educationconservative
Texas' Big Education Shift: What's Next for School Choice?
Texas, USAThursday, April 17, 2025
Protesters also made their voices heard, filling the Capitol with chants of "No vouchers! " Supporters and opponents were easy to spot, with protesters wearing red shirts and supporters in blue.
The Education Savings Accounts (ESAs) proposal would give families money for education expenses.
Families in private schools could get about $10, 000 per year per child, while homeschooled students could get $2, 000.
Children with disabilities would get even more, with private school students receiving $11, 500 and homeschooled students getting $2, 500.
Republican state budget writers want to spend $1 billion of the state's surplus to fund the program.
But a legislative advisory board projects that the cost could rise to nearly $4 billion by 2030.
Democrats tried to cap the program's funding at $1 billion, but their efforts failed.
They also pointed to Arizona's experience with ESAs, which has led to a budget shortfall.
The bill also has a controversial provision: it would block undocumented students from qualifying.
Only U. S. citizens or people lawfully in the country could receive an ESA, a point of contention for some lawmakers.
Meanwhile, the House also approved a major boost to public school funding, adding about $8 billion to those campuses.
This would be the first increase to the base per-student funding since 2019, but it might not be enough to keep up with inflation.
It's clear that Texas is at a crossroads when it comes to education funding.
The state is trying to balance the needs of public schools with the desire for more school choice options.
It remains to be seen how this new policy will play out in the coming years.
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