The state commissioner of education in New Hampshire, Frank Edelblut, homeschooled his 10 children. He knows nothing about public schools and the role they play in communities. Appointed by Governor Chris Sununu, Edelblut has devoted his time in office to promoting anything but public schools.
He pushed voucher legislation and projected it would cost $3.3 million in its first two years. The actual cost was $22.7 million. The vast majority of children who use vouchers never attended public schools.
New Hampshire has about 160.000 students who attend public schools. In the first year of the voucher program, 90% of the students who claimed vouchers were already enrolled in religious and private schools. The proportion now remains over 80%. Vouchers are now claimed by about 2.6% of the state’s students. About 1/2 of 1% of the voucher users previously were enrolled in public schools.
Vouchers are a subsidy for private school students.
Garry Rayno of IndepthNH writes:
CONCORD — In three years, the enrollment in the Education Freedom Account program has grown 158 percent, while the cost has increased 174 percent in figures released this week by the Department of Education.
For the current school year, 4,211 students are in the program, up from 3,025 at the same point last year, and from 1,635 for the 2021-2022 school year.
The costs have grown from $8.1 million the first year, to $14.7 million the second year and $22.1 million this school year.
This year the financial threshold to participate in the program was raised from 300 percent of the federal poverty level to 350 percent.
That increases the threshold for the current school year from $59,160 for a family of two, to $69,020, and for a family of four from $90,000 to $105,000 annually.
Once a family qualifies for the program there are no future financial limits on earnings.
Department of Education Commissioner Frank Edelblut, who championed the program before the legislature, was pleased more and more students are participating in the EFA program
“It has been three years since the launch of New Hampshire’s successful Education Freedom Account program, and it is apparent that New Hampshire families are taking advantage of this tremendous opportunity that provides them with different options and significant flexibility for learning,” said Edelblut. “With three years of data under our belt, we know that students are coming and going from the program, which is exactly how it was designed – to allow various options for personal learning needs that may fluctuate from year-to-year based on whatever path is appropriate in the moment.”
The program was sold by Edelblut and others as an opportunity for lower-income parents to find the best educational fit for their children if they have problems within the public school system.
However the vast majority of the money spent through the expansive voucher program has gone to pay the religious and private school tuition of students in those schools prior to the EFA program’s creation. [Emphasis added]…
A larger number of EFA students this year left public schools to go into private or parochial schools, 444 students, compared to 282 last school year, and 286 in the 2021-2022 school year.
Overall there are 1,577 new students to the EFA program this school year, while 109 students left the program due to graduation, 75 returned to public schools, and 524 students left the program for other reasons.
The 1,577 new students are 128 more students than the previous year.
When the program first began, the Department of Education projected its first two years would cost about $3.3 million and instead the state paid $22.71 million.

Vouchers are massive transfer of wealth from the working class to the affluent. No wonder they are the darling of the GOP. They also undermine the local control that public schools have over their enrollment and budgets. Vouchers represent anti-democratic policy that usurps local tax dollars and transfers the funds to private interests without the public having any input. They are taxation without representation.
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This last comment above says vouchers are transfers of wealth from working class to the affluent. Well I have another analogy on a different topic. How about the transfer of teacher’s pensions to wealthy Wall Street? Ms raimondo the China-friendly commerce secretary is now back in RI. And apparently this fluff piece will be on 60 minutes. The capitalist who 60 minutes refuses to discuss on their TV segment, the very bad things that happened under her in RI, was instrumental in taking away and transferring to Wall Street with high fees to them, the RI teachers’ retiree pension cola and now there is a movement to restore that cola that she transferred with the help of Enron’s John Arnold, back in 2011 through legislation.
Wanted to bring to your attention the latest from Rhode Island.
Here is a Link to a Story which appeared in GoLocal a RI site, this morning.
Gina Raimondo makes a surprise appearance at RI State House to film ’60 Minutes’ interview https://www.providencejournal.com/story/news/politics/2023/10/17/colas-for-ri-state-pensioners-getting-another-look-after-raimondo-cuts/71206906007/
Here is a Link to GoLocal’s story concerning a Pension Advocacy Group which is working to Restore COLAs as well as Revisions to RIRSA, Advocates for COLA Restoration and Pension Reform.
Clicking on the title will take you to their FB Page.
Here is a link to Golocal’s Story:
https://www.golocalprov.com/news/60-minutes-is-featuring-raimondo-critics-worry-show-will-ignore-her-pension?fbclid=IwAR3rgyYEWtn9mHUlhDZAH697xOz3MOtjwPlRy7wYigzJFRtPsbmXAluuIXQ
60 Minutes Is Featuring Raimondo, Critics Worry Show Will Ignore Her Pension Policies — Sunday, October 22, 2023
The CBS news magazine 60 Minutes was in Rhode Island this past week, filming a feature segment on U.S. Commerce raimondohttps://www.golocalprov.com/news/60-minutes-is-featuring-raimondo-critics-worry-show-will-ignore-her-pension
pension?fbclid=IwAR3rgyYEWtn9mHUlhDZAH697xOz3MOtjwPlRy7wYigzJFRtPsbmXAluuIOn Friday, the group “Advocates for COLA Restoration and Pension Reform” posted the following to their Facebook page: “Gina Raimondo filmed a ’60 Minutes’ segment at the State House. The producers may be interested in hearing the other side to the story.”
Thank you
retired RI teacher one of 66,000 who wants her pension cola restored
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Isn’t “Republican Commissioner of EDUCATION” and oxymoron?
These people are not bright, and they are not well educated. I don’t know what TF they did in school, but it didn’t involve much learning.
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an oxymoron
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