Amid all the angst in conservative circles, there is some good
news-in the form of two far-reaching education reform proposals
introduced by veteran Rep. John Boehner (R.-Ohio).
Boehner cut his teeth in the early 1990s as a relentless fiscal
hawk and rabble-rousing member of a group of backbench House
reformers called the "Gang of Seven." Even as many of his
colleagues were "growing in office" and disappointing
conservatives, Boehner retained his enthusiasm for aggressive (and
conservative) policymaking while rising to the fourth-highest
position in the House Republican leadership and, five years ago, to
chairman of the Education and Workforce Committee.
This week Boehner and freshman Rep. Bobby Jindal (R.-La.) proposed
the creation of Family Education Reimbursement Accounts. These
innocuous-sounding accounts, if enacted, could ultimately redefine
the financing of K-12 education. Boehner wants to funnel all
Hurricane Katrina-related education assistance directly to the
region's 372,000 dislocated families, thereby bypassing education
bureaucrats.
Ambitious Proposal
Boehner's is the most ambitious education choice plan ever
introduced in Congress. Under the proposal, eligible parents would
receive up to $6,700 per eligible child to establish reimbursement
accounts managed by private financial institutions. The accounts
would allow them to select their child's school-public, private or
charter. The schools, in turn, would receive reimbursement payments
directly from the parent, rather than having to negotiate with
several layers of bureaucracy.
On cue, education bureaucrats rose in righteous anger. "The
proposal," National Education Association President Reg Weaver
huffed, "is quite simply a voucher plan-directing federal funds to
private and religious schools." The nation's largest teacher's
union, of course, reacts to vouchers like a vampire does to a
cross. Weaver's alternative approach has been introduced in the
Senate by that body's newest legislative duo-Mike Enzi (R.-Wyo.)
and Teddy Kennedy (D.-Mass.). Known as "equitable participation,"
the Enzi-Kennedy proposal would essentially maintain the public
school monopoly over educational decision-making by placing severe
and unnecessary limits on the ability of dislocated students to use
those funds in private or religious schools.
According to Weaver, all federal assistance should "flow through
public schools to pay for student services" and "control [should]
rest with the school district or local education agency."
The NEA's unstated fear is that hoards of Gulf-region parents will
send their kids to non-public schools. But these fears are
overstated because public-school districts that deliver a quality
education product to students can prosper when parents
choose.
Case in point: Louisiana's southernmost school district,
Plaquemines Parish, reopened its doors recently to its 5,000
students and, by all accounts, would thrive under the
Boehner-Jindal approach. According to Education Daily, pre-Katrina,
"the district was a star in the state's education reform movement."
Two-thirds of its students qualified for free or reduced lunch, yet
these predominantly poor students exceeded the state average by 10
to 15 points on Louisiana's 2004 math and English
assessments.
Education Cuts
Boehner's other noteworthy legislation is the Setting Priorities in
Spending Act, which would repeal 14 federal education programs that
studies show are "inefficient, duplicative, or simply unnecessary."
The House has already voted to zero out $246 million in funding for
these programs, but the Senate persists in keeping them on life
support. Unless Congress drives a stake through their heart by
deleting them from federal law, they will continue to rise from the
dead like Dracula and receive funding year after year.
The programs slated for elimination duplicate efforts elsewhere in
the federal government and have murky track records. The list
includes funds for community technology centers, exchanges with
historic whaling and trading partners (a slush fund for favored
entities in Massachusetts, Hawaii and Alaska), prison-based
education, foreign language, teacher training, distance education,
learning through TV, and parent education efforts.
Eliminating failed federal programs is an integral element of any
successful long-term strategy to overhaul K-12 education. Boehner's
two bills are complementary parts of such a successful strategy and
should serve as a model for Hill leaders who want to address the
federal government's failures in policy areas as diverse as
housing, health care, job training and welfare.
Mike Franc, who has held a number of positions on Capitol Hill, is vice president of Government Relations at The Heritage Foundation.
First appeared in Human Events