Living and breathing in the Second City
A fellow blogivist alerts us to a breaking development in Georgia. The State Senate has approved a tuition tax credit scholarship program (read the full bill). The bill now just needs to be signed by the Governor, Sonny Perdue. Perdue signed a special-needs voucher program last year, so there is every reason to expect he’ll sign this bill as well.
Any time a state passes a scholarship program like this one, it is good news. Tax credit programs like this one encourage individuals and corporation to give to scholarship funds that help needy children get out of failing public schools. Thousands of kids will now be given opportunities that before existed only in their dreams.
But there are some shortcomings, as we might expect. The bill limits individual contributions to $1,000 for individuals and $2,500 for couples. Importantly, the corporate contributions can be as high as 75 percent of their tax liability, a respectably high amount.
Also, the total of tax credits allowed by the program is capped at $50 million. This is a pretty healthy cap size, $6 million more than Pennsylvania’s. But it is still an artificial limitation on opportunity. State per pupil spending is around $8,000 per student. If we assume the average scholarship will meet this level, then this program can only help about 6,250 of Georgia’s 1.6 million school kids.
Kudos to Georgia. They should be proud. But we must remember, this big victory is but a drop in the bucket.
The fog comes
on little cat feet.
It sits looking
over harbor and city
on silent haunches
and then moves on.
-Carl Sandburg
Tuition Tax Scholarship in Georgia from Free College Scholarship
April 2nd, 2008 at 8:50 am
[...] post by Mike Van Winkle for Scholarship [...]
» Woah! Voucher bill makes it to Governor Liberty is for me…
April 2nd, 2008 at 8:54 am
[...] Journal-Constitution is available here; a substantive overview of the bill, here. According to A Chicago Blog, the Georgia Governor signed a special needs bill into law last [...]
voucher tester
April 2nd, 2008 at 9:57 am
Ga parents need to know that the truth about the SN Voucher. (SB10 Special Needs Scholarship, voucher)
We sadly were quick to try this new program. Our child has been in a school that functions like a babysitting service.
My very intelligent child was not being educated
The parent of difficult kids don’t get called about their disruptive kids, so it’s a win win for those types of families.
Teachers just quit after school started. My child had to put up with terroristic threats all day long. Violent chidren were tolerated.
I am shocked at what little education took place. The rare time work was done it was several, several grade levels lower than where my child was at.
Parents please please look before you leap.
Private schools are getting away with this in GA and the children suffer.
Public schools have issues, yes, however none of the above issues are allowed in public schools.
Things that are allowed in this private school would have made the nightly news has it been a public school.
Accountability is, for the most part, in place in public school.
Look before you leap…….