Recent Developments: No new developments.
Click here for detailed information about West Virginia public schools, and see below for school choice contacts and a detailed history of school choice in West Virginia.
State Contacts
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Christian Home Educators of West Virginia
David and Kelly Richman, Administrative Directors P.O. Box 8770 South Charleston, WV 25303-0770 Phone: (877) 802-1773 Website: www.chewv.org E-mail: administrator@chewv.org |
Archived History, Pre-2006
In 1997, House 2256 was introduced to provide a tax credit for parents who provide their children with home or private schooling. The bill died in committee. The following year, two tax credit bills were introduced. H. 2256 would have provided tax credits to parents of home-schooled or privately schooled children.[3] H. 4403 would have provided a tax credit of up to $1,000 for tuition at a private school. The legislature did not act on either bill.[4]
H. 2151 and H. 2824 were introduced in 1999 and 2000. H. 2151 would have provided a $500 tax credit per child to home-schooling parents and a $1,000 tax credit per child to parents paying private school tuition. The West Virginia Board of Education would have been prohibited from regulating the education of children whose parents received a tax credit. H. 2824 would have authorized a tax credit of 50 percent of the total amount spent on tuition, tutoring, computers, uniforms, or textbooks, up to $1,000. Both bills died in committee.
Similar legislation was introduced in 2001. H. 2750 would have provided parents a $500 tax credit for home-schooling expenses and a credit of $1,000 for private schooling. H. 2269 would have provided a credit of 50 percent of the total spent on education, up to $1,000. Both bills died in committee.[5]
Delegate Tim Armstead (R-32) reintroduced H. 2269 to provide a 50 percent tax credit for education expenses up to $1,000. John Overington (R-55) reintroduced H. 2750 to provide a tax credit to parents for both home and private school expenses. Both bills died in committee.[6]
Senate 591, which would have established charter schools, was introduced but died in committee. The bill would have authorized county school boards to approve charters for new schools and conversions from traditional public schools. There would have been no appeals process for rejected charter applications.[7]
In 2003, Delegate John Overington (R-55) introduced H. 2507, which would have provided a tax credit of up to $500 for home schooling and $1,000 for private schooling. The bill died in committee.[8]
On May 26, 2004, the Supreme Court of Appeals of
[1] Education Commission of the States, "School Choice State Laws: State Profiles," at http://mb2.ecs.org/reports/Report.aspx?id=207 (August 20, 2004).
[2] See West Virginia Code, Chapter 18, at http://129.71.164.29/wvcode_chap/wvcode_chapfrm.htm.
[3] See
[4] See National School Boards Association Web site at www.nsba.org/novouchers.
[5] See
[6] Ibid.
[7] Ibid.
[8] Ibid.









