School voucher battle expected to erupt in Texas legislature.
Frustrated voucher proponents in Texas are exploring new avenues to
bring taxpayer support for private religious education to the Lone Star State.
For years, voucher bills have been introduced in the state
legislature, but none have passed. This year, supporters are ready to
try some new tactics to push the idea.
The Houston Chronicle reported Dec. 6 that state Rep. Frank Corte,
a San Antonio Republican, has pre-filed a bill that would establish a
voucher program in six of the largest school districts in Texas.
Corte says rather than sub]nit the bill as free-standing
legislation, he will attempt to attach it as a rider to a larger bill
that lawmakers are required to pass. He's thinking of an omnibus
measure that finances the Texas Education Agency or some other
wide-ranging school-finance legislation.
"We're probably at a better position this term than any
time before to try to bring [vouchers] to fruition," Corte told the
newspaper. Gov. Rick Perry and several politically powerful business
groups in the state support vouchers.
But public education leaders are vowing to block the proposal and
say they are willing to match Corte's hardball tactics. Groups that
oppose taxpayer funding of private religious schools say they are even
willing to risk a shutdown of the state education agency.
"If they get into playing that kind of chicken, we'll
play," said Richard Kouri, a lobbyist for the Texas State Teachers
Association.
The Coalition for Public Schools, an umbrella organization that
includes several Texas groups, has also vowed to oppose vouchers.
"What is in the public interest is to have a fabulous public
school in every neighborhood," Carolyn Boyle, coordinator of the
Coalition, said. "There's too many people who want their hands
on public money."
A voucher bill reached the floor of the Texas House of
Representatives in 1997 but failed on a tie vote. Bills have been
introduced repeatedly since then, but none has gathered any momentum.
In South Carolina, meanwhile, private-school aid proponents are
gearing up for an attempt to pass tuition tax credits. In early
December, state Rep. Doug Smith, a Spartanburg Republican, filed a bill
that would create a tax credit program in the state.
State Education Superintendent Inez Tenenbaum said she opposes the
idea.
"The biggest problem is public schools are challenged by
accountability, and here we want to give money to schools that have no
accountability," she said.
South Carolina public schools. Tenenbaum noted, are already
under-funded. Smith's bill, she said, would only mean less funding
for the system.