Legislator urges Illinois’ school choice program be reinstated
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[February 10, 2024]
By Greg Bishop | The Center Square
(The Center Square) – News around schools aiming to close if Illinois
legislators do not reauthorize a privately funded school choice
scholarship program has some urging for swift action on the issue.
Illinois’ Invest in Kids school choice scholarship program provided
private donors a 75% Illinois income tax credit. The program never saw
the full investment potential, but has given nearly 41,000 children the
ability to go to a school of their families’ choosing since 2018. The
program expired at the end of 2023, after legislators failed to approve
an extension.
Before the House adjourned Thursday until later this month, state Rep.
Dan Ugaste, R-Geneva, said the stories of schools preparing to close,
and the impact on students and families, should spur action to reinstate
the program.
“Nine-thousand, five-hundred underprivileged children are about to lose
their best chance at a bright future,” he said. “If these schools have
to close because the credit isn’t there, then guess what folks, we’ve
just impacted more than just those 9,500 kids who have bet their futures
on this type of education.”
The program was opposed by public school unions. In praising the
program’s sunset, the Illinois Education Association called it a
“voucher scheme.” And, despite the program being privately funded in
exchange for a tax credit, the IEA said it diverts taxpayer dollars away
from public schools, even though public education spending in Illinois
increases each year.
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State Rep. Dan Ugaste, R-Geneva, during a news conference in
Springfield, Illinois
Greg Bishop / The Center Square
“Eighty percent of our public schools in Illinois are underfunded,” IEA
President Al Llorens said in November. “We need to focus on providing
the necessary funding to our public schools so that all children in
Illinois continue to have access to a high-quality, public education.”
Public schools in Illinois have seen an increase in taxpayer funding of
around $350 million each year since the inception of the Invest in Kids
program.
Last month, the Archdiocese of Chicago announced several private schools
would close where a majority of the schools’ students are recipients of
the Invest in Kids scholarship.
“Since the scholarship program has lapsed, we’re seeing the negative
effects on not only the recipients, but also on their schools and
classmates,” said Bob Gilligan, executive director of the Catholic
Conference of Illinois. “We simply cannot stand back and watch schools
close.”
Ugaste implored the Democratic supermajority to join the Republican
minority to reinstate the program.
“We have 40 votes we’re willing to put on it. You have the power to have
the bills called,” he said. “Please work together with us and help the
children of Illinois.”
Legislators return Feb. 20. |