Representative Rick Glazier explains the court decision today that invalidated the General Assembly’s voucher plan. The State Constitution clearly says that public funds are for public schools.
Representative Glazier writes:
The lawyers who put together this case for the plaintiffs, including Burton Craige and his firm, lawyers for the NC Justice Center, Eddie Speas, and former Supreme Court Justice Bob Orr, among others, did a great job in preparing, briefing and arguing the case before the Superior Court. They made clear what many of us, including a number of House Democrats, had argued on the House floor last year against this bill and provision–that it patently violates the NC Constitution. Public funds for vouchers is, on its face, inconsistent with our constitutional mandate that public money may only be spent on a uniform system of PUBLIC schools. Not only is this [voucher program] public money to fund private schools, but even at that— a nonuniform system of them since the voucher provisions contain no accountability for the funds or schools, no non-discrimination protections, no teacher licensing requirements, no curriculum mandates, no supervision of the use of the funds, no EC requirements and the list goes on. And, no shell game movement of funds by the legislative majority or Governor makes it any less illegal under NC law. Shy of a constitutional amendment approving vouchers, which would never pass in this state, our state constitution forecloses private vouchers funded by public money and the Judge simply recognized what our legislature refuses to understand–no matter your ideology, and policy beliefs, there are some actions the Constitution forbids and using public money to fund private school choices is one of them. Maybe now we can really get back to our job as state legislators and look to truly assist public schools, public school educators, and the students of this state. Vouchers are not reform; they are an abdication of public education. If we want to assist pubic schools, lets start by professionally compensating teachers and educators, repealing the elimination of masters pay, adding time and resources for top notch and targeted professional development, recognizing the role of poverty in educational disadvantages that need time, attention and resources to overcome, restoring a career status system for teachers that rewards good teaching over time. expanding the richness of curriculum in all public schools, ensuring the involvement of the business community in the commitment to and improvement of public schools, and by our words reminding the public daily of the overriding importance of outstanding public schools and public school educators to our state’s economic success. It has been a good day, for a change, in North Carolina! Rick Glazier

Rick Glazier gets it. Why doesn’t President Obama?
Why doesn’t our President, who teachers and supporters of public education overwhelmingly voted into office twice, speak up for the students and teachers and public schools with the same passion as Rep. Glazier. What is the president afraid of? Why is he so timid? Why doesn’t he understand that a few words from his mouth with the same message as Mr. Glazier’s would absolutely galvanize the teachers and unions for the 2014 and 2016 elections and boost declining morale like nothing else.
Maybe he does understand but has different priorities. If so, I believe real Democrats like Rep. Glazier will have to work to remake his party or face the unimaginable prospect that his state’s constitution, and constitutions in other states, will be amended to permit vouchers. That is where Obama’s silence is leading us to.
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If only this can snowball.
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How do you know it’s not?
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Wow! Yes!! Come speak in California, Mr. Glazier!!!
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I see this as a major political statement in another way. These were NC democrats who fought this battle against vouchers in NC. Yet, Pres. Obama has been decidedly ‘pro-voucher” all along. Could it be that finally, state Democrats are breaking with Obama and Duncan policies!…The base is waking up.
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Wonderful! Thank you Representative Glazier !!
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In my narrow view, vouchers should be constitutional. That the judge ruled otherwise, is probably correct in NC for now. An amendment may be necessary and may be possible. I prefer publicly funded education but not publicly run education as a way to satisfy the moral commitment to equal opportunity.
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Taxation without representation is not being morally committed.
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Mike, I’m not following your argument here at all. I wonder whether you’d be willing to expand and clarify (with examples) what you are getting at.
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HU, it sounds like you’re advocating a CMO-like model where public funds are collected for a privately operated charter system without the oversight of an elected school board.
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What does CMO stand for please? Not charters, but vouchers.
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Yes Rick Glazier, yes!!!
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Now that Glazer and the court point to the NC Constitution to invalidate the voucher program, let’s hope the Republican majority General Assembly pursue amending it.
This will be the only way to “encourage” public schools to do a better job or lose students to better schools,private or otherwise.
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They’ll only lose the brightest students, because charters and privates don’t have to supply transportation and free lunch for those who can’t afford it. The target demographic for these “scholarships” (poor minority students) won’t be the ones benefitting because of the issues listed above. Students with special needs will also be excluded because schools aren’t required to offer special services like public schools do. Why not invest the $ into bettering public schools instead of lining the pockets of investors from other states.
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Many of the private schools in NC are not necessarily better than public schools.
Someone may feel better sending their child to a different school, but that does not mean the school is better.
I know quite a few people with children in private schools. The ones they send their children to cost a lot more than $4200 and they have a rather selective admission process.
http://www.newsobserver.com/2014/02/22/3643910/nc-voucher-money-likely-to-go.html
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