Gary Rayno writes in InDepth NH about a Democratic proposal to put the State Department of Education in charge of the voucher program. Called “Education Freedom Accounts, the program was sold as a way to help low-income students in bad public schools transfer to better private schools. But about 75% of the students getting voucher money were already enrolled in private and religious schools. The free-market State Education Commissioner Frank Edelblut (who home-schooled his own children) projected that the program would cost $3.3 million, but it has actually cost $27 million in its two years of operation. Edelblut promised it would cut property taxes, but the cost of the program is projected to grow.
Rayno writes:
CONCORD — Several lawmakers seek changes to the new Education Freedom Account program with a package of bills addressing issues raised in its first two years of operation.
The program was included in the state’s two-year operating budget passed in 2021, and has been significantly over budget projections with more students than anticipated and what many view as insufficient oversight.
“It is hard to have oversight,” said the prime sponsor of House Bill 626, Rep. David Luneau, D-Hopkinton, “when you don’t have transparency, when you don’t have the data to look at.”
The bill, which had a public hearing Wednesday before the House Education Committee, would have the Department of Education administer and manage the program instead of the Children’s Scholarship Fund NH, which receives 10 percent of the program’s grant distribution under its contract with the state. The organization’s no-bid contract was approved by the Executive Council soon after the program was approved in the state’s operating budget.
The program allows the money parents receive to roll-over from year to year, unless the amount exceeds what would be a quarterly payment.
If the student graduates, leaves the freedom account program or is removed from the program for misuse of funds, the parents would be required to return any excess money to the Education Trust Fund under the bill.
The bill would also require students in the program to take one of the statewide assessment tests required of public school students as a comparison of how well the students in the program are doing, Luneau said.
Luneau and other supporters of the change say the program needs more oversight, accountability and transparency given the millions of dollars being distributed to parents.
The state has spent about $27 million during the first two years of the program, well above the $3.3 million budget Education Commissioner Frank Edelblut projected would be the cost.
He asked for $30 million each year of the next biennial budget in requests to the Governor’s Office.
Luneau told the committee that is $90 million in the first four years of the program coming out of the Education Trust Fund, and $9 million of it going to the scholarship fund.
He said he believes with added staff, the department could manage and administer the program for much less money and have the data needed for better accountability, transparency and assessment.
Why use tax dollars to pay the overhead of a private company, when you are already paying the department to oversee kids’ education in the state, Luneau said.
To date, about 75 percent of the funds for the program have gone as subsidies to parents of students who were enrolled in private or religious schools prior to the program’s start.
Of the 3,000 students in the program this year, about 700 attended a public school the year before.
Luneau said the reports include the kids who were in private and religious schools before the program began to show how successful it is, but that is not saving any taxpayers money but is using money from the Education Trust Fund.
Luneau is prime sponsor of another bill prohibiting using the money as a subsidy for private or religious school tuition.
Supporters of the program sold it as a way for lower income parents to afford to find the best education opportunities for their students while saving property tax dollars for taxpayers.
Luneau said taxpayers who fund public schools receive a great deal more accountability, oversight and transparency of their tax dollars than they do in the freedom account program, adding the reports the scholarship fund has provided are laughable; they are so incomplete.
The view of Republican legislators is that parents alone offer accountability. If they don’t like the program, they will leave it. Since 3/4 of them are already enrolled in private and religious schools, they should be overjoyed that the taxpayers are underwriting the cost.
Open the link and read the rest of the article.
Vouchers are another financial scheme that forces the middle and working class to pay for the education of affluent whose parents can already afford to pay the expense of the tuition. Unaccountable tax dollars flow out of the common good and into private pockets. These financial products are enabled when we allow public education to become a profiteering commodity instead of a public responsibility.
Charter schools and vouchers are scams that pretend to be about choice and opportunity, and they are marketed that way. However, IMO they are really a form of class warfare and segregation.
And now a scheme has been introduced to permit local property taxes (the ones that were supposed to be reduced, but weren’t) to fund the vouchers. The only possible outcome is increasing per-pupil costs in the public schools and – guess what – even higher property taxes.
Of course. Vouchers cost taxpayers more, not less. Even Edelblut must know that.
I would be very cautious with any claims re: What Frank Edelblut “Must Know.”
That’s true.
Apparently, no one could vouch for the students.