D.C.
Advocates Fight to Stop Federally Funded School Vouchers
Education advocates
in our nation's capitol celebrated a temporary
victory as the U.S. Senate delayed a vote on a controversial program of federally
funded school vouchers in the District of Columbia. Claiming they still had sufficient
votes to pass the bill, supporters, mainly Republicans and the District's Democratic
Mayor, stress that they will return to the voucher proposal after other votes
and a scheduled break. For the Coalition for Accountable Public Schools
and other advocacy organizations fighting to defeat the D.C. voucher plan, the
Senate delay suggests that voucher support is wavering after a week of heated
debate and a threatened filibuster. The opposition is led by the Coalition, a
grassroots alliance of parents, residents, and civic, civil rights, education,
labor, religious, and other advocacy organizations, such as People
for the American Way, Stop
D.C. Vouchers, Parents
United for D.C. Public Schools,
21st Century School Fund, and D.C.
VOICE. These groups have lobbied and contacted members of the House and Senate,
urging them to defeat the plan which is opposed by a majority of D.C. residents.
Coalition members argue that federally-funded vouchers would support schools
that are not held to the same levels of accountability as public schools, currently
forced to adhere to the No Child Left Behind
Act. Additionally, members insist that federal funds earmarked for vouchers
should instead be used to support and improve schools in the troubled Washington,
D.C. public school system. The $13 million dollar plan, currently stalled
in the U.S. Senate, offers $7,500 a year for less than 3% of the District's students
to attend private schools. The House of Representatives narrowly approved a similar
bill in early September, allocating $10 million dollars for vouchers. Advocates
have argued that President Bush and a Republican-dominated Congress are using
the District to showcase their support for vouchers on a national scale. The
controversy over federally funded school vouchers highlights D.C.'s lack of representation
in Congress, as recently criticized in a New
York Times editorial. Prepared October 1, 2003 |