tuition for private and charter school students, prior to addressing the American Legislativ­e Exchange Council.

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