Your weekly roundup of Texas policy updates, videos, events, and culture.
View in browser
The Post

THE LEAD  |  WATCH  |  EVENTS  |  POSTSCRIPT  

Governor Greg Abbott officially confirmed this week that he will call a special session next month to pass school choice. During a conference call with Texas pastors hosted by TPPF, the governor displayed his unwavering commitment. “If we do not win in that first special session, we will have another special session and we’ll come back again,” he said.

 

The school choice reform the legislature will most likely consider will be creating education savings accounts (ESA) that give parents some control over how dollars are used to educate their kids. The media and school choice opponents often conflate ESAs with “vouchers,” even using the terms interchangeably. But they are not the same thing and there are some very important differences. (There are several other variations of school choice programs, as well.) 

 

Our friends at the American Federation for Children make it clear: “Voucher programs allow education dollars to ‘follow the child,’ enabling parents to select private schools and receive state-funded scholarships to pay tuition.” 

 

On the other hand, “education savings account programs create personal accounts that store a child’s state education dollars. With ESAs, parents can use education dollars to pay for school tuition and fees, textbooks, tutoring and special therapies and other approved expenses, so a child’s education is truly customizable.”

 

Only about half of Texans support vouchers. That makes sense because they are limited by what you can do with the money, where it goes, and who is eligible. But nearly three-quarters of Texans support ESAs because of their tremendous flexibility. Parents can use it for tuition at public schools, private schools, or other accredited institutions. They can buy books and other educational materials and receive specialized tutoring. 

 

Unlike vouchers, that traditionally only go to private schools for the cost of tuition, ESAs allow parents to spend the money on the varying and specific needs of the child. 

 

Opponents of school choice who insist on using “voucher” to describe ESAs either don’t understand the difference or are intentionally using the wrong term because they know so many more Texans support ESAs. (TPPF even has polling that shows a third of school choice opponents support ESAs if you explain to them how ESAs actually work.) 

 

I won’t be rude enough to say that means people using the term "voucher" are either dumb or deceptive, but at the very least they’re being disingenuous. It’s critical that the coming debate begin with the truth about the policy the governor and the legislature will be proposing. 

 

Brian Phillips

Chief Communications Officer

The Lead
Featured
9.21 The Post Featured Story
Top Stories
Offshore Wind Junk
Hunter Biden Treatment (2)
In The News
  • IMMIGRATION: Inside Colony Ridge: The ‘fastest growing development’ in the U.S. is a magnet for illegal immigrants

  • IMMIGRATION: Former Border Patrol Chief says agents can’t vet illegal immigrants from 'vast majority of the globe'

  • EDUCATION: Ken Paxton verdict heightens political tension ahead of education special session

  • EDUCATION: Impeachment aftermath could spell hostility for school choice session. Here's what we know

  • EDUCATION: Abbott says special session for school choice coming in October, with one to follow if needed

  • CRITICAL RACE THEORY: Inside the controversy over the National Museum of the American Latino

Watch
Education Funding (1)

During a KXAN panel on the state of Texas education, TPPF's Mandy Drogin discusses the reality of state education funding, the myths surrounding where the state spends education dollars, and how legislators must pivot to prioritize teachers and parents. 

Local Governments Tax Cut

Local governments are coming for Texans' property tax savings. The ink is barely dry on the state's new $18 billion tax cut and already, greedy local governments are gobbling up part of the savings at your expense.

Events

SEPTEMBER 26 — TYLER Liberty Leadership Council: Cocktails & Conversation with Rep. Matt Schaefer RSVP

 

SEPTEMBER 27 — AUSTIN Liberty Leadership Council: Building a Stronger Austin Together Salon Dinner RSVP

 

SEPTEMBER 28 — HOUSTON Liberty Leadership Council: Charting a Course for Education Excellence RSVP

 

OCTOBER 5 — MIDLAND 2023 Midland Awards Dinner RSVP

 

OCTOBER 10 — LIVESTREAM One Door: How Might Consolidating Workforce and Human Service Programs Better Serve Texans? RSVP

 

OCTOBER 11 — AUSTIN Parental Empowerment: How Hispanic Families Will Benefit From School Choice RSVP

 

OCTOBER 17 — DALLAS 2023 Dallas Awards Dinner RSVP

 

NOVEMBER 10-11 — AUSTIN 2023 LLC Annual Summit: Culture at a Crossroads RSVP

See more events >>

The Postscript

My Home Sweet Home

 

Growing up in Austin in the early 2000s, I remember local business posted signs that read

Austin

City Limit

Population: FULL.

 

Since then, the entire state has exploded with newcomers deciding that the Lone Star State is where they want to be. While I understand why one would want to move TO Texas, it is hard to relate to the idea that one can easily move to another state. Many Texans join in this thought. In fact 82% of Texans end up remaining in-state.

 

Why is it that the vast majority of Texans feel this way?

 

Both the land and the people are responsible for forging this place that we call HOME. We have mountains, plains, hills, deserts, forests, and coasts. It is everything you need, with the people of Texas uniting this special place. It is Texan to be welcoming and kind yet fierce. It is Texan to remember the people who fought for the land we have. It is Texan to work hard to succeed and fight for the freedom for others to do the same. Texas is the realized potential of the American Dream.

 

Stephen F. Austin said “Texas is like a beckoning star to American settlers.” Settled we have.

 

Ariana Silva

Videographer

 
 
Sign Up For The Daily Cannon
Learn More About TPPF
Donate To Keep Texas Texan
Facebook
Twitter
Instagram
YouTube

Was this email forwarded to you? Sign up to receive The Post here.

Texas Public Policy Foundation, 901 Congress Avenue, Austin, Texas 78701, United States, 5124722700

Unsubscribe Manage preferences