Education

South Carolina Gov Signs School Choice Program Into Law, Gives Private School Students Taxpayer Funds

[YouTube | Screenshot: Henry McMasters]

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Reagan Reese Contributor
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Republican Gov. Henry McMaster signed school choice legislation into law Thursday that provides private and religious school students with taxpayer funds.

Under S 39, every student enrolled in a private or religious school will be eligible to receive $6,000 to spend on education related costs. The bill, signed into law by McMasters on Thursday, passed the state Senate in February and the state House approved the bill in April, 79-35. (RELATED: Red State Governors Push For School Choice Legislation Across The Country)

Through the law, by 2026, 15,000 students are expected to be utilizing the education vouchers, costing the state about $90 million. In the 2026-2027 school year, the program would expand beyond students outside of the public school system making any family with an annual income over $100,000 eligible for the vouchers.

“For nearly a decade, grassroots South Carolinians have led the effort to give families access to the alternative academic resources that best fit students’ needs,” Jessica Anderson, executive director of Heritage Action, an organization focused on education grassroots efforts, told the Daily Caller News Foundation. “Governor McMaster’s signing of S. 39 into law scored a historic victory for thousands of students and families across the Palmetto State who now have access to education savings accounts that give them the ability to select from a variety of education options. South Carolina has bolstered the nationwide momentum to expand education freedom for all.”

“I’m not against any South Carolinian that’s trying to better themselves and trying to make a provision for their family,” Democratic state Sen. Ronnie Sabb told WISTV. “I think the fundamental question is not that. I would submit that the fundamental question is whether or not we use public funds to support private schools.”

Deonna Moody, Janice Moody, Shaylene Moody and Diane Moody (L-R) wait in an evacuation shelter setup at the Conway High School for the arrival of Hurricane Florence on September 13, 2018 in Conway, United States. Hurricane Florence is expected to arrive on Friday possibly as a category 2 storm along the North Carolina and South Carolina coastline. (Photo by Joe Raedle/Getty Images)

Deonna Moody, Janice Moody, Shaylene Moody and Diane Moody (L-R) wait in an evacuation shelter setup at the Conway High School for the arrival of Hurricane Florence on September 13, 2018 in Conway, United States.  (Photo by Joe Raedle/Getty Images)

Throughout the country, lawmakers are moving to enact school choice legislation; in March, Republican Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis signed a piece of legislation into law, giving the state a universal school choice program. Republican Iowa Gov. Kim Reynolds signed school choice legislation into law in January, providing private school students with taxpayer funds.

“We got these ideas from other states that tried things, some worked, some didn’t,” McMaster said ahead of signing the bill. “But this bill, this new law, works. It works extremely well for the people of South Carolina. Among the many benefits are not just preparing our people to live happy, strong, healthy, meaningful lives. The impact on our economic growth will be enormous because we must have economic growth, educational strength and a strong environment in order to prosper. This goes right to the heart of that educational strength.”

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