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For Immediate Release
January 11, 2011
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Williams and Piccola Unveil School Choice Plan
HARRISBURG - Calling school choice "the civil rights movement of this
century," state Sens. Anthony H. Williams (D-Philadelphia) and Jeffrey E.
Piccola (R-Dauphin and York) announced the details of a highly anticipated
"opportunity scholarship" plan today targeting the Commonwealth's worst schools
and most impoverished families.
The plan would allow the parents of a needy child to take the state
subsidy that would have been directed to their home school district and apply it
to the public, private or parochial school of their choice. For the Harrisburg
School District, for example, that amount would equal approximately $9,000,
based upon information from the state Department of Education website (2008-09 year).
"We are blessed with many outstanding public schools and teachers in this
Commonwealth," said Piccola, Chairman of the Senate Education Committee. "We
also know that we have a group of schools that have been persistently failing,
unsafe and falling short in meeting the needs of our kids and families who
cannot afford to move to a better school district. Our plan targets these
schools and those students who are trapped."
"Standing in the way of school choice for needy kids in failing urban schools is
like Gov. George Wallace standing in the doorway of a classroom to continue the
segregation of the '60s," Williams said. "Why would we block access to great
schools for children in need? All kids deserve access to a great education
- regardless of race, income or zip code. Let's open the doors to freedom and
opportunity."
"Our education system is the last public monopoly in America. Taxpayers can no longer
subsidize, support or ignore failure," said Williams. "Too many children are
trapped by their zip code in schools that are not making the grade. We are
robbing our kids of a fundamental right."
The Williams-Piccola plan would give scholarships to families meeting certain
income limits for either public or private schools. The bill--Senate Bill 1 to
reflect its priority status--- also includes an increase of $25 million in the
popular Educational Improvement Tax Credit (EITC) program, bringing the total
tax credits available under EITC to $100 million.
The plan calls for a three-year phase-in. In the first year, only low-income
students currently attending persistently failing schools would be eligible for
a grant. In the second year, low-income students residing within the attendance
boundary of those schools, but currently attending private schools, would be
eligible; and in the third year, all low-income students regardless of school
district would be eligible.
"Low-income" is defined as families whose income is at or below 130 percent of
the federal poverty level – a family of four would qualify at
$28,665.
Piccola and Williams likened this phase-in to a rescue plan for a three-story
burning building. The plan would rescue the most at-risk children first, then
move to the lower two floors. And to those choice opponents who question what
students should be saved, or what happens to those left behind, Williams
responded, "This is an emergency. Why wouldn't you save as many as you can?"
"Let's give parents who are trapped an exit strategy," Piccola said.
The Senate Education Committee held a 10-hour hearing on school choice in
October, featuring testimony from proponents such as the REACH Alliance, the
Philadelphia Black Alliance for Educational Options (BAEO), and the Black Clergy
of Philadelphia, and from opponents, such as the teachers' unions and the
Southeastern Pennsylvania School Districts Education Coalition. Another hearing
is slated for mid-February.
Piccola and Williams said that by phasing in the plan, the financial impact can
be spread out over time, allowing state revenues to rebound as the recession
fades and the deficit is addressed.
"In the end, school choice has the power to save taxpayers money because it has
traditionally cost less to educate children in a nonpublic setting," Piccola said.
School choice was debated during the Ridge Administration in the late '90s in
the form of bills known as "Kids I" and "Kids II."
"This effort would not have been possible without Governor-elect Tom Corbett and
his embrace of this concept," Piccola said. "We are eager to work with the new
Administration and the House to bring transformative change and competition to
our schools. I am also excited to work with my friend Anthony Williams, who has
been a visionary in rescuing kids from substandard schools and who elevated the
importance of school choice in the Democratic primary for governor."
"Providing access to a quality education for every child is the most important
issue facing our state and our nation today," said Williams. "The broad-based
support for this bill transcends party and regional lines. The parents and
taxpayers of this Commonwealth are speaking to us loudly and clearly. They
cannot wait one more year or even one more day. They want school choice now.
There can be no compromise on that. We must make school choice a reality with
all deliberate speed."
Governors in Florida, Nevada, Indiana and Wisconsin are also advocating plans to
give private school grants to families. Today, 12 states and the District of
Columbia have vouchers or tax-credit programs that provide scholarships to
mainly low-income students to attend private schools, according to the
Commonwealth Foundation.
Senate Bill 1 Summary (PDF)
Background Information
CONTACT:
Diane
McNaughton of Sen. Piccola's Office at (717) 787-6801
Mike Nixon of Sen. Williams' Office at (267) 248-9100
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