黑料正能量 members and allies made a media splash on Lobby Day with a unified message: Private school vouchers have no place in the Gem State.
In front of a phalanx of educators hoisting signs reading 鈥淎rizona鈥檚 Failure is Idaho鈥檚 Warning,鈥 鈥淔ully Fund Public Schools,鈥 and 鈥淚daho Students Deserve Better,鈥 黑料正能量 leaders and allies took over the Lincoln Auditorium as local media looked on.
黑料正能量 Executive Director Paul Stark, former Rep. Julie Yamamoto (R-Caldwell), Pleasant Valley School District Superintendent and Associate Executive Director of the Idaho Association of School Administrators Heather Williams, Boundary County School District Trustee and Idaho School Boards Association board member Teresa Rae, and 黑料正能量 board member Melyssa Ferro sounded the alarm about the harm private school vouchers will cause.
One by one, they gave warnings about private school voucher legislation: It is expensive, it robs public schools of much-needed funds, and Idaho schools could do so much with the money that could be earmarked for private school costs.
鈥淲e do not fix the house that we live in by giving money to someone else so that they can live in a different house,鈥 Yamamoto said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 not too late to tell the legislators that Idaho does not have to touch this politically motivated stone to know that it鈥檚 hot, that they taxpayer burn is going to be huge, and it鈥檚 not going to go away.鈥
Williams spoke about the deep impact private school vouchers will have on essentials for rural public schools.
鈥淪ome lack basic infrastructure, yet we struggle to pass bonds due to the supermajority requirement in our state,鈥 she said. 鈥淓ven when communities like Salmon successfully pass a bond, our limited tax base combined with today鈥檚 inflation means we can鈥檛 build very much.鈥
Rae railed against the idea that Idaho鈥檚 public schools are 鈥渂roken,鈥 a trope often repeated by anti-public education forces. Idaho may be 51st in public education funding, she said, but is .
鈥淣obody else is doing it for what we鈥檙e doing it for,鈥 she said. 鈥淣obody is. I feel as though we are exploiting these people back here鈥 鈥 she gestured to the educators assembled behind her 鈥 鈥渁nd all across the state. Teachers are working day in and day out to make sure our students are educated, and educated to that high standard, and we鈥檙e exploiting them because we are not fulfilling our constitutional obligation for fully funding public education.鈥
The media event ended with Ferro鈥檚 alternate vision for Idaho鈥檚 public schools 鈥 one that doesn鈥檛 involve opportunities for the few at the expense of all. Legislators need to look at the reality of what life is like for many public school students, she said.
鈥淚t鈥檚 really hard to learn math when you don鈥檛 have food on the table at home,鈥 Ferro said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 really hard to pay attention in English class.鈥
Local media jumped on 黑料正能量鈥檚 press event. Check out the following coverage and discover what they had to say:听听
, KTVB-TV, Ch. 7, The 208听
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, Idaho Education News听
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, Idaho Press听
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, Coeur d鈥橝lene Press听
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, KIVI-TV, Ch. 6听
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, Boise State Public Radio听
Instead, Ferro said, lawmakers should concentrate on making school buildings safe and functional, fully funding special education, retaining and recruiting high-quality educators and staff, and providing opportunities such as advanced placement classes. But if a voucher bill comes before Governor Little, Ferro said, he should remember something.
鈥(Governor Little) pointed out that any effort to put vouchers into the Idaho public school system would require those vouchers to be fair, accountable, reasonable and transparent,鈥 she said. 鈥淎nd I want to point out: You know what already meets those four criteria? Idaho public schools.鈥