House committee
makes school choice bill two-district pilot
JIM
DAVENPORT Associated
Press
COLUMBIA, S.C. - Gov. Mark Sanford's
centerpiece school choice program hit a major snag in the House
budget committee where it was scaled back Monday to apply to only
two districts instead of all the state's schools.
Sanford backs using tax credits to cover tuition at private
schools. He has said the move will inject competition into
education.
Last week, a report from the state's chief economist said tax
breaks would cost South Carolina as much as $231 million in revenue
in five years. That Board of Economic Advisors fiscal impact study
cooled enthusiasm for the legislation.
Supporters tried to amend the bill Monday to address those
concerns. For instance, they dropped a proposal that would have let
businesses and individuals give unlimited contributions to
scholarship granting groups instead of paying state income taxes.
But their compromise failed on a tie vote.
Instead, Rep. Adam Taylor, R-Laurens, convinced the House Ways
and Means Committee to create a two-district pilot program. The
Education Department would pick school systems from the state's
wealthiest and poorest school districts. He also cut back the
donation break for the scholarships, capping tax write-offs at
$10,000.
Those compromises were needed "to allow this bill to move forward
to the full floor for debate," said Taylor, who added he has been
targeted politically by supporters of the bill.
But that compromise isn't nearly enough, Sanford spokesman Will
Folks said.
"We're going to keep pushing for as many choices for as many
parents as possible," Folks said. The bill hitting the floor
"certainly is a far cry from the kind of school choice that parents
deserve," Folks said. At the same time, the limits on scholarships
need to be lifted so those groups can be free to help parents and
children with school choice, he said.
"We're just happy it's going to the House floor," said Denver
Merrill, spokesman for South Carolinians for Responsible Government,
the group leading the school choice legislation. Still, "we don't
feel a pilot program will give it the chance it deserves," he
said.
But even that chance is too much, opponents say.
The state six years ago passed one of the nation's toughest
school accountability laws, Education Superintendent Inez Tenenbaum
said. But the House budget committee refused to include
accountability requirements for private schools in the pilot
program.
"It's a terrible message to send to public schools who have
worked against all odds to produce results," she said. The House
should kill the bill because it is "bad public policy. It's bad
fiscal policy," Tenenbaum said.
The South Carolina School Boards Association agrees.
"A bad bill is a bad bill," association spokeswoman Debbie Elmore
said. With the bill emerging from the committee with a 12-9 vote,
opponents hope to stop it on the House floor. "Obviously it doesn't
have tremendous support," Elmore said.
Denver said supporters would try to move the legislation back to
a statewide school choice program on the floor. But that's
unlikely.
The original bill "was too much to try to do at once," House Ways
and Means Committee Chairman Bobby Harrell, R-Charleston, said. "I
don't anticipate the bill will be changed back on the floor." |