The state Supreme Court is about to decide whether millions of dollars
in taxpayer money that started flowing this year to pay student tuition
at private and religious schools continues for a second year.
The state's highest court hears arguments Tuesday on a ruling last
summer that the Opportunity Scholarships program violates the state
constitution because religious schools can discriminate based on faith.
Wake County Superior Court Judge Robert Hobgood also said privately run
K-12 schools are not required to meet state curriculum standards.
Supreme Court justices showed they're in a hurry to decide whether
private school vouchers will continue by latching on to the case early.
Parents are already looking ahead and the deadline for them to submit
scholarship applications for the next academic year is March 1.
So far, more than $4.2 million has paid for 1,200 students to attend 216
private schools around the state, according to the State Education
Assistance Authority. That's a fraction of the 5,500 students whose
families sought one of the scholarships, said Darrell Allison, who heads
a group that advocates for expanding the program. Three out of four
applicants for the vouchers, which pay private schools up to $4,200 per
child per year to schools that admit them, were minority students.
"There are literally thousands of families who are looking forward to
their day in court — desperately hopeful for a favorable ruling,"
Allison, president of Parents for Educational Freedom in North Carolina,
said in a statement.
The program opened this year to families whose income qualified their
children for free or discounted school lunches, a ceiling of about
$44,000 for a family of four. Eligibility increases for the year
starting in August as the ceiling rises to nearly $59,000 per family.
Opponents of the voucher law complain that it violates the constitution
because money from collected taxes goes to religious schools that have
the option of ruling out students who don't follow their faith's
beliefs, turning away the disabled or refusing the children of gay
parents.
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