Monday, December 13, 2010

Great News: More Power For Parents in Florida

Via Libertarian Republican, big news from Florida:
The latest buzz-phrase at the capitol in Tallahassee is "Educational Savings Accounts."

Libertarian Republican Governor-elect Rick Scott is hinting at a major overhaul of Florida's education system. The liberal-leaning St. Pete Times is calling his plan one of the "most radical... ever considered."
What's so radical? Let a bed-wetting liberal explain:
It is clearer than ever that Republicans intend to mount a frontal assault next year on Florida's public schools. Legislators show no interest in building consensus...

In Scott's fuzzy vision, every parent would be given public education money to spend on "whatever education system they believe in, whether it's this public school or that public school or this private school or that private school…''
Blum, BLUM, BLUMMMMM! Letting parents take back their tax dollars to educate their own children as they see fit ― what an insidiously diabolical idea!

Seriously ... its time for America to catch up. Socialists in Europe embraced marked-based reforms in education long ago:
Take the case of Swedish school vouchers and pensions. School vouchers were enacted by a conservative-led government in 1992. Initially, every Swedish student had the option of using a private school voucher equivalent to 85 percent of per-pupil spending at the local public school. When the Social Democrats took power in 1994, they could have repealed this law. Instead, they chose to increase the amount of the voucher to 100 percent of public school expenditures...
Let the money follow the students. There's no reason why government-run schools should have a monopoly.


4 comments:

Just a conservative girl said...

The shift is happening. Too many parents have realized that the public system is just not working and teachers unions are far more concerned with power than they are in the kids.

Did you hear about that school in California? They have pulled a "trigger" and the school will now be taken over by a Charter that has a much higher ratio of success.

DaBlade said...

It's been a tough year financially at the DaBlade residence(s), but we wouldn't even consider pulling the youngest of our three boys, a sophomore in HS, from the Catholic school we are paying big bucks for him to attend. I have always resented having to pay for their education twice (through taxes and tuition), and it's high time we voucher up and put competition back into the equation. Public education has already failed (see 2008 presidential election results)...

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