In the News
As the source for parental school choice in our state, PEFNC is often asked to provide commentary on educational choice.
HB 10 | House passes bill addressing school vouchers, ICE detainment requests
Published September 11, 2024
RALEIGH, N.C. (WTVD) -- The House voted to pass HB 10 on Wednesday afternoon, a wide-reaching measure that will provide money for Opportunity Scholarships and require local sheriff's to honor ICE detainment requests in certain situations.
Supporters of school choice applauded the move, as the bill provides funding to clear the backlog of 55,000 Opportunity Scholarship applicants who attend private schools. It calls for $248 million in nonrecurring funds for Opportunity Scholarships for all students attending private schools. Then, an additional $215 million in recurring funds.
"I think what our legislature is doing here is choosing to invest in students regardless of where they go," said Brian Jodice, Executive Vice President of Parents for Educational Freedom in North Carolina.
NC GOP leaders reach deal on private school vouchers. A ‘blessing’ or ‘irresponsible’?
By T. Keung Hei
Originally Published September 7, 2024
A state budget deal that will help 55,000 families pay for private school tuition this year is drawing both cheers and anger among North Carolinians. Republican legislative leaders announced Friday that they have reached a deal to provide $463 million in additional taxpayer funding to clear the 55,000-student backlog in the Opportunity Scholarship program. It’s welcome news for families who’ve been waiting for months to find out if they’d get any state help to cover private school costs.
“This is great news for working class families who are trying to make ends meet given inflation,” Rachel Brady, a Wake County parent on the voucher waiting list, said in an interview Friday.
Vote to increase opportunity scholarship fund possible next week
Originally Published September 5, 2024
RALEIGH, N.C. — Funding in the state budget for the opportunity scholarship program ran out quickly this year with many people left on a waitlist hoping for more dollars to be added.
Gov. Roy Cooper and other Democratic leaders said no more taxpayer dollars should be designated to fund this initiative.
The argument is about whether taxpayer money should fund private school education.
The North Carolina General Assembly will meet on Monday. The possibility of a vote to expand funding to the opportunity scholarship program looms.
Brian Jodice is a father of two girls who were once in public school but now attend private schools in the Triangle area.
“School choice programs like this are investing in students,” Jodice said.
Should private schools account for use of public-tax vouchers?
July 29, 2024
North Carolina has one of the newest — and least regulated — private-school voucher programs in the country.
Given those traits of the N.C. ‘school choice’ program, which offers financial aid for students to attend private school regardless of income, a debate has emerged over the program’s accountability.
“In North Carolina, I mean, we’re slack. We’re really slack on this, as far as regulating private school vouchers…. There are just so many factors that pull into it. That’s the main thing, there is no equity,” said Jimmy Rogers, a member of the Haywood County Board of Education.
“The private schools, the Christian schools, they do a wonderful job. … The question is, where does the money go?” questioned Chuck Francis, Haywood school board chairman.
North Carolina implemented its voucher program last fall. Other states require private schools accepting vouchers to require state testing, certified teachers, regulated curriculum and regulated school hours and days. North Carolina requires none of those boxes to be checked.
In this state, private schools are required to operate for a school term of at least nine calendar months, keep attendance and immunization records, and administer a national standardized test that covers English grammar, reading, spelling and math. That test does not have to be the same as the one used by N.C. public schools however, making performance comparisons difficult.
Lack of a budget deal on private school vouchers leaves NC families angry and in limbo
By T. Keung Hei
July 3, 2024
Thousands of North Carolina parents are uncertain where their children will attend classes this fall after Republican lawmakers were unable to agree on a deal to increase private school voucher funding.
State lawmakers adjourned last week without approving new funding to clear a waiting list of 55,000 students who want an Opportunity Scholarship. Now, families are weighing whether they can still afford to attend a private school without state funding to help cover their tuition costs.
“We voted them in with the promise they’d give a free education to all, and it hasn’t happened,” said Kathy Whitehill, a parent from Charlotte whose daughter is on the state waiting list. “Seventy-two thousand families applied this year. That should show how many families want it.”
The lack of action so close to the start of the new school year has put families and schools in a bind, according to Mike Long, president of Parents for Educational Freedom in North Carolina. “It’s looking very bleak for those families who are on the waiting lists,” Long said. “Even if they come back in September as the Speaker (Tim Moore) has suggested, that’s too late for parents. Schools have to move on.”
NC voucher expansion has GOP support, but didn’t materialize in state budget
July 2, 2024
An infusion of cash to clear the waiting list for North Carolina’s Opportunity Scholarships — public money that helps families pay private-school tuition — seemed like a sure thing.
Last year’s eligibility expansion led to a surge in applications: 72,000 new students seeking scholarships for 2024-25, compared with fewer than 12,000 the year before. That meant the money allocated ran out with more than 50,000 students still on the waiting list.
Republican leaders of the state House and Senate agreed to pump $248 million into the current budget to clear that list before schools opened. With the state running a surplus, the money was there. And the GOP had enough votes to override Democratic Gov. Roy Cooper’s near-certain veto.
But when the General Assembly adjourned last week without updating the budget, the additional voucher money was a casualty, with the start of the school year less than two months away.
Mike Long, of Parents for Educational Freedom in North Carolina, a leading voucher advocacy group, called the lack of action “a head-scratcher.”
“We are frustrated. We’re disappointed for these families, because we are certainly hearing from them with their frustration and disappointment,” he said Monday.
School-choice advocates dismayed as lawmakers fail to fund Opportunity Scholarship waitlist
June 28, 2024
North Carolina lawmakers left the state capital on Friday without fully funding the waitlist for the state’s school choice voucher program, even though both House and Senate leadership agree that the funding fix needs to happen.
Lawmakers will return to Raleigh July 10 for a skeletal session, and then five more times this year: July 29, Sept. 9, Oct. 9, Nov. 19, and Dec. 11. But it’s unclear when both chambers could agree on budget adjustments that would include the $487 million in additional funding to clear the 54,800 applicants on the waitlist for Opportunity Scholarships.
In May, the Senate approved a stand-alone bill and sent it over to the House, but that chamber hasn’t yet taken it up. Instead, House leadership wanted to tie the increased voucher funding to augmented raises for public school teachers and state employees.
“I’m disappointed in the House because we sent them an Opportunity Scholarships funding bill eight weeks ago and they have not taken it up,” said Senate leader Phil Berger, R-Rockingham, yesterday. “We also sent it to them in our budget adjustments. We today, on multiple occasions in conference reports that were being negotiated, offered to put Opportunity Scholarships in those conference reports and the House refused. So I think folks need to ask them why it’s not funded. because we have tried every way that we know how.”
‘Out of hand.’ Add rules if NC private schools get $463M in new voucher money, CMS says
By Rebecca Noel
May 14, 2024
Private schools need more accountability if the North Carolina legislature hands out hundreds of millions in new tax money for student vouchers this year, according to Charlotte-Mecklenburg Schools. The N.C. General Assembly is working through final changes now on a $463 million bill to clear wait lists for opportunity scholarships — the state’s private school vouchers — one year after spending $505 million to vastly expand the program. It used to have an income cap, but anyone in the state is eligible now, regardless of income or whether they’ve already got a child in private school. The expansion strays from the initial intent of opportunity scholarships, which was to offer the ability to attend private schools to those who couldn’t afford tuition, Charlotte-Mecklenburg Schools officials say.
As legislators debate massive expansion, a candid conversation about NC's school voucher program
By Jeff Tiberii, Rachel McCarthy
May 13, 2024
North Carolina’s private school voucher program began over a decade ago to offer low-income families an alternative to low-performing public schools. The Opportunity Scholarship program has expanded in recent years — now there is no income requirement to qualify and tens of thousands of moderate to higher-income applicants are waiting to hear if they'll get scholarships as well.
North Carolina Republicans seek hundreds of millions of dollars more for school vouchers
May 1, 2024
RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) — Addressing a sharp increase in private-school grant applications, North Carolina Republicans advanced legislation on Wednesday to spend hundreds of millions of dollars now to eliminate a large waiting list this fall for Opportunity Scholarships and to permanently meet expected higher demand.
The Senate Appropriations Committee voted for legislation that would spend another $248 million in the coming year to eliminate a waiting list of 54,900 applicants who otherwise would receive money to attend private or religious K-12 schools.
Republicans from both chambers said before the legislative session began last week that finding a way to eliminate the wait list was a top priority. They said that parents counted on the program to help their children succeed if an alternative to public schools was best for them.
“The urgency of all this is really because these families have to make decisions,” said Sen. Michael Lee, a New Hanover County Republican and longtime school choice advocate, told committee members.