TX Special Session: Public Education at Risk

*UPDATE: Moments after TFN posted this entry on Tuesday afternoon, Rep. Sid Miller, R-Stephenville, filed a massive private school voucher proposal, which goes by the Orwellian title of “taxpayer savings grants.” The bill number is HB 33 in the newly reordered nomenclature of the special legislative session, but it is not a new idea. It is the same voucher scheme that Miller and host of conservative groups tried to sneak into the budget in the closing days of the regular session.

The Texas Legislature began a special session this morning, the day after the regular session ended without the passage of several key pieces of legislation. That failed legislation included several bills involving public education. Gov. Rick Perry has asked the Legislature to focus on measures that will “allow school districts to operate more efficiently,” which means this special session could be critical to the future of public education in Texas. In addition to imposing billions of dollars in budget cuts on public schools, the far right could use the special session to advance a number of its long-standing goals – establishing a private school voucher scheme in Texas and expanding the State Board of Education’s authority over curriculum and textbooks. We saw attempts to do both during the regular legislative session.

It’s critical that supporters of public education stay engaged during this special session. You can help the Texas Freedom Network support strong public schools in three ways:

We will have a more detailed legislative wrap up on all of TFN’s issues in the coming days.

This article was posted in these categories: public education, Texas Legislature, vouchers. Bookmark the permalink. Follow comments with the RSS feed for this post. Post a Comment or leave a trackback: Trackback URL.


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3 Comments

  1. Charles
    Posted May 31, 2011 at 10:26 pm | Permalink

    Don’t forget the last comma before the conjunction when listing items in a series. They tried taking it out in the late 1960s and early 1970s because college kids could not remember to put it there. College kids of that era were taught to do it that way, but most of the writers and editors that I know started putting that comma back in long ago.

    Sorry—just one of my pet peeves.

  2. Donald
    Posted June 1, 2011 at 3:38 pm | Permalink

    The ever present Charles; I’m sure this suggestion will really make a difference.

  3. Charles
    Posted June 1, 2011 at 5:40 pm | Permalink

    Effective communication always makes a difference, unless you think think “…glasses and panties” is the same as “…eggs and bacon.”

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