James Talarico
@jamestalarico
·
10h
These pictures were taken at Cornerstone Christian School, where tuition is $27,000.
Abbott’s voucher is only $8,000 — not enough for working families
to get a “choice” but enough for rich families at Cornerstone
to get a 30% discount.
Vouchers are welfare for the wealthy.
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James Talarico
@jamestalarico
·
10h
These pictures were taken at Cornerstone Christian School, where tuition is $27,000.
Abbott’s voucher is only $8,000 — not enough for working families
to get a “choice” but enough for rich families at Cornerstone
to get a 30% discount.
Vouchers are welfare for the wealthy.
![]()
https://www.kxan.com/news/texas-politics/gov-abbott-says-agreement-reached-with-house-leaders-on-school-choice-plan/amp/
AUSTIN (KXAN) — Gov. Greg Abbott announced Tuesday he reached an “agreement” with Texas House leaders that could advance his stalled school choice plan, as time runs short to approve it before the third special legislative session ends in exactly one week.
Abbott said he expanded the special session agenda to now include additional public school funding as well as teacher pay raises after working with House Speaker Dade Phelan. He said their deal would also raise the proposed amount of money that families could receive through an education savings account program he’d like to establish in state. He said participating students could receive approximately $10,400 per year, which is higher than the numbers previously proposed by both the House and Senate.
According to an email from Abbott’s office, key aspects of the legislation to expand school choice in Texas include the following:
- Universal eligibility for all K-12 schoolchildren in Texas.
- Voluntary participation – parents, students, and schools choose whether they want to participate.
- Students will receive approximately $10,400 per year in their Education Savings Accounts.
- Phases out the State of Texas Assessments of Academic Readiness (STAAR) Test.
- Students participating in the program will have the option of taking a norm-referenced test or STAAR test to ensure the program achieves good educational outcomes.
- Billions more in funding for Texas public schools for the biennium, including teacher pay raises and school safety.
As someone with kids living in Texas, this would be fantastic.
I live in a pretty average suburb in Austin and most of my immediate neighbors send their kids to charter schools.
I support school choice but not if it means subsidizing religious schools. Kind of defeats the purpose of education if the education they are getting tells them they can pray cancer away and a magic man in the sky watches you poop.
Abbott on a mission it seems