Well, shit. There are no pro-public education candidates for governor in Pennsylvania.
Josh Shapiro is for vouchers.
In an interview with the Patriot News, Shapiro said, "And I’m for making sure we add scholarships like lifeline scholarships to make sure that that’s additive to their education. That it gives them other opportunities...to be able to help them achieve success”
Nor is his support an interview bobble. From his campaign website:
Josh favors adding choices for parents and educational opportunity for students and funding lifeline scholarships like those approved in other states and introduced in Pennsylvania.The Lifeline Scholarship bill is a GOP education savings account bill--a super-voucher bill-- currently sitting in the appropriations committee in the House; the Senate has passed their version. Not just charters. Not just traditional vouchers. But nice shiny, super vouchers. Take a bunch of money from public schools (based on state average cost-per-pupil, not local numbers, so that many districts will lose more money than they would have spent on the students). Handed as a pile of money/debit card which can be spent on any number of education-adjacent expenses. (Excellent explainer at greater lengths here.)
The state will audit the families at least once every two years. The bill contains the usual non-interference clause, meaning that the money can be spent at a private discriminatory school, and no one will be checking to see if the school is actually educating the student. The bill is only old-school in that it uses the old foot-in-the-door technique of saying that this is just to rescue students from "failing" public schools (but includes no provisions to determine if the child has been moved to a failing private school).
Choicers are ecstatic.
The Center for Education Reform, the ardently pro-school choice anti-teacher advocacy group, has gleefully sent out the news. Choice advocate David Hardy from the right-tilted Commonwealth Foundations says, "I am happy that Mr. Shapiro has indicated his willingness to consider for poor families what has obviously worked for his family. The families most satisfied with their children's educational experience are those who were able to choose it."
Pastor Aaron Anderson, who operates a private religious school of his own and has a degree from Liberty University, thinks this is super.
Could it be that both Republicans and Democrats finally agree that a child’s zip code, ethnicity, or class should not determine whether they have access to a high-quality education?
I wonder what's going to happen to Friday night football and college football once schools start dropping sports because they can't afford them... :-)
ReplyDeleteThere is absolutely NO equity in providing vouchers for families anywhere! If people care about and promote equity, they STOP all voucher and charter school funding and place public tax dollars into genuine public schools--NOT the false leading title "public charter" because there's no such thing as a "public charter"! STOP Vouchers--support EQUITY--support public schools and their families and their children!
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