BMX Bandit said:
HumbleAg04 said:
The detail I need to see and understand is the impact of special education and expectations of service. For example in today's world say a kid qualifies for speech services and attends a private school. The private school doesn't offer speech or have a SLP on staff because they aren't required to. The public school the kid is zoned to is legally obligated to provide services.
Does the obligation to provide services follow the voucher? Will the zoned public school continue to get screwed? Or will we just not provide special education services anymore?
Why would a parent needing speech therapy for their child leave a school with the therapy to go to a school that didn't offer it?
How is the zoned public school getting screwed?
In current system zoned public school has to go out of their way to schedule services for a student at another campus or face legal repercussions (thanks Fed). On the bright side the tax revenue is going to the school system providing the services, on the down side the state is stealing $10MM / yr from the district.
In a voucher system if that tax revenue leaves the school but it is still mandated by our wonderful government to provide services so now they have to more with less resources.
All the discussion is around private schools and ****ty public schools, what happens to communities with a good public school system? Can they limit how many people want to attend their campuses, do kids have to apply? How does the district plan for attendance numbers every year? (I hope killing the Department of Education is part of this shift and impacts this conversation) There are lots of actual details needed to make this work and I've yet to see an actual fleshed out plan.
I'm 100% in favor of overhauling public education, killing the administration staff that eat up all the funds, and abolishing the Federal Department of Education, but the simplistic takes on the voucher system by everyone isn't going to solve the actual detailed issues it will create.
Does Texas rush into this with the potential of massive federal changes to education? Do we slow play it to encompass our plan into that new world? Schools are funded through property taxes, why not eliminate that and fund schools differently?
I support the voucher idea on its face and vote accordingly, but it is just far more nuanced of an issue than people want to acknowledge.