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Vouchers appear doomed
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Vouchers might have had a chance in Utah if they had been limited to the poor or lower income groups. By offering everybody a voucher it meant Utah would be footing the bill eventually for all kids attending private school, even those who could easily afford it.
There were also too many flaws and gapping lack of standards of accountability and school safety that made anyone who read the bill question why on earth were our representatives pushing this.
Then we have the paid bloggers, Sutherland Institute, the anti-liberal campaign, Oreos, Byrne and other nonsense that made the Pro Voucher campaign laughable and did more to kill any support from most who were undecided months ago. It is not easy to win when every few weeks or so one of your key approaches turns out to be shooting yourself in the foot.
LEGISLATORS - Please listen to the public
We don't want vouchers. We just want our public schools to be funded better than they are now. We want teacher pay to increase enough that teachers from other states WANT to come here. We need a teacher surplus in order to improve things in Utah. Please spend the surplus money on teacher salaries.
Also please let the voucher issue die. Don't bring back another bill next year. The public has spoken.
I know it sounds very harsh to say this out loud, but factually the educrats are holding our children hostage in substandard schools (see Wall Street Journal editorial, below), often under horrendous conditions, in order to maintain this bonanza on the backs of hard-working taxpayers. How they get away with this day after day and year after year is difficult to explain, other than to say that he who controls the government gets to do whatever they please.
Several people I know have written to various writers and talk-show hosts, asking them to explain Education Funding 101: How is the money spent before the voucher law was passed? How does a weighted pupil unit work? What really happens to a school's funding, and when, if a student uses a voucher?
So far as we have seen, no one has ever given the voters that basic information.
Hundreds of people have written in these comments, with 40 variations of what they think happens, and the 2 ad sponsors have played up their projections of what might happen, but all the media delivers is polls?
I, too, will be voting against Referendum 1.
What's really happening here is that the same people who are victims of the Utah education system from a generation ago are now the voters who lack the critical thinking skills needed to see that vouchers are a good thing.
Voters: Read the bill and make a decision on your own. You'll only get partial truths from the media.
Will the legislature learn any lessons from this public rebuke? Ha! We wish!
No, these are not the kind of guys who admit to having made errors. Instead, they're going to seek revenge against the very folks they're supposed to be representing.
Just watch - they'll take their wrath out on public schools this January.
We need to follow-up Tuesday's vote with another vote in November of next year. Vote every one of the pro-voucher legislators out of office.
$400 Million vs $65 billion to $100 billion.
To do anything the way the UEA wants, would cost much, much more. This is a good idea. Vote for vouchers.
The abuse of office by some of those in the education bureaucracy, and some teachers, is proof tht they care more about maintaining their monopoly and power than educating our kids.
Despite the many fine teachers, overall the public schools are growing steadily worse, not better. The worst are little more than liberal indoctrination centers and baby sitters. No wonder parents are eager to have options!
Parents would do well to make any sacrifice necessary to send their kids to private schools. or take on the burden of home schooling.
It's for the children---- unless you are for the powerful teachers' union.