5 Ways Louisiana’s New Voucher Program Spells Disaster for Public Education
By Kristin Rawls, AlterNet
Posted on June 8, 2012, Printed on June 9, 2012
Late last month, the state of Louisiana unveiled a new school
voucher program, joining 14 other states that have recently increased
the availability of vouchers to fund private school tuition with public
dollars.
This latest pet project of popular Republican Governor Bobby Jindal, called Louisiana Believes, is now regarded as the most extensive voucher system in the United States -- out-privatizing even the state of Indiana,
where nearly 60 percent of the state’s students are eligible for
vouchers. By eroding caps on family income levels, and thereby providing
voucher assistance to both low- and middle-income families, Indiana’s
plan aimed to remake public education in the state more extensively than
any voucher system in US history – until now.
Like Indiana’s program, Louisiana’s new voucher plan is so wide in
scope that it could eventually cut the state’s public education funding
in half. But in a number of crucial ways, the Louisiana model works even
harder to destroy public education than Indiana’s program does. Already
approved by the Louisiana state legislature, the program sets an
alarming precedent for undermining public education in other states.
Saturday, June 9, 2012
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