Bill to Add Hamilton County to Tennessee ESA School Voucher Pilot Advances

by Jon Styf

 

Hamilton County students might soon have access to educational savings accounts like students in Davidson and Shelby counties.

Senate Bill 12 advanced through the Senate Education Committee with a 6-2 nod of approval as it now heads to the Senate Calendar Committee.

Because the pilot program has a cap on the number of participants, the bill will not cost the state additional money.

The program can admit 5,000 students in the first year, then 7,500 in the second year, 10,000 in the third year, 12,500 in the fourth year and then 15,000 students in the fifth year.

The ESAs were expected to be worth $7,572 in the first year and advance to a value of $8,684 per ESA.

“Because the enrollment limit is expected to be met every year under current law, expanding the number of eligible students will not affect the total number of participants in the Tennessee ESA Pilot Program,” the fiscal note on the bill stated.

Yes, Every Kid

Sen. Joey Hensley, R-Hohenwald, and Sen. Ramesh Akbari, D-Memphis, voted against the bill, which would make the 44,500 students in Hamilton County eligible for ESAs next year.

Families must have an annual household income that does not exceed twice the federal income eligibility guidelines for free lunch to be eligible. They also must attend a school identified as a priority school in 2015 and 2018 and must have been among the bottom 10 percent of schools as identified by the Department of Education in 2017.

“I was opposed to it being piloted in Shelby County and in Davidson County as well,” Akbari said, explaining her vote.

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Jon Styf is an award-winning editor and reporter for The Center Square who has worked in Illinois, Texas, Wisconsin, Florida and Michigan in local newsrooms over the past 20 years, working for Shaw Media, Hearst and several other companies.

 

 

 

 

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2 Thoughts to “Bill to Add Hamilton County to Tennessee ESA School Voucher Pilot Advances”

  1. william delzell

    This is another attempt by Republicans to destroy public schools in Tennessee by stealing state tax-payer money to completely subsidize charter schools, including so-called Christian academies in violation of the state constitution’s separation of Church and State!

  2. Joe Blow

    Why is not the legislature just going for the gold and make school choice available statewide? This piecemeal stuff is disgusting.

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