Current:Home > StocksFamilies rally to urge North Carolina lawmakers to fully fund private-school vouchers -Thrive Success Strategies
Families rally to urge North Carolina lawmakers to fully fund private-school vouchers
View
Date:2025-04-18 07:02:06
RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) — Dozens of North Carolina parents held a rally on Wednesday to urge Republican legislators to fully fund scholarships for children to attend private and religious schools after lawmakers failed to work out an agreement earlier this year to meet the program’s soaring demand.
A state budget provision last year ending income caps to qualify for the decade-old Opportunity Scholarship program and the repeal of another eligibility requirement led to a six-fold increase in new applications for the coming school year. But without enough funding set aside, nearly 55,000 children who qualified for scholarships were placed on a waiting list.
House and Senate Republicans said during this year’s chief General Assembly session that eliminating the waiting list was a top priority. But the two chambers failed to work out a deal to appropriate hundreds of millions of additional dollars for the program before adjourning in late June.
“We’ve been told time and time again that they would get this done, and it so far has not happened,” said Rachel Brady of Wake Forest, a rally organizer who is among the waiting list families. “We applaud your school choice efforts, but we are not going to be forgotten ... it’s time to act now and get this done.”
The gathering behind the Legislative Building came as the House convened to consider overriding three vetoed bills unrelated to the scholarships. Senators, however, declined to take any actions this week. The legislature’s next scheduled meetings are in early September.
During this year’s primary session, the Senate passed a standalone spending measure that allocated $488 million to cover the program and another private-education funding initiative. But House members didn’t act on the measure and instead wanted the private-school money accompanied by public school spending increases within a budget bill.
House Speaker Tim Moore, who spoke with some of the parents Wednesday, said he was hopeful an agreement could be reached this year. He wants any solution to make scholarship awards retroactive to the start of the school year.
Senate leader Phil Berger also met with the advocates and expressed his support but told the parents to urge House members to vote on the Senate’s standalone measure, spokesperson Lauren Horsch said. Moore said passing the Senate measure wasn’t allowed by the rules governing this week’s session.
The delay already has affected families, according to Wednesday’s speakers, who have either pulled their children out of private school enrollment this fall because scholarships haven’t come through or who feel the pinch of paying more tuition from their own wallets.
Jason Phibbs, co-founder of Heritage Classical Academy in Stanly County, said that enrollment at his school has fallen at least 10% during the last few months in the wake of the waiting list delay. Families have been “left to decide whether they pull children out of the school that’s best for their family, split children between schools, or make extraordinary sacrifices in hopes of making tuition payments,” he said.
Elizabeth Foskey of Raleigh, a first-time scholarship applicant, said she and her husband are making ends meet so their third-grader and kindergartener can attend Thales Academy starting this year without the scholarships.
Lawmakers “gave us hope that we were getting this money. So we stuck it out,” Foskey said, adding that with the first school payments due Aug. 15, “we had to sacrifice quite a bit.”
Until this school year, only low- and some middle-income families could qualify for the scholarships. The funding shortfall for the expanded program meant there was only enough money to provide awards to children who received scholarships last year and some new applicants whose family income fell below certain levels. A family of four that makes more than $115,440, for example, is currently left out.
Gov. Roy Cooper and other Democrats have strongly opposed the Opportunity Scholarship program, saying it takes away money that could otherwise buttress the state’s traditional public schools. The elimination of the income caps makes it worse, they argue, by allowing even millionaires to receive grants, albeit ones that are smaller than those with lower income levels. Any pro-school voucher bill likely would be vetoed by Cooper, but Republicans hold narrow veto-proof majorities.
If fully funded, scholarships for the school year would range from $7,468 for the lowest-income earners to $3,360 for the highest.
veryGood! (7)
Related
- Trump's 'stop
- Family, fortune, and the fight for Osage headrights
- Pig kidney works in a donated body for over a month, a step toward animal-human transplants
- Russian shelling in Ukraine's Kherson region kills 7, including 23-day-old baby
- Residents worried after ceiling cracks appear following reroofing works at Jalan Tenaga HDB blocks
- Horoscopes Today, August 15, 2023
- A headless body. Victims bludgeoned to death: Notorious mass murderer escapes death penalty
- Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway cuts its stake in GM almost in half
- John Galliano out at Maison Margiela, capping year of fashion designer musical chairs
- Maui wildfire survivors say they had to fend for themselves in days after blaze: We ran out of everything
Ranking
- Costco membership growth 'robust,' even amid fee increase: What to know about earnings release
- A former fundraiser for Rep. George Santos has been charged with wire fraud and identity theft
- Minnesota woman sentenced to 7 years in prison in $7M pandemic aid fraud scheme
- Fired Wisconsin courts director files complaints against liberal Supreme Court justices
- Taylor Swift Eras Archive site launches on singer's 35th birthday. What is it?
- Venus Williams, Caroline Wozniacki receive wild cards for 2023 US Open
- Rebates are landing in the bank accounts of Minnesota taxpayers and paper checks are coming soon
- Dottie Fideli went viral when she married herself. There's much more to her story.
Recommendation
Warm inflation data keep S&P 500, Dow, Nasdaq under wraps before Fed meeting next week
Yes, pickleball is a professional sport. Here's how much top players make.
Protesters march through Miami to object to Florida’s Black history teaching standards
As death toll in Maui fire rises, here's how it compares to the deadliest fires in the US
Trump invites nearly all federal workers to quit now, get paid through September
North Carolina GOP seeks to override governor’s veto of bill banning gender-affirming care for youth
Firefighters in Hawaii fought to save homes while their own houses burned to the ground
Jet aborts takeoff at Boston airport when another airliner gets a bit too close