INDIANAPOLIS (AP) — Those who want to make it easier for siblings of private
school voucher students to join Indiana’s program say doing so would remove
an unnecessary hurdle for families, but a key legislator says the move would
sidestep the notion that all students would first give public schools a try.
The proposal sponsored by Republican state Sen. Carlin Yoder of Middlebury
would eliminate the requirement that siblings of current voucher students
first attend a public school for a year before becoming eligible for the
program.
Yoder told the Senate education committee on Wednesday that the change would
prevent families from having to spend a year juggling their children between
public and private schools when they’ve already decided on private school
long term.
Christa Runion of Indianapolis told the committee that her 9-year-old
daughter is now attending a Catholic school in Greenwood on a voucher after
spending a year in the Perry Township schools, where her 6-year-old son is
now in kindergarten. Runion said she spends about two hours a day picking up
her children at different schools.
She said her daughter has had to miss out on after-school activities because
of the public school requirement for her son, who will be attending the same
parochial school as his sister next year.
Yoder said children forced to start in public school before going to private
school face being taken away from their friends when they change schools.
“I just do not see how it is helpful for that child,” he said.
Indiana has the country’s largest voucher program, spending about $36
million on subsidies to low- and moderate-income families toward sending
about 9,100 children to private schools this year.
The state Supreme Court is weighing the legality of the program after
hearing arguments in November from opponents that virtually all of the
voucher money goes to schools whose primary purpose is to promote the
teachings of their affiliated churches.
Sen. Luke Kenley, R-Noblesville, said during Wednesday’s committee meeting
that he thought making a sibling exception represented a “fundamental
change” to the agreement reached during the 2011 debate on the program that
public schools should have a chance to first win over parents.
Kenley is chairman of the Senate Appropriations Committee, which would have
to consider the voucher expansion if it clears the education committee in a
vote that could happen next week.
Kenley said the sibling exemption could add millions of dollars in
additional costs for the voucher program and change the premise on how
students qualify.
“It seems to me we are maybe breaking down that voucher system,” he said.
Yoder countered that it was unfair to require low-income families receiving
vouchers to go through more one-year public school periods for their
children.
“These are not kids who are going to stay in the public schools,” Yoder
said. “The family has already made that decision.”
Runion, the Indianapolis mother, said that ideally all children could be
eligible for vouchers without first spending time in public schools, but
that she understood that the state might not be able to afford such a step.
“Even when I was a young child in a parochial school I didn’t feel that it
was fair that my parents had to struggle to send me to a private school when
their tax dollars were going to the public schools,” she said.