Senate Democratic leaders said Tuesday that they are exploring the possibility of ending some popular tax credits in order to fund a grant program designed to improve failing schools aimed at countering a school takeover proposal championed by Gov. Nathan Deal.
The governor, meanwhile, said he was considering whether to exempt charter schools from his proposal to put the state’s worst schools in a new statewide “Opportunity District” under his office’s oversight. That move is meant to placate critics who said the focus of the initiative should be on more traditional public schools.
Senate Democrats view their plan as a better alternative to Deal’s proposal, which they see as a government overreach that gives the governor’s office too much power over local education programs. Their initiative, Senate Bill 124, would create “community schools” with access to health clinics, counselors and after-school tutors.
“We believe a program to address failing schools must be much more focused,” Senate Minority Leader Steve Henson said. “The issue of Deal’s constitutional amendment need not pass this year. We urge the governor and his staff to give us time to look at it and to review our proposal.”
There is no price tag on the Democratic proposal yet, though Henson said his caucus is exploring ending some tax credits. He mentioned eliminating the lucrative state tax credit on aviation fuel that benefits Delta Air Lines and the $58 million tax-credit program to fund student scholarship organizations. Ending either tax break is considered an unlikely prospect in the Republican-controlled Legislature.
Deal wants panel to look at Democrats’ plan
Deal, however, has indicated he was receptive to the broader Democratic plan. He said Tuesday that he wanted an education commission he assigned to investigate ways to update the state’s school funding formula to also review Henson’s proposal.
“It does not appear to be an alternative to what I’m proposing. It appears to be something that can already be done,” Deal said. “It would be one of those things that I would hope our education reform commission will look at.”
The governor needs bipartisan backing to pass his measure, which as a constitutional amendment requires a two-thirds vote in each chamber. For their support, Democrats could demand he include portions of their proposal in his overall education package.
Deal said he's exploring other changes to his signature initiative as well. Charter school supporters say their schools don't belong in Deal's new statewide district, as they are already bound by a strict mandate to increase performance or close their doors.
The governor said he will consider whether to exempt the schools from his proposal. At least two charter schools under state oversight were on the list of 141 failing schools that his office circulated last week.
“I think they have a point,” Deal said. “We have not tried to include them in it necessarily.”
Leaders from one of those charter schools are taking matters into their own hands. Ivy Prep Young Men’s Leadership Academy said in a statement Tuesday that it had hired a consultant to probe its enrollment, instruction, policy and procedures. It also recently launched two programs aimed at increasing parental involvement and offering more tutoring to raise test scores.
“We’re the first to admit when a policy or procedure isn’t working, and we work tirelessly to fix it,” Victoria Wiley, executive director of Ivy Preparatory Academies, said in a statement. “That’s what being a charter school is all about for us.”
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