Under legislation that has cleared the Georgia House, some children who are “legal refugees” could obtain state scholarships to attend private schools.
The Associated Press on Monday, March 9, 2015
Georgia opened the door to private school vouchers in 2007, with a law aimed at parents who felt their disabled children weren’t being adequately served in public school.
In the 2013-2014 school year, the families of about 3,400 disabled students received taxpayer-funded vouchers to help pay their children’s private school tuition.
The vouchers, or scholarships, vary in an amount based on the severity of the disability. The maximum last year was $12,803, just shy of what’s reported as the average tuition at private schools dedicated to teaching special needs students.
Public school groups have been generally opposed to this program and the much costlier private school tax credit/private school scholarship. They argue that both programs undercut public education, a claim that supporters deny.
The special needs scholarship program is for students with an array of disabilities, including autism, blindness and behavioral disorders.But an observant reader who had seen House Bill 296 called PolitiFact, asking if it meant a major change in the program was afoot.
“It looks like the program is no longer just about helping handicapped kids,” she said. “It looks like they want to give out scholarships so immigrant children who can’t speak English can attend private school. Can that be right?”
PolitiFact Georgia decided to investigate.
We found a five-paragraph story on the bill by The Associated Press, which backed up the reader’s claim.
We reached out to the authors of House Bill 296, which is a bill pending in the Georgia General Assembly to amend the special needs scholarship law.
We heard back from the bill’s chief sponsor, state Rep. Randy Nix, R-LaGrange, who told us an estimated 700 school-age refugees could qualify under the legislation for scholarships to attend private school.
“They are legal, and Georgia is obligated to educate them,” Nix said.
The highest concentrations of these students are metro Atlanta, especially the Clarkston area of DeKalb County, he said.
These students “create a significant problem for their schools,” Nix said.
“This bill is good for those schools that are struggling to deal with these students,” he said. “It will be better for all concerned for them to attend a school which creates a learning environment more geared and welcoming to their unique needs.”
To qualify for a scholarship, a student would have to meet the definition of legal refugee under Title I of the Immigration and Nationalization Act, said Matt Cardoza, spokesman for the Georgia Department of Education.
The student would be required to have an I-94 clearance, with a refugee admission stamp, and be “limited-English proficient as defined in 20 U.S.C. Section 7801.”
Unlike other students in the scholarship program, qualifying refugees would not be required to have individual education plans (IEPs) nor would they be required to attend public school in the prior school year.
The original champions of the scholarship program were caught by surprise by the bill when contacted by PolitiFact on Thursday.
There is no school choice program in the country related to refugees, the Friedman Foundation for Education Choice, the legacy foundation of Nobel economist and school choice founder Milton Friedman said in a statement.
“We instead believe the one year requirement to enroll in a public school to earn a scholarship should be removed for special needs students,” said Susan Meyers, a spokeswoman for the organization.“This effort argues in favor of a voucher for all children. If a child needs a different school, he or she should be able to choose no matter what their personal circumstances.”
The bill overwhelmingly passed the Georgia House on Monday and moves to the Senate for consideration. The measure, which also would require approval of the governor to become law,
“pays attention to some often-overlooked children – exceptional education students who are either children of immigrants or those learning to speak English,” said Tim Callahan, spokesman for the Professional Association of Georgia Educators (PAGE).
”That by itself is a positive since our legislators do not often look kindly on such students,” Callahan said.
But he said the current group of political leaders are championing these students as “part of their not-very-hidden efforts to splinter the public schools via defunding and diversion of funding, ie. vouchers posing as ‘scholarships.”
“The irony is that across the nation schools of choice — charters, magnets, etc. — are frequently criticized for either not accepting these types of students because they are labor intensive and more costly to educate … or for accepting them but forcing them out eventually. So I guess it is a mixed blessing.”
Gov. Nathan Deal has taken issue with the number of refugees in Georgia. Last July, he fired off
a blistering letter to President Barack Obama, saying he was shocked to learn that federal authorities had transferred 1,154 unaccompanied immigrant children to the care of sponsors living in Georgia.
The children were placed in Georgia early in the year by the federal Office of Refugee Resettlement as the Obama administration grappled with a surge of Central American children illegally crossing the southwest border.
Our conclusion:
Legislation has cleared the Georgia House that would expand the list of students eligible for private school scholarships from students with disabilities — such as blindness, traumatic brain injury and behavioral disorders — to include qualifying refugees.
The estimate is there are about 700, and each is “limited-English proficient as defined in 20 U.S.C. Section 7801.
We rate the statement True.
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