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Senate Passes Vouchers, Awaits Governor鈥檚 Signature聽

February 21, 2025

Vociferous opposition from 黑料正能量 members, thousands of concerned voters, and some of the most influential business and education groups in the state wasn鈥檛 enough to stop the Idaho Senate from passing a $50 million voucher program that will use public money to pay for private schooling.  

The Senate passed House Bill 93 on Wednesday by a 20-15 vote.  

Lawmakers have been under tremendous pressure to pass the bill. Lobbyists from the Heritage Foundation, Mountain States Policy Center, EdChoice and more have been courting legislators for months, but the coup de gr芒ce came from President Trump himself.  

HB 93 is now in Governor Brad Little鈥檚 hands. It鈥檚 unknown whether he will find HB 93 meets the 鈥渇air, responsible, transparent and accountable鈥 test he set out for any proposed voucher scheme when he asked legislators to set aside $50 million for the purpose at the start of the legislative session.鈥 

鈥満诹险芰 members have battled against unfair and unneeded vouchers for years,鈥 said 黑料正能量 President Layne McInelly. 鈥淭he fact that it took a tweet from the president to push this unpopular bill over the finish line is truly a testament to 黑料正能量 members and our allies.鈥 

As HB 93 advanced in the Legislature, anti-public school lawmakers continually pointed out in hearings, Idaho is one of the last 鈥榬ed鈥 states without a voucher program.  

鈥淭hat is because of you, 黑料正能量. But the fight isn鈥檛 over,鈥 McInelly said. 鈥淲e will fight to secure the governor鈥檚 veto of the bill. If it becomes law, we will fight to keep the program limited. And we will continue to push Idaho鈥檚 lawmakers to do right by the state鈥檚 public school educators and students.鈥&苍产蝉辫;&苍产蝉辫;

Lawmakers Question Fairness, Accountability, Responsibility and Transparency 

HB 93 allows non-public school students to receive $5,000 in public tax dollars to pay for private school tuition, tutoring, curriculum and other private education expenses. HB 93 allows families earning up to 300 percent the鈥痜ederal poverty limit 鈥 $93,600 annually for a family of four 鈥 to apply for the funds. Students with special needs could qualify for up to $7,500.鈥 

黑料正能量 members and other pro-public education voters sent thousands of emails and letters voicing opposition to HB 93, which creates a tax credit for parents of private school students. that members of the House Revenue and Taxation Committee, where the bill was introduced, received more than 1,000 emails before a Feb. 5 public hearing. Ninety-four percent were in opposition to vouchers.  

The program will be administered through the Idaho State Tax Commission, a provision that provoked consternation among lawmakers debating HB 93 on the Senate floor Wednesday. The bill鈥檚 鈥渁ccountability鈥 measures include a survey, distributed by the tax commission, that participating parents must fill out.  

Idaho鈥檚 new voucher bill is strikingly similar to Arizona鈥檚 disastrous program, which is considered the gold standard among anti-public school lobbyists.  

鈥淲e can鈥檛 afford to take on private religious schools at this point,鈥 Sen. Janie Ward-Engelking (D-Boise) said. 鈥淲hen we see what鈥檚 happened in other states, and there are a lot of them 鈥 Florida, Indiana, Arizona. Not only have these states鈥 budgets ballooned and critical areas have reduced, like infrastructure water projects in those states, but there鈥檚 also been a lot of fraud and exploitation.鈥&苍产蝉辫;&苍产蝉辫;

Sen. Treg Bernt (R-Meridian) read a letter from a constituent whose children were denied entry to a Treasure Valley Christian school because they are members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints.  

鈥淚 don鈥檛 care how you slice it, that is discrimination,鈥 he said. 鈥淚 pose a question: What safeguards are included in this bill that would prohibit private Christian schools from potentially discriminating against those that feel that Mormons aren鈥檛 Christians?鈥 

There are no provisions in HB 93 that would require private schools to enroll all students who apply, as public schools do.  

Sen. Kevin Cook (R-Idaho Falls), who serves on the Senate Local Government and Taxation Committee, spoke twice against HB 93 during the floor debate. The funding system HB 93 creates, Cook said, is not transparent and will lead to further increases.  

鈥淲hen somebody says it won鈥檛 affect public schools 鈥 it will affect everything,鈥 Cook said. 鈥淚t will affect your roads, your schools, your bridges, everything that we do here at the State of Idaho. It will affect (it) because you鈥檙e taking that money away.鈥 

Sen. David Lent (R-Idaho Falls), who introduced a voucher program that failed on the Senate floor last week, countered nearly every argument anti-public school lawmakers have made for HB 93. Without naming names, he targeted the assertion Rep. Wendy Horman (R-Idaho Falls) has been making for months 鈥 that 鈥school choice is the civil rights issue of our time.鈥&苍产蝉辫;&苍产蝉辫;

鈥淚 think the civil rights issue is that this legislation provides an opportunity for us to institute publicly funded discrimination,鈥 Lent said, later adding, 鈥渁bout 95 percent of the population of our state will be paying taxes for about five percent of our students to attend a private school.鈥 

Sen. Doug Ricks (R-Rexburg) gave a preview of what taxpayers can expect if Governor Little signs HB 93: More taxpayer money flowing into private schools.  

鈥淚t will be a start,鈥 he said. 鈥淲e pass legislation every session on public schools. It鈥檚 always being amended. That process will continue on if we open this door, and for the private school option, it鈥檒l continue to evolve.鈥&苍产蝉辫;&苍产蝉辫;

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