FOR
IMMEDIATE RELEASE
CAPE Leaders Denounce Governor Rowland:
Vouchers Would Drain Dollars From Under-Funded Public
Schools
FRIDAY, MARCH 1, 2002
CONTACT: Therese Duncan, VP for Legislation, Connecticut PTA
HARTFORD - It's a scheme to funnel public dollars to
private and religious schools that shows disregard for the needs of public
schoolchildren and insensitivity to the burden on local property
taxpayers.
That is how parents, teachers, school administrators,
school boards, and civic and religious leaders - members of the Citizens
Alliance for Public Education (CAPE) - today summed up the voucher
provisions of "An Act Implementing the Governor's Budget Regarding
Education" (Bill
No. 5020). They delivered their comments before the Education
Committee of the Connecticut General Assembly. (The provisions of Bill No.
5020 that describe the governor's proposal can be found
here.)
Reverend Fidelia Lane, CAPE chairperson and a
retired Congregational minister, said, "Our state legislature needs to
support our students in our public schools. State lawmakers must reject
the governor's proposal on vouchers. They can't ignore the deep cuts in
state aid - the $46 million reduction in the education cost sharing grant
to municipalities beginning July 1 - that Governor Rowland is advancing at
the same time he is pushing vouchers."
Donna McGuire, president of the Connecticut PTA
said, "The way to ensure that every child has an equal and valuable
education is to invest in our public school system. Vouchers are an
attempt to abandon our public schools where 90 percent of our students are
educated. Vouchers draw critical financial resources away from public
schools, where these resources are needed to address record high
enrollments, teacher shortages, maintaining and modernizing school
facilities, and improving indoor air quality."
David Larson, executive director of the
Connecticut Association of Public School Superintendents, said, "There is
absolutely no evidence that vouchers improve student learning. The public
school superintendents in Connecticut feel that the state needs to
adequately fund public schools. Public schools that are adequately funded
are the bedrock of our democracy."
Rosemary Coyle, president of the Connecticut
Education Association, said that under the governor's proposal, the
schools with the greatest needs are likely to see the greatest drain in
resources. "If state education aid is taken away from local public
schools, then programs will be slashed or local property taxes will go up.
Scarce state funding must be spent on improving public schools - on
priorities proven to work, such as reducing class size and ensuring a
well-trained workforce. Voters want good schools for all, not tuition
vouchers for a few," said Coyle.
Patrice McCarthy, deputy director and general
counsel for the Connecticut Association of Boards of Education, said, "At
a time when our schools most in need of improvement lack the necessary
resources, CABE is deeply concerned with any proposal that would further
reduce the scarce resources available to those children - the state's most
vulnerable and academically needy youngsters."
Roberta Cooper, deputy director of the regional
office of People For the American Way, explained, "The Governor's attempt
to play off the children of the state against one another is disturbing.
To reduce resources to the very districts that need them most in order to
provide public funding to private and religious schools - in any
guise - is inappropriate and works against the best interests of the
citizens of our state - present and future. Education is not an issue to
be manipulated for political end."
David Waren, regional director of the
Anti-Defamation League in Connecticut, said, "From a public policy
perspective, there are two fundamental reasons to oppose the governor.
First, the governor's proposal per student is not going to cover the costs
of most private school tuitions. Therefore, the suggestion that it will
help urban students is disingenuous. Furthermore, the private schools will
be free to cherry pick the best students, leaving to already overburdened
public schools those students who cost the most to educate. Second, we are
concerned that public tax money could be used to fund schools promoting
ideologies that many would consider extremist. The alternative
governmental oversight of curriculum would dangerously entangle government
in private religious affairs."
Sharon Palmer, executive vice president of the
Connecticut Federation of Education and Professional Employees, said, "It
is shameful that the governor has chosen to attach this voucher proposal
to recently enacted federal legislation - the
Elementary and Secondary Education
Act (ESEA). ESEA or Title I programs are designed to help the most
educationally needy children. We know that non-public schools will not
accept these students. This proposal is a sham."
Teresa Younger, executive director of the
Connecticut Civil Liberties Union, said, "Every student has the right to
an education. That education should be equal and adequately funded. Our
concern with the proposed program is that it does not offer a choice nor
does it solve the problem of low-performing schools. The option of giving
public tax money to private schools, a majority of which are parochial
schools, is a direct violation of the First Amendment relating to the
separation between church and state." Younger continued, "The separation
between church and state works to assure everyone's religious freedom.
Public funding of religious schools would require citizens to use their
tax dollars to support the religious beliefs of others. That kind of
monitoring by the state is exactly what the First Amendment would not
allow because the state cannot violate the free exercise of religion. The
Connecticut Constitution has an "Establishment Clause" in Article 7, which
states that no person shall be compelled to join or support... any
congregation, church, or religious association. Additionally, when we
remove monies from the public school system to provide for this choice,
what is happening to those students left behind? What happens when the
right to an education that is public is not a true choice?"
The following are key contacts for CAPE:
Reverend Fidelia Lane, retired Congregational minister
Donna McGuire, Connecticut PTA
Dave Larson, CT Assoc. of Public School Superintendents
Rosemary Coyle, Connecticut Education Association
Patrice McCarthy, CT Assoc. of Boards of Education
Roberta Cooper, People for the American Way
David Waren, Anti-Defamation League
Sharon Palmer, CFEPE
Teresa Younger, CT Civil Liberties Union