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Archive for the ‘CO Legislature’ Category

Defeat of tax credits to attend private school

Monday, March 8th, 2010

denver-post

The Denver Post carried an op-ed online by ACE’s Executive Director Norton Rainey on the defeat of a tax credit bill that would have given low-income families access to quality private schools.

School Choice Bill Killed

Wednesday, February 24th, 2010

Yesterday the House Committee on Finance considered HB 10-1296, sponsored by Representative Spencer Swalm and Senator Josh Penry. Norton Rainey, ACE executive director testified in support of the bill, as did Jacque Graham, Principal at Inner City School and Theresa Gallegos, the mother of an ACE scholar.

The idea behind HB 1296 came from former U.S. Senator Hank Brown, and it would provide low-income families with an annual $1,000 tax credit for enrolling their child in a private school. The bill would also provide a grant of $1,000 to any public school that loses a student to a private school as a consequence of the tax credit.

Regrettably, the bill was killed on a Party line vote, six to five.

It is unfortunate, as the bill would have given low-income families a tremendous financial incentive to send their child to a private school, reduced public school class sizes as more children took advantage of the tax credit, and provided public schools with a $1,000 grant to help them give the children that remain behind a better quality education.

The bill would have even had a positive fiscal impact on our state, with a savings of $4.9 million in the first year, $8.7 million in the second year, and as much as $36 million in ten years, according to the official fiscal note prepared by Legislative Council.

It’s hard to imagine rejecting a bill that would do so much:

  • Provide a much-needed financial benefit to low-income families;
  • Allow low-income children to attend quality private schools;
  • Support public schools with a $1,000 grant for not teaching a child who left for private school;
  • Save the State of Colorado millions of dollars during one of the worst recessions in our history and at a time when the Legislature is proposing to cut K-12 education spending.

During the hearing several comments stood out as particularly alarming:

  • The full-time lobbyist for the Colorado Education Association (the teacher’s union) testified against the bill, stating that the legislation “doesn’t support public education.” This statement perfectly sums up what is wrong with the CEA. The lobbyist was right that the bill’s intent was not to support public education, even though it would have provided each school $1,000 for every child they lost. The bill was intended to support children, not the bureaucracy of our public education system… and shouldn’t that be the point?

  • Other representatives who voted “no” agreed with the CEA lobbyist, saying the bill “undermined” public education. It’s hard to imagine that giving a public school $1,000 for every child that leaves their school would be seen as undermining public schools. After all, most of the children who would choose to leave would do so because the public school wasn’t effective. Talk about rewarding failure!

While it was frustrating to watch this bill go down in defeat, ACE was proud to support the bill and share with the committee some of the amazing things that are happening through this organization. ACE will continue to provide these low-income children with immediate relief from failing public schools, and we will continue to support efforts to extend school choice to every child in Colorado.

Ed reformer fills Groff’s seat

Friday, May 15th, 2009

Michael Johnston, principal at Mapleton Expeditionary School of the Arts (MESA), has been selected to fill Senator Peter Groff’s vacant seat – ensuring that the Senate will not loose a crucial voice on education reform.

Groff was recently asked to join the Obama administration, in part, because of his work last year to pass ground-breaking legislation that allows schools to operate more freely from union and district oversight.

Johnston served as one of three top advisors on education policy during Obama’s Presidential campaign. Groff’s departure was seen as a huge loss by ed reformer, but Johnston’s selection by the vacancy committee will surely take some of the sting out of the loss.