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This Murky Area MIGHT Affect Everyone

According to the Senate version: SB503, Scholarship Amount- Allowable uses pg. 3-4

To receive the Scholarship or ESA the parent of the student applies to the Department of Education (DOE). It must be ensured that the student will satisfy the compulsory school attendance requirement by providing documentation of enrollment in a private school (I, II, III, IV, or V nonpublic category) or a public in a local education agency (LEA) outside the students normal assigned district (the Senate bill provides for movement between LEA’s as space allows).

In this section, of greatest interest to Private school students and Category IV Umbrella homeschool students is the following on pg. 4 (4) dealing with special education services.  An ESA eligible student “by participating in the program through enrollment in a private school does not retain the right to receive special education and related services through an individualized education program” BUT “the students may be eligible under the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA) (20 U.S.C. 1414) to receive equitable services through an individualized service plan.” (Pg 4)

In the House Education Committee meeting there was significant discussion about the use of IDEA federal funds in private schools.  The Commissioner of Education, the Deputy Commissioner, and House legal staff and even legal staff from the Department of Education were not able to answer definitively if the federal funds being used by one ESA student in a private school or homeschool would bring the entire school or the homeschool under federal regulations. See below for further information on this complicated issue. This is apparently an open question even though the legislation passed both the chambers with this language in place.  

While a soon to be attached visual will likely be required to understand the following flow of funding for service to children with disabilities in either public, private, or homeschools, the following description walks us through the present practice in schools and the proposed flow under the new EFSA program.  Currently, children with a disability qualify for funding to cover services such as speech therapy, tutoring, occupational therapy, and other therapies through the implementation of an IEP (Individualized Education Program) funded by the state and enacted by the public school in the LEA.  Under both current law and the proposal in SB503 under consideration, if a public-school student with an IEP leaves the public school to attend either a private school or a homeschool, they lose access to that IEP and its services/funding.  In the private school or the homeschool, the child with a disability can instead access funding for similar services through a federal program called IDEA (Individuals with Disabilities Education Act) that is then titled an ISP (Individualized Service Plan).  These facts are clear and seem to be corroborated by testimony by the legal services representative of the Department of Education during the recent House Education Committee discussion of HB 1183 on March 6th, 2023. 

From this point, the implications of this funding are unclear both in the language of HB1183 and SB503 (sister bills).  Based on the U.S. Supreme Court case Grove City v Bell (1984) (https://time.com/6835607/grove-city-supreme-court-conservative-education/) an institution of higher education which accepts federal grant money for student tuition must agree to certain Title IX non-discriminatory regulations on that money by signing a form.  If that same legal ruling is applied to a child with a disability who receives service funding through the IDEA federal funding, what regulations will be required of the student, their parent, or their private school as a student in a private school or umbrella school?  It is possible the entire school comes under federal regulations but the legislators in attendance at the committee meeting did not receive a clear answer from their own legal counsel nor from the legal services representative for the Department of Education. 

Prior to passing the legislation as written in SB503/HB1183 which follows the same legal logic of severing IEP service funding when a student leaves a public school for a private or homeschool, parents and private schools need to understand how they may be impacted by federal regulations should a student with IDEA funding attend their school or become a part of their homeschool. They need clear answers to the following questions.

  1. For a student with a disability who receives EFSA funds and then receives services funded by IDEA through a public school or its LEA, what strings of regulation will they be expected to comply with?
  2. For the same student, what strings of regulation will be applied to the private school or umbrella school in which they are enrolled?
  3. For the school noted in #2, will other students be impacted by such regulations?
  4. Will the private school ever be the provider of such services and thus regulated by the federal government through IDEA?
  5. Will the money for IDEA ever be distributed directly to the parent and what are the regulatory regulations for the parents and/or their umbrella school in such a situation?
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If you thought that ESA recipients would be given a $7000 check for educational expenses each year, then you will be in for a surprise.  In fact, direct payment to the parent or student is strictly forbidden in both proposals.  In the house bill it reads on pg. 10, “(a) A scholarship awarded under this part: (1) Must not be paid directly to an eligible student or to an eligible student’s parent;” In the Senate bill it says on pg. 13 “(b) The department shall establish and maintain separate scholarship accounts for each recipient and shall verify that the uses of scholarship funds are permitted…”  The Senate bill also specifies that refunds from schools or providers shall NEVER go to the parent or recipient but only to the scholarship account (p. 14, (d)).

Additionally, in the Senate version, use of the funds must be PRE-APPROVED by the DOE (p.13 (b)). Further, the parent or recipient can be suspended or terminated by the DOE if they fail to comply with requirements meaning that the account will be closed by the DOE (pg. 15, (b)). Fraud measures are in place. First, if a parent or recipient uses scholarship funds on non-qualified purchases or if they have misrepresented “the nature, receipts, or any other evidence of one or more of the expenses paid using scholarship funds” (pg. 15 (c)), they will have to pay the amount back to the state.  Second, if they believe that a person knowingly used the funds on expenses that were not qualified (remember pre-approval required) or knowingly misrepresented the information then the DOE may refer the recipient for criminal prosecution (pg. 16 (d)).

The House version also has a section on penalty for fraud or misrepresentation.  On pg. 10 it reads “(a) A parent who knowingly provides false information on an eligible student’s application in order to obtain a scholarship commits a class A misdemeanor.”

At the end of the year, any unused funds will be put back into the treasury for next year’s scholarship fund.  For private school tuition, the funds will probably be used up on that alone.  If a homeschool student does not find a way to use all the funds on approved expenses, then the money will be returned to the state.  You do not get to keep any excess for your personal use or put it toward next year.

To sum it up, no money is directly given to the student or parent.  You can only use the funds on DOE approved expenses (more on this in another blog), receipts and proofs are required for approval of an expense, and you may have to pay it back or face criminal charges if you are not very careful with the procedures and rules.  Money is never FREE and Government Money is never without strings.

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It seems that many of our legislators have forgotten their duty and their jurisdiction.  When homeschoolers bring up concerns regarding the ESFA legislation, they keep telling us that the legislation will not affect us.  When we point out the doors that are being opened in the legislation which could lead to infringement upon our freedom to homeschool according to our convictions, they tell us that we will just have to make sure the “right” people get elected each year.   Additionally, when we give them language by which they could shore up protection for our future, they refuse.  “No need,” they say.  “Not our job,” they reprimand.

Many in the capitol seem to have forgotten that they are the branch closest to the people- to be the most able to respond to their needs.  Despite being the “branch of the people”, most legislators, in this instance, are willing to open doors which may one day lead to the infringement of our freedom while rejecting legislative language that offers protection against those dangers.  They simply dismiss our concerns saying that it is someone else’s job to worry about the future freedoms of families in Tennessee.  I ask, “If they do not care for future freedoms and protect us, then who will?”

Please reach out to your representative and senator in regard to HB 1183 and SB 503, sister bills going through legislative committees.  It is within the contexts of discussing these two bills with our legislators that their forgetfulness has become evident.  Remind them that they have a sworn duty to uphold principles of freedom while working within the boundaries of the Tennessee Constitution.  Tell them you expect them to limit their power to the jurisdictions within which they have been given authority.  In the Tennessee Constitution Article XI Section 12 it reads, “The General Assembly shall provide for the maintenance, support and eligibility standards of a system of free public schools (emphasis mine).”  They are not delegated authority over the private sphere where liberty from state interference should be carefully guarded.  Respectfully but firmly remind them that homeschool families and private school families expect them to make laws that promote freedom rather than imperil it for generations to come.

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Have you ever watched the bubble gum blowing contests where the giant bubble pops and covers the blower’s face and head?  In contrast, smaller bubbles just blow up in front of them with less of a mess. 

The School Choice bill SB503 resembles just such a comparison as one reads the fiscal note for it.  Senator Lundberg’s accepted amendment served well to lower the initial cost by involving the cost shifting of TISA funds between public schools and from public school funding to the scholarship fund.  The first-year gum bubble price tag looks more manageable than the House HB 1183 version which tries to blow the double bubble of school choice and adding over 200 million to public school efforts. 

If this SB503 stopped at such a smaller bubble only costing less than 100 million dollars, the bubble’s impact would be slightly easier to swallow, but following years promise a much bigger bubble.  While the House’s HB1183 sister bill version offers an explicit growth rate of no more than 20% per year pending appropriations, the SB503 version could grow to over 500 million in 2 years.  A calculation of the house bill’s growth rate would take 9-10 years to reach this size even though it starts at 400 million. A 500-million-dollar gum bubble in 2 years could truly explode in the face of taxpayers.

While one can appreciate the Governor’s stated intentions of providing all the children of Tennessee parents (emphasized, NOT Tennessee’s children, as the children belong first to the parents rather than the state) with the best education, the price tag for this program is a bubble blowing contest winner and loser.  The price tag bubble will make it look like we are pouring money into education, but its rapid expansion threatens to burst in our state budget’s face. 

Take a few minutes today to contact legislators on the Senate Finance, Ways, and Means Committee today before they meet to discuss this bill on Tuesday April 2nd.  Put a few of the following bullet points into your own words so they know we are all expecting them to protect our state from a budgetary explosion hidden in plain sight in SB503. 

  • While education is important, the state budget is not limitless.
  • Passing SB503 which has the potential to balloon to over 500 million in 2 years, as admitted by your own fiscal note, is irresponsible.
  • We need a better plan than SB503 to rescue children from failing schools.
  • Say no to SB503 before it blows up all over our state budget.

Thank you for taking time to contact the Senators below.  You can email (good), call (better), or make an in-person appointment (best). If you can come for the Committee hearing on April 2nd at 830am at the Capitol, you can bring a small sign that says “NO to SB503”. 

Blessings,

Eric Potter MD

Contact List for Members of Senate Finance Ways and Means Committee

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Milton Friedman may have been a noble prize-winning economist with an idea he claimed would free education from the governmental dominance.  However, he was not a Christian. When he communicated concerning his proposed voucher system in education, he rested his arguments upon expediency rather than eternal principles set down by the Creator. Therefore, he failed to find the balance that he desired between individual freedom and the need for social cohesion.  The state, even in his schema, was necessary for setting approval standards in education as well as financing it. The following are some select quotes primarily from his essay “The Role of Government in Education” (1955) and an interview a few years before his death in 1995.  He has another work Free to Choose from 1981 which I will address in another post where he goes into greater detail but where government still plays a financing and approval role.  Below are a few bullet point quotes or summaries from his writing with my thoughts following each quote.

  • Generally, while acknowledging the role of family in the care of children who are not yet capable of handling the “freedom” endowed to individual, he saw the role of the family as “a procedure [which] rests on expediency rather than principle” (1955).  My Comments: The family was not instituted by God for the care and protection of children and raising up the next generation in the faith but just a matter of expediency since children were not old enough to be responsible members of society.  The very foundation of his worldview is faulty leading to the need for government oversight of the education of children on some level.  His view of family was based on expediency.  Since many of the leftist ideologies of today have come up with models which “free” the child from the need for family, his foundational premises can be called into question by progressives. Arguments from expediency can be easily undone.
  • He believed that the government should finance education but not administer that education.  He gave government the role of setting down minimum standards to promote a widespread acceptance of some common set of values required to maintain a stable society (1955).  My comment: Therefore, government ultimately standardizes the enculturation which occurs through education.
  • “Governments could require a minimum level of education which they could finance by giving parents vouchers redeemable for a specified maximum sum per child per year if spent on “approved” educational services.” (1955)- My Comment: This means that expenditures must be government approved according to their standards.
  • “Parents would be free to spend this sum and any additional sum on purchasing educational services from an “approved” educational institution of their own choice.” (1955)- My Comment: Again, expenditures must be approved by government standards.
  • “The role of the government would be limited to assuring that the schools met certain minimum standards as the inclusion of a minimum common content in their programs, much as it now inspects restaurants to assure that they maintain minimum sanitary standards” (1955)- My Comment: Government standards approved in education and the resulting enculturation of the next generation is vastly different from a restaurant food safety checklist.
  • “How draw a line between providing for the common social values required for a stable society on the one hand, and indoctrination inhibiting freedom of thought and belief on the other? Here is another of those vague boundaries that is easier to mention than to define.” (1955) – My Comment: He does not answer his own question here.  However, this may be THE pivotal issue of a public money voucher system and the door it opens to infringement upon religious freedoms and parental rights.

Also Note: He doesn’t answer, but studies from other countries in later decades- Australia show that government funding of private education flattens out education control over time– “another consequence “ of the experiment of Australia’s policy of limited privatization of education begun in 1973 “was the increasing regulation and centralization of decisions and the loss of private school autonomy which limited the feasible range of options and will probably continue to do so in the future…most of these consequences were generic and would probably follow if this system were adopted in other countries” – “Private Education and Redistributive Subsidies in Australia” Estelle James (1991) in Privatization and Its Alternatives Ed. William Gormley

  • “For the lowest level of education, there is considerable agreement, approximating unanimity on the appropriate content of an educational program for citizens of democracy—the three R’s cover most of the ground.” (1955)  My Comment: This is definitely not true today as leftist ideology permeates the curriculum down to the youngest grades.
  • “But education is not open and shut. In Capitalism and Freedom we came out on the side of favoring compulsory schooling and in Free To Choose we came out against it. So I have become more radical in that sense. Murray used to call me a statist because I was willing to have government money involved. But I see the voucher as a step in moving away from a government system to a private system. Now maybe I’m wrong, maybe it wouldn’t have that effect, but that’s the reason I favor it.” -Friedman in Reason Interview 1995 https://reason.com/1995/06/01/best-of-both-worlds/ My Comment: He thought that vouchers would lead to more freedom from government but he had the faulty worldview that the family was merely expedient and the government needed to maintain a level of control through approval of minimal standards for use of its money at an “approved” school of the family’s choice.  We can already see that vouchers have not undermined the public system in the states thus far after decades of trials.

Bottom Line:  He was wrong on education vouchers leading to freedom from governmental indoctrination. 

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By Jennifer Potter

In this brief post we offer a correction in part of our review of House Bill 1183. Because HB1183 has language dealing with the scholarships and even more language dealing with public education issues, we need to clarify the testing requirements for scholarship recipients. Previously, we noted that the testing requirements in the bill for the scholarship students follow the federal guidelines and testing schedule. However, that testing schedule is for the public education portion of the bill.

While the scholarship students in private schools will have their academic performance indicators monitored by the Department of Education, they are not required to test according to the federal guidelines like the public-schools. Instead, a third-party contractor will be collecting data from the private schools regarding the scholarship student’s academic performance per the school’s chosen measures. These will be included in a yearly report to the house education committees. We have been told that the third-party contractors will be prohibited from selling the student’s data for profit but do not see the language for this provision in the current version of the bill.

Despite its less rigorous testing schedule, the house bill still contains the same Department of Education approval oversight, DOE rules promulgation issues, and public-private funding concerns. Because the funding schema in this bill involves government money (not tax relief) being paid directly to private education institutions, it tips the balance of power over private education in favor of ever greater state oversight- especially in the future as the size of the program grows.

While some of the public education measures in this bill seem to have some merit, we continue to oppose the bill for reasons discussed. Let’s find another way to help children stuck in a bad education system, not extend the power of that system over the private sphere.

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Let us settle the question about the inclusion of Homeschoolers in the bill.  Did they include or exclude homeschoolers in this bill?  The answer is BOTH.

SB503 reads on page 2 Section (2) “Eligible student” means a resident of this state who: (B) Is not enrolled in a home school for which a parent is required to provide annual notice to the local director of schools prior to each school year of the parent’s intent to conduct a home school, as described in 49-6-3050(b);”

They have exempted the “Independent Homeschool” students in the state.  These are the students whose parents report directly to the local director of schools.  Under this statute, students must take the “…same state board approved secure standardized tests required of public-school students in grades five (5), Seven (7), and nine (9) …” (49-6-3050 section (b)(5)(A)). Additionally, the legal statute makes the scores reported to “the parent-teacher, the director of schools and the state board of education;” (49-6-350 section (b) (5) (B) (iii)). The statute also has listed out the procedure for dealing with inadequate test results which may ultimately culminate in further testing and possibly force the parent to return the child to a public or private school setting. 

For some reason, these are the homeschool students that the legislators chose to exempt- those already mandated to participate in state testing and undergo monitoring by the state. 

The majority of homeschool students in the state do not homeschool under this provision.  Instead, most of them are under the Category IV umbrella schools as described in 49-6-3050 (2)(A) “… where parents are associated with an organization that conducts church-related schools, as defined by 49-50-801…” Sometimes, the Department of Education (DOE) recognizes these students as private school students in a satellite school and sometimes as homeschool students; the legal code and the interpretation is ambiguous. 

The Senate Bill 503 does NOT exempt Category IV schools or homeschools operating under a Category IV umbrella.  Therefore, as we review how this bill could possibly affect Private or Non-Public schools who accept ESA students, homeschool parents operating under an umbrella program need to realize that this could one day affect their current level of freedom while operating within this category. 

With this SB503 version, the “strings” attached to the use of ESA funds outright applies only to those taking the funds, but as we review the bill, you will see that it is not really that simple and could change over time.  You might call these unintended consequences.

Questions: * Why did they exempt the Independent Homeschool category which already has government controls but include the Category IV private homeschool option which is free from direct government oversight?

* If they want ESA students to have the option to homeschool, why not allow the Independent Homeschool option for participation instead? 

*Why are they unwilling to close the doors they are opening to future private and homeschool regulations by the DOE?

Seems like we need an answer to these questions from our legislators.

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SB503 and HB1183 are presently traveling through the legislative process as sister bills, but are far from identical twin sisters.  Each deserve individual attention as nuances as well as vast differences exist between the two bills focused on one goal of implementing school choice in Tennessee.  Our series on the school choice movement in Tennessee has highlighted multiple aspects of each bill given that Tennessee’s ultimate school choice, if passed, will result from a fusing of these two bills in some form.  Today, we look at how the funding formulas and methods of each will affect private schools in our state.

SB503

The Senate bill attempts to cut costs by using TISA funding and by allowing children with ESA funds to transfer between Local Education Agencies (LEA’s).  In the SB503, children are eligible to attend either a private school or another public school outside their LEA.  For transfer to another LEA, children take their TISA (Tennessee Investment in Students Achievement) funding with them and leave the local funding.  There are funding formulas for movement between LEA’s that I will not spend time on here since they make little difference for private or homeschool students which is my focus. (SB 503 pg. 4-5 (c) (1) (B)

For private school- Non-Public Category I-V- the approximately $7000 is paid out from 100% state funds (SB503 p. 5 (2) (B)).  From our understanding of the language, TISA money is generated for each student who receives an ESA.  This would mean that those students currently in private education either schools or homeschools who are not allocated TISA money currently, could now receive TISA money allocation from the state.  That TISA calculated money would be transferred into the EFSA scholarship fund for the student.

By approaching the funding in this manner, SB503 offers a smaller price tag in the first year of the bill at less than $100,000,000.  In contrast to the $140,000,000 estimated price tag for the House bill HB1183, this might seem like a good deal, but we have to continue reading to the punch line.  Each bill in the Senate and the House requires an attached fiscal note that estimates the cost of a bill on the state since each budget must be balanced so that the state does not go into debt.  The fiscal note for SB503 begins with the lower cost of the program but continues that within 2 years the program could balloon to over $500,000,000 per year.  That amount of money is a hefty price for the state and will make a sizable impact on the state’s private school sector.  More to come on that impact after considering the House’s sister version.

HB1183

The House bill takes a more straightforward approach, ignoring the exchange of students between public school districts and seeming to leave TISA funding untouched.  It simply lays out $7075 per student multiplied by 20,000 students and funds this from $140,000,000 earmarked for the program in the Governor’s budget.  The TISA money already earmarked for public schools from prior and current budgets is not addressed, meaning that the money likely comes from the Tennessee General Fund although this is not stated explicitly.  I believe this lack of mention might allow flexibility in future appropriations decisions for future year budgets by not pigeonholing the legislature into where future money can be appropriated from. 

The House bill then offers a slower growth formula built into the legislation than the sudden expansion possible with the Senate version.  As the number of scholarships actually given out each year reaches 90% of those available, the following year, the total number of scholarships can be increased by 20% if the legislature appropriates money in the coming year’s budget.  The hypothetical situation in which each year the total is increased by 20% due to a high use of the scholarships each year would produce a price tag of over $500,000,000 like the Senate version in about 7 years. Although this formula allows a slower buildup, the costs to the state and ultimately the taxpayer are impressive over time.

Impact of either bill

The independent nature of private education funding which is free from government money would be fundamentally changed by this legislation in either form described above.  Over time, as the program grows, government funding would become a major source of income for private institutions.  Studies in other countries have shown that governmental funding fundamentally changes private education even if that is not the intent of those passing the initial legislation.  Over time, the presence of the largest payor of services flattens out the differences in education like happened in Chile and Australia.  In the end, the difference between private and public education becomes more a matter of semantics than content- same system, different building.  Additionally, dependence upon government funds is likely to increase prices over time and increase administrative costs to meet governmental reporting requirements and testing which will be discussed later. These cost increases have been seen in higher education as well as medicine when government funding entered the picture and grew into a major funder of these services.

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(Updated 3/22/24 with Correction at end concerning testing requirements) 

Although having grown up in a rural county meant that I never needed to put a leash on my family pets, I do appreciate whoever came up with the idea of a retractable leash.  You can strap the leash on and grant your pet of choice a feeling of great freedom until you shorten the retractable leash and they hit their allowed limit.  Sometimes you can give them 20 feet of open leash, sometimes you have to shorten it to 3 feet so they don’t cause trouble.

Government regulations often operate much like a retractable leash, attaching accountability measures which initially seem quite permissive, but later get tightened down when they decide you are not doing what they think you should do.  The school choice legislation before us in the 2 houses of the Tennessee General Assembly are a great example of such a retractable leash which will be placed upon the necks of those trying to escape their failing local public school.  Not only will escaping families be held accountable to the program’s rules, but the private schools and homeschool communities which accept them will also have a leash attached to their necks.

Multiple public statements have been made denying the reality that government money always has strings attached.  The strings are euphemistically labeled accountability measures.  On face, this is quite absurd as the explicit content of the legislation in both houses places specific limits on the money’s use:

  • The money cannot go directly to the parent or student.
  • The money can be used only for expenses approved by the Department of Education and require receipts for reimbursement.
  • Expenses without receipts or which are not approved will require parent to return that money.
  • A parent or school which is believed to commit fraud in regard to the expenses may be remanded to civil authorities for criminal prosecution.
  • Schools which are not in compliance with DOE’s promulgated (and potentially changing) academic standards and regulations will lose the right to participate in the program.
  • Testing requirements are attached to HB1183 which comply with the federal ESSA (Every Student Succeeds Act). — CORRECTION AT END
  • Compliance with ESSA is required to receive federal funding with its strings.

Parents and their private schools should be concerned about these strings or leashes in their present form, but future prospects for the leash shortening are even more troublesome.  We may (or may not) feel comfortable with the leash length right now, under the current administration and the current General Assembly, but the future holds no promises that future state leaders will allow such leash lengths to remain unrestrictive.  Once the leash is attached to our neck through funding and the regulations which always follow such funding, we will have great difficulty extracting our necks from the leash when it shortens. 

The best option is to avoid the leash being attached in the first place by rejecting the legislation and rejecting the promised money for educating our children. 

Please take a few minutes to contact the House Government Operations committee and share the ideas above in your own words in opposition to this bill.  You can email (good), call (better), or make an in-person / phone appointment (best).  Their committee oversees the regulations written by various state government departments which would eventually tighten the leash.  Tell Legislators that private school parents and homeschool parents DO NOT WANT a leash attached through this legislation, especially one which can be tightened later by future leaders.  Their contact information is below. Parents can further warn their private school or homeschool umbrella program with this information.

Thank you.

Dr. Eric Potter

LINK to the Contact List for the House Government Operations Committee Members

CORRECTION 3/22/24

From details learned during Moms for Liberty legislative day 3/20/24

Posted separately on 3/22/24

You Learn Something New Everyday

In this brief post we offer a correction in part of our review of House Bill 1183.  Because HB1183 has language dealing with the scholarships and even more language dealing with public education issues, we need to clarify the testing requirements for scholarship recipients.  Previously, we noted that the testing requirements in the bill for the scholarship students follow the federal guidelines and testing schedule.  However, that testing schedule is for the public education portion of the bill.

While the scholarship students in private schools will have their academic performance indicators monitored by the Department of Education,  they are not required to test according to the federal guidelines like the public-schools.  Instead, a third-party contractor will be collecting data from the private schools regarding the scholarship student’s academic performance per the school’s chosen measures.  These will be included in a yearly report to the house education committees.  We have been told that the third-party contractors will be prohibited from selling the student’s data for profit but do not see the language for this provision in the current version of the bill. 

Despite its less rigorous testing schedule, the house bill still contains the same Department of Education approval oversight, DOE rules promulgation issues, and public-private funding concerns.  Because the funding schema in this bill involves government money (not tax relief) being paid directly to private education institutions, it tips the balance of power over private education in favor of ever greater state oversight- especially in the future as the size of the program grows.   

While some of the public education measures in this bill seem to have some merit, we continue to oppose the bill for reasons discussed.  Let’s find another way to help children stuck in a bad education system, not extend the power of that system over the private sphere.

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When a student uses ESFA funds to pay for a part of their private school tuition, the schools bring themselves more directly under the DOE and potentially lose their autonomy.

First, the schools will have to deal with testing issues.   In the Senate bill, scholarship recipients must undergo annual testing using a normed referenced test approved by the state board of education as well as administering an English language arts test (TCAP or other DOE approved test) in third grade and a mathematics test (TCAP or other as approved by DOE) in eighth grade.  Then, in eleventh grade they must take the ACT or SAT.  Administering the tests is the responsibility of the schools on pg. 13 (b). 

In the House bill, testing will be required for ESFA students. THIS WAS INCORRECT AND HAS BEEN CORRECTRED AT THE END AS WELL AS IN A SEPARATE POST. ——-ERROR REMOVED———– Right now, this is being set up as a state funded endeavor. The legislation gives the commissioner of education the right to establish the schedule for the statewide tests.  No further information on who administers the test is given in the legislation. If a private school has scholarship students, presumably they will come under the administration schedule of the commissioner of education but this is not clear in the legislation. If federal funding ever comes into play, the schools may be brought under federal guidelines. 

Second, the school is responsible for providing adequate receipts for documentation for all expenses paid with funds (p 14).  They may not refund the parent but only the state account (p 14). Should the school have several students using the funds in various ways, the administrative overhead may increase depending on the rules and requirements established by the DOE regarding this matter.

Third, the senate bill gives the state board of education duty to “promulgate rules allowing the department to suspend or terminate a private or public school from participating in the program due to low academic performance, as determined by the department” (emphasis mine) (pg. 15 (2)).  The school can then be removed from participating in the program.  What other rules come into play regarding the school remaining open are not addressed but probably can be found in other legal codes and rules. The testing that the schools are required to perform is stated to be for information purposes only so it is unclear how the school’s academics will be evaluated.  These rules will be made by the state board after the legislation passes.   Direct oversight by the DOE who perhaps has a different educational philosophy from the private schools should be concerning to independent private schools.

Fourth, fraud protections extend to “any other person” who use funds deposited in an account in a way that is not qualified or “any other person” who misrepresents the nature, receipts, or any other evidence of one or more expenses could be made to pay restitution or may be brought up on criminal charges. The DOE is given the right to promulgate the rules regarding all these issues (pg. 15-16). 

Fifth, for private students with educational disabilities, the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA) funding uses federal money to provide those services.  One child using this money could bring the entire private school under federal regulations. This is a complicated issue that was left unanswered by the Education Commissioner, Deputy Commissioner, legal counsel for the House, and legal counsel for the DOE.  Both bills include IDEA funding for students with disabilities who leave the public system to go into the private system.  Schools need to be aware of this issue and careful that they do not come under federal regulations. In conclusion, by taking this money, the private schools are taking on the responsibility of annual testing, adding administrative tasks and possibly legal consultation fees to their budgets, putting themselves under direct evaluation by the DOE for academic performance, and possibly opening themselves up to fraud charges if the money is not handled just as the yet to be promulgated rules allow.   They also must be careful with the use of IDEA funds for special education student needs or could end up under federal regulations. Even more important, everyone should be aware that federal ESSA guidelines are being followed for testing schedules which sets the state up for being able to take federal funds in this endeavor in the future which could put private schools under federal regulations. Private schools need to count the costs carefully before accepting this money.

Stay Tuned for a Call To Action March 12th (tomorrow).

CORRECTION 3/22/24

WE LEARN SOMETHING NEW EVERYDAY

By Jennifer Potter

In this brief post we offer a correction in part of our review of House Bill 1183. Because HB1183 has language dealing with the scholarships and even more language dealing with public education issues, we need to clarify the testing requirements for scholarship recipients. Previously, we noted that the testing requirements in the bill for the scholarship students follow the federal guidelines and testing schedule. However, that testing schedule is for the public education portion of the bill.

While the scholarship students in private schools will have their academic performance indicators monitored by the Department of Education, they are not required to test according to the federal guidelines like the public-schools. Instead, a third-party contractor will be collecting data from the private schools regarding the scholarship student’s academic performance per the school’s chosen measures. These will be included in a yearly report to the house education committees. We have been told that the third-party contractors will be prohibited from selling the student’s data for profit but do not see the language for this provision in the current version of the bill.

Despite its less rigorous testing schedule, the house bill still contains the same Department of Education approval oversight, DOE rules promulgation issues, and public-private funding concerns. Because the funding schema in this bill involves government money (not tax relief) being paid directly to private education institutions, it tips the balance of power over private education in favor of ever greater state oversight- especially in the future as the size of the program grows.

While some of the public education measures in this bill seem to have some merit, we continue to oppose the bill for reasons discussed. Let’s find another way to help children stuck in a bad education system, not extend the power of that system over the private sphere.

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