From Deseret News archives:

Debate on vouchers heats up

Curtis is opposing a special session before Nov. 6 vote

Published: Thursday, May 31, 2007 12:17 a.m. MDT
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It is "disingenuous" for Gov. Jon Huntsman Jr. to call a special session on vouchers before the Nov. 6 public vote, says House Speaker Greg Curtis, who vows to "vigorously" fight against repealing HB174 if such a session is called.

"I disagree vehemently with the governor" about calling a special session to repeal HB174, Curtis said regarding the second of two voucher bills.

Curtis, R-Sandy, made his arguments after Huntsman released a letter on vouchers last weekend. Huntsman, a Republican, said in his letter that he would call a special legislative session to fix the two-bill voucher problem if Utah courts don't quickly rule that the Nov. 6 election is "definitive." The election would allow voters to decide whether private-school vouchers should be allowed in the state.

Rep. Steve Urquhart, R-St. George, was the original sponsor of HB148, the main voucher bill that will go before voters. He said in a blog this week that a special session should be called and that both HB148 and HB174 be repealed. He also wants a comprehensive voucher law passed and a vote taken on that bill this November.

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Voucher opponents are pushing for a clear vote as well, and on Wednesday, the anti-voucher group Utahns for Public Schools sued to challenge the 100-word ballot title that was written for the November referendum. That lawsuit came less than a week after voucher supporters also sued to change the ballot language to acknowledge that a voucher law already exists.

The anti-voucher group wants the ballot to be explicit so that voters are aware that if the original voucher law is voted down, the amendment also will fail and no voucher legislation will be implemented.

But Curtis said the anti-voucher forces are orchestrating a public campaign of confusion and trying to make the GOP-controlled Legislature "the whipping boy on vouchers."

Some people, including the governor, talk about a "quick fix" on the two-bill voucher problem, Curtis said, "but no one has shown me there is a quick fix." In fact, Curtis doesn't believe there is one.

Legislators passed two bills on vouchers in the 2007 Legislature. HB148, the subject of the Nov. 6 referendum, is the main voucher bill that passed by one vote in the House. Anti-voucher legislators then asked Curtis if they could recall that bill to make some amendments so that the voucher law would be more workable and appealing.

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Jon Huntsman Jr.

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