On Tuesday evening, I flew to Texas to keep a promise to myself. Three years ago, I was chosen for the annual award of the Friends of Texas Public Schools. The day I was supposed to fly to Austin, there was a huge blizzard in New York City and my flight was canceled. All flights were canceled the next day as well. I Skyped in to the event the next evening, and a few weeks later received a beautiful large wooden plaque with my name on it. But I never felt I earned it because I wasn’t physically there. So, I arranged to meet with them again this week. The gods of the air decided not to make it easy, so there was a huge rainstorm, delaying my flight for four hours, and I arrived at 2:30 am the day before I spoke.
This is the talk I gave, no notes, just an informal conversation. I am sorry to say it is posted on Facebook so if you are not on FB, you can’t hear it. I can’t hear it myself as I am not on FB.
After I spoke, I participated in a panel where I learned very encouraging news. I sat with three members of the Texas House of Representatives, two of whom are Republicans. All of them understand the importance of public schools, and all are opposed to vouchers.
To my right was Representative Dan Huberty, the chair of the House Public Education Committee. He is a Republican from Humble, Texas, near Houston. He recently told the news media that voucher legislation would be “dead on arrival” if it passed the Senate. The Tea Party has put a target on his back, and when he runs again, I will do everything in my power to support him because he is a principled supporter of public education. He announced during the panel discussion that his committee had approved a new appropriation of $1.6 billion for public schools (in 2011, the legislature cut more than $5 billion from public schools and never restored the cuts when the economy revived).
Next was Representative Diego Bernal, a Democrat from San Antonio. He is charming, smart, and a strong supporter of public schools.
Last to speak was Representative Gary VanDeaver from New Boston, who was a career educator and a superintendent in his community. He has said that he supports school choice in principle, but does not support public money being taken away from public schools to fund private schools, faith-based schools, or homeschooling.
On Thursday, the state senate passed the voucher bill, which will take money from public schools that educate all children and give it to parents for private or religious schooling or homeschooling, with no accountability. The bill passed 18-13. Here is the statement on the bill by our steadfast ally, Pastors for Texas Children.
The usual opposition to vouchers comes from a bipartisan coalition of rural Republicans, who understand the importance of their community public schools, and urban Democrats, who don’t want their schools to be privatized or defunded. The day I arrived, the Senate sponsors of vouchers added an amendment to exclude any district from the voucher legislation with fewer than 50,000 students, to win votes from rural legislators. Experience in other states shows that once a voucher bill is passed, the exemptions drop away and eventually every school district will be starving its public schools, even rural districts.
The bill that passed exempted counties with fewer than 285,000 people, to fool the rural legislators. It excludes homeschoolers. It has no accountability for students with vouchers, so public money will fly out the window with no one knowing how it is spent.
I learned that there is big money promoting vouchers, namely a group called Empower Texans, an organization created by billionaire Tim Dunn to push for lower taxes, less governments, school choice, and the usual Tea Party platform of less for all. Empower Texans has a PAC that endorses local and state candidates, including school board candidates. Anyone who opposes their agenda has to worry about a well-funded primary fight from their right. Empower Texans, to say the least, does not support public education.
Texas has two great forces working on behalf of public schools: one is parent-led organizations like Friends, TAMSA (Texans Advocating for Meaningful Student Assessment), Texas Kids Can’t Wait, and many more. The other force is the Pastors for Texas Children, a group of more than 1,000 pastors across the state who support separation of church and state and who actively help their local public schools.
The Facebook page of FOTPS has a photo of Blake Cooper, a recently retired superintendent who now works as a volunteer for Friend of Texas Public Schools, and FOTPS founders Leslie and Scott Milder. Leslie taught high school for 10 years; their children attend public schools.
I had a great time. I even had great barbecue for lunch.
I have great hopes for Texas public schools because it has many organizations of parents and teachers who will fight for what is right, and it has strong bipartisan support in the House. Ninety percent of the children in the state attend public schools. In the 2018 elections, if parents and educators turn out to vote, the face of Texas could change, and it could do right by its 5.4 million students in public schools.
PS: I heard that two pro-voucher Republican legislators held a meeting today in Dallas, and the audience beat them up (rhetorically)

Actually, they changed it even more so that rural Republican public schools are protected. It’s not fewer than 50,000 but 285,000. This is from the Austin American-Statesman:
“Students who live in counties with fewer than 285,000 people would no longer be eligible for state money through so-called savings accounts or tax credit scholarships. It also appears the education savings accounts would also no longer cover home schooling expenses; this comes as some home schooling parents have opposed SB 3 because they feared state regulations.”
Whole article:
http://www.statesman.com/news/state–regional-govt–politics/senate-passes-scaled-back-private-school-voucher-bill/7kcgVCO36Htcjpz8BZVdoJ/
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I have been trying to figure out how many districts stand to be harmed by this voucher program. I assume it is mostly the cities where they are once again targeting minorities. Will they be able to use the voucher in another better performing public school?
Then, I wanted to learn about the educational savings accounts for home schoolers when I came across this propaganda site explaining how to keep Texas free through ESAs. Giving money for home schooling treats the public money like it belongs to the student when it is really the taxpayers’ common pool. Following their logic, childless couples should be eligible for a rebate!
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I often speak ill of Texas. Your post reminds me that I should discern and not paint with a broad brush, however tempting (and at times, easy) it is, regardless of where in the world it might be. Inspiring message and good barbecue too. What more can one want?
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This is a wonderful report. I hope you put in a link to the picture. Perhaps someone can put in a link to the Facebook version of your talk.
I hope there can be a turnaround in Texas and other states before 2018.
The Trump/DeVos budget is not set yet, but if she can, I am sure she will make the receipt of federal funds for vouchers contingent on having a state law that makes “choice” mandatory. I doubt that she will consider that requirement a case of “federal overreach.”
Of course, such federal mandates were embedded in the Duncan/Obama strategy for Race to the Top. Get your state legislation aligned with what we want or, you can’t compete for RTT funds.
This tactic also promises to be a feature of the Trump administration. This morning Jeff Sessions warned “sanctuary cities” that federal funds for law enforcement could be withheld if so-called sanctuary cities do not follow the Trump logic of all immigrants are or may be criminals/terrorists. Sessions should know that there is no legal definition of a “sanctuary city.”
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And more and more it appears that this administration’s immigrant deportation logic is not “all immigrants are…criminals/terrorists” but “all dark-skinned immigrants are criminals/terrorists.”
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It’s a shame for smaller communities because we really do get along fine with religious schools as private schools. Ohio has several laws that mandate public funding of certain religious school activities and that has always worked for us. The private school shares our music program, for example, and they get transportation and supply money. The religious school is K-8 and they move very easily into the public high school because they know each other thru the shared services.
Setting this up as a competition is a terrible idea. DeVos is just wrong. It’s not at all like Uber and taxis.
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Thank you so much for visiting Texas again and inspiring us to continue to stand strong against legislative issues that negatively affect our children. Enjoyed your speech and seeing you again.
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You almost feel sorry for the ed reformers who supported charters but not vouchers.
They could have looked at states and seen that they never stop at charters, but they didn’t. This won’t end until it’s “backpack vouchers for all” and they’ll either recognize that and fight it or the liberal position will magically align completely with the most conservative position and they’ll be reduced to defending whether schools should be regulated AT ALL. They’re already there, mostly. Ed reformers now battle over “no regulation” versus “some attempt at regulation”. They retreated too far and they’ll never get back.
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Koch brothers/ALEC > $$$$$$$$$$$$ > Tea Party > $$$$$$$$ > campaign contributions to cloned, minion politicans like Mike Pence.
I wonder if Pence has a human brain between his ears or is he a human looking android with a nodding programed AI-chip installed in his head.
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