Guest guest Posted January 4, 2006 Report Share Posted January 4, 2006 What about those of us homeschooling our children or doing in-home therapy. The status of homeschooling in Texas is the same as private schools. If the voucher system will help us pay for some of the expenses, why not support it?!!! Furthermore, we should have the option of selecting private schools for our children because the majority of the public schools are nothing but warehouses with very few exceptions. Autism bill represents House GOP subterfuge (Indiana) Vouchers won't help kids Autism bill represents House GOP subterfuge An effort to use poor children to advance their school voucher campaign failed last year, so House Republican leaders this year are turning to children with autism. " We have to walk before we begin to run in the school choice arena, " House Speaker Bosma told the Indianapolis Star in November. " I think this is the next step, to look at those who could be served better and more efficiently. " The speaker's words reveal the ultimate goal: steering tax dollars from public education to private and parochial schools. It's telling that the Autism Society of Indiana, the Indiana Autism Coalition and other disability advocates have said they will not support the proposed scholarship program. " There's a concern that they are putting forth this bill without having consulted anyone in the autism community, " said Pieples, president of the Autism Society of Indiana. " We want to make sure we're not being used as a pawn for school choice. " She said House leaders showed " little integrity " in proposing the voucher plan without first consulting those most affected. Pieples, whose 19-year-old son has an autism spectrum disorder, said she has met with Bosma and other lawmakers since the voucher plan was announced and will meet with him today, but still is concerned that they didn't begin by asking the autism community for its input. If they had, they would have been told that there are few options outside of public schools for students with autism. Vouchers will do little to help if there's no place to use them. In addition, the program is aimed at a handful of children, when the numbers of children with autism spectrum disorders is large and growing larger. There are an estimated 6,000 in Indiana. Pieples' other concern is that preschool programs, which have been found to be effective in helping children with autism, are woefully underfunded. " We don't want to see money taken away from those programs, " she said. " The general education system has to be shored up first. It is really a travesty that we can find money to fund a new (Colts) stadium, but we're so underfunded when it comes to children. " Fortunately, there are lawmakers pointing out the facts surrounding the proposed bill. " The reality is that there aren't any private schools in the area that want to take on autistic children, " Sen. Vaneta Becker, R-ville, told the ville Courier & Press. " The majority of children who are autistic are educated by the public school system. " Becker is right - Pieples said she knows of three private schools that serve children with autism. Each is in the Indianapolis area and only one has openings available. And Sen. Meeks - always a voice for fiscal restraint - dismisses the voucher plan with four simple words: " We can't afford that. " No kidding - the Indiana Urban Schools Association estimates the cost at $40 million. If lawmakers truly want to help families of autistic children, they will reject the voucher bill and focus efforts on programs that identify autism spectrum disorders and target the state's dollars at early intervention, which holds the greatest promise for children with autism and their families. The autism community has promised to present a proposal next year. That's the one legislators should consider, not Bosma's repackaged voucher scheme <http://www.fortwayne.com/mld/journalgazette/13546652.htm> http://www.fortwayne.com/mld/journalgazette/13546652.htm Jimmy Kilpatrick Senior Fellow, is de Tocqueville Institution Editor, EducationNews.org <http://www.educationnews.org/> 1723 Westheimer Road Houston, Texas 77098-1611 LDAdvocates.com <http://www.ldadvocates.com/> 832 814-7463 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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