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  • 2011-12-15 (xsd:date)
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  • Anti-voucher advocate claims proposed scholarship program would be funded out of public school budgets (en)
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  • Thousands of students could receive a private education through corporate donations to a so-called scholarship program, but one critic claims the proposed school voucher program would be funded on the backs of public schools. Julia Sass Rubin, a spokeswoman for the anti-voucher group Save Our Schools NJ, explained the funding mechanism within the proposed legislation, known as the Opportunity Scholarship Act, during a recent interview on News 12 New Jersey’s Power & Politics show. (The Opportunity Scholarship Act) would be funded directly from public school budgets, Rubin said during the show broadcast on Dec. 3 and 4. So it would absolutely take money out of the public school system to transfer to private and religious schools. After reviewing the legislation, PolitiFact New Jersey determined that Rubin skipped a few elements of the proposed voucher program, but she still has a point that public schools would lose state aid as a result. There’s no direct link between the scholarships and public school budgets, as Rubin said. Students would receive scholarships through donations made by corporations, and use them to pay for tuition at other public schools or private schools. However, those corporations would get tax credits in return, and to make up for that lost tax revenue, the state would withhold aid from the students’ original school districts. In a phone interview, Rubin acknowledged the process involving the tax credits, but argued that public schools are ultimately paying for the program. It’s like a money laundering scheme, Rubin told us. It’s a direct reduction in school aid. So the schools are paying for it. Let’s explain how the proposed voucher program would work: The Opportunity Scholarship Act is part of Gov. Chris Christie’s education reform agenda, but the legislation has stalled in the Legislature since early this year. About two weeks ago, opponents and supporters of the bill held competing rallies, one in Jersey City and one in Trenton. The current version of the Act would set up a five-year pilot program to award scholarships to public and private school students residing in 13 school districts with failing schools, including Asbury Park and Newark. Public school students would be able to leave those districts and attend school elsewhere. Three organizations throughout the state would distribute the scholarships to parents or guardians of the selected students. Corporations making donations for the scholarships would get tax credits worth 100 percent of the value of their donations, costing the state millions’ worth of tax revenue. That’s where the school aid dollars come in. According to the state’s nonpartisan Office of Legislative Services, which analyzed the Senate version of the bill, up to nearly $1.2 billion in state aid would be initially withheld from the 13 districts over the course of the program. Of that amount, about $354 million would be returned to the districts, according to OLS. But the remaining roughly $840 million would be retained by the state to offset the loss of corporate business taxes, according to OLS. So, the scholarships would not be directly funded by public school dollars, but in a roundabout way, education aid would be withheld to cover the tax credits granted to donors providing the scholarships. But Adam Bauer, a spokesman for Republican state Sen. Tom Kean Jr., one of the bill’s sponsors, argued that under the state’s school funding formula, schools would lose a proportionate share of state aid if their enrollment declined for any other reason. That’s how the formula works, Bauer said in an email. Why then is it such a travesty when this happens as a result of a student choosing to go elsewhere as part of a scholarship program? Our ruling In a television interview, Rubin claimed the Opportunity Scholarship Act would be funded directly from public school budgets and take money out of the public school system to transfer to private and religious schools. The program would not make a direct link between public school budgets and the scholarships. But to offset the cost of tax credits awarded to the scholarship donors, the participating school districts would lose state aid. We rate the statement Mostly True. To comment on this ruling, go to NJ.com . (en)
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