The Kansas Reflector reported that the state legislature plans to enact voucher legislation that will defund public schools. The pro-voucher legislators spout on about “parental rights,” but their real enemy is public school teachers. They accuse teachers of promoting a radical “woke” agenda and pushing sexual deviance on their students.
These ideas have not a scintilla of evidence behind them. They are smears. Plain and simple. How Kansas parents can listen to this extremist claptrap without demanding the recall of these extremists is a mystery.
TOPEKA — Between voucher programs and new parental rights legislation, education officials say public schools are having a rough time.
During a recording of the Kansas Reflector podcast, Marcus Baltzell, director of communications for the Kansas National Education Association, and Leah Fliter, Kansas Association of School Boards assistant executive director of advocacy, discussed the state of K-12 education, along with recent legislation that would take away funding from public schools.
Voucher bills
Baltzell said recently proposed voucher programs were blatant power grabs, including House Bill 2218, which would become the “sunflower education equity act” if passed. The bill passed out of committee Wednesday in a modified form.
While full implementation wouldn’t happen until four years after the legislation is passed, the program would allow parents to set aside a portion of public school funding — about $5,000 per student — for use at private or home schools, including unregulated, unaccredited schools.
HB2218 would also set up a 10-member board to manage the program, which would receive compensation. Critics have said the board would be slanted in favor of Republicans because of member requirements, and also might have too broad an influence on K-12 education in the state.
“If you wanted to set up a kind of a shadow board of education, if you wanted to completely circumnavigate the Constitution and the constitutional authority of the State Board of Education, this is how you would do it,” Baltzell said. “You would set up this group, you would tie it to legislation around a voucher scheme, you would then set up this board that has essentially decision-making authority over all aspects of this.”
Baltzell and Fliter also discussed House Bill 2048, which would expand a tax credit that allows taxpayers to write off up to $500,000 worth of scholarships they provide for private schools.
Another bill, Senate Bill 128, would give taxpayers a refundable income tax credit for K-12 children not enrolled in public schools. The bill stipulates that taxpayers who have a student enrolled in an accredited nonpublic school or a nonaccredited school registered with the Kansas State Department of Education are eligible. The tax credit would be given to Kansans starting in fiscal year 2024, as long as their student isn’t included in the enrollment of a public school district.
Fliter said legislation like this is meant to draw students and funding away from public schools by giving financial incentives for parents to switch to private education. She said lawmakers were framing the legislation as a way to give parents more educational freedom in order to popularize the idea.
“They know that the voucher thing is not popular,” Fliter said. “And so to cast it as a parent’s right over their child is another tactic. Kansas parents have many, many, many legal rights over their children. Children are minors until they turn 18. That means their parent or guardian has legal rights over their education, over everything they do. And so it’s just a somewhat cynical ploy to try to make a voucher seem more palatable.”
Rhetoric around teachers
The two said rhetoric surrounding public school and public school teachers also served to lure parents away from public education. Lawmakers have discussed a new form of parental rights legislation and accused teachers of being too radical.
Under House Bill 2236, parents could object to any educational materials or activities they believe would harm the student’s or parents’ beliefs, values or principles. Educational materials would include reading material, websites, videos and textbooks. Parents could withdraw their children from courses they find objectionable without harm to the student’s academic records. Critics of the bill say the legislation is overbroad.
During the bill hearing, Rep. Owen Donohue, a Shawnee Republican, said he thought it would be embarrassing to be a teacher, especially because they were teaching materials such as critical race theory. Donohoe said he was glad parents had the option of scholarships and homeschooling.
“If you look at history, it’s just an abysmal record,” Donohoe said. “It’s embarrassing to say, I would think, that I’m a teacher, when we’re getting the kind of results, or have been, in this state.”
Republicans in the House and Senate have made fighting a so-called “sexualized woke agenda” a legislative priority this session, with some arguing that Kansas students are struggling with mental health as a result of being taught an unnecessary and radical curriculum in public schools.
A former teacher of the year who appeared before lawmakers to urge them to stop using harmful rhetoric about public educators was told that people like her were the real deterrent.
Who are these people? Why do they hate teachers? What’s wrong with them? Did they get low grades? Were they the class clowns?
Couple of things I think of in regard to “vouchers/scholarships.” First, when my son’s public school volleyball team made it to the CCS playoffs, the first team they went against was St. Francis, a private Catholic school, of which, could recruit and offer scholarships for the best players in the area. Needless to say, they lost, but held their own. When I taught art, I simply gave up on “getting any funding from the school” because they said they didn’t have any, so I “begged, borrowed, and stole” what I needed to provide supplies in a timely fashion, e.g., paint, paper, cleaning supplies, whatever. People said I was crazy, but I could not be a teacher who sat there and said, “Do whatever, we have no money for supplies.” Vouchers remind me of my student who earned a $44K Merit Scholarship to The School of the Art Institute in Chicago, but only lasted one year because the “voucher/scholarship” only paid 25% of the total tuition. His mother was a “single mom” making a minimum wage working for the CA DMV. I often told my students, “It’s like I have one arm tied behind my back and hopping on one leg, but they want the same results or better.” So, what people don’t understand is if monies are constantly being stripped from public education, then supplies diminish, teachers get cut, programs are cut and it’s easy to say, “See, they aren’t working.” Just like me when I was evaluated, they don’t buy, “..but I had no supplies…” Oh, well. When I decided to send my son to private school because he was getting bored with public school, we paid for it. I barely had the money and I had to drive him or he took the bus for an hour. He DID NOT get a better education. The teachers were less qualified (in my opinion) and never could answer my questions on how he could get better in school. He got more items stolen and many of the kids drove to school in their BMWs which made us feel inferior in our old Toyota.
We came from “the wrong side of the tracks.” Plus, in public school, students with disabilities get sooooooo much more support as well. He graduated from our local high school with honors and never had anything stolen. Vouchers are “coupons” and don’t pay for it all. And boy if you miss a payment, they are sure ready to boot your child out of school. And Diane, yes they are “clowns” and not in a good way.
Vouchers and ESAs are a grift for people who already attend private schools. This needs. To be front and center. It’s these Republican politicians who are the problem.
Any state that has a legislature and governor voting for and passing legislation like this is not a free state, it is an autocratic, theo/fascist, racist state.
Does anyone know if these MAGA RINO domestic enemies of the U.S. Constitution also wear steel toed boots, goose-step when walking, and flashes the OK racist hand signal Traitor Trump uses at his hate rallies and probably also during all of his press conferences?
https://www.npr.org/2019/09/26/764728163/the-ok-hand-gesture-is-now-listed-as-a-symbol-of-hate
When will they start inviting Putin and Kim Jong-un to be the keynote speaker at their high school and college graduating classes?
I wonder if it would be worth if for NPE or some public policy school to compare the maximum amount of a voucher in a state and compare it to the contortions one must go through to get the same amount in subsistence public aid. This is another example of inherent/institutional/endemic racism built into the system. Poor folks who are struggling must meet strict, often onerous conditions to qualify and it is limited. I’m guessing there’s not much paperwork involved in vouchers because “we can trust good folks to give public money to private interests.” John Oliver touched on this in his most recent broadcast.
Rep. Owen Donohoe’s promotional site shows (prominently) a photo of one of his great grandchildren. Speculatively, was the child singled out in anticipation of blowback to Donohoe’s anti-CRT position?
Republican Rep. Owen Donohoe (mentioned in the post) is a leader in the pro-life campaign and is a member of the St. Joseph Catholic Church.