That attitude frustrates Jeff Murray, operations manager for School Choice Ohio, which supports the state's voucher program and
a proposed scholarship tax credit program.
Not exact matches
Cuomo said his plans to extend public tuition assistance to undocumented immigrants — the Dream Act — and a plan
proposed tax credit offsetting donations to private and parochial school
scholarship funds (as well as public schools) were «highly likely» to fall out of talks because the State Senate and Assembly were «dug in» in their respective opposition.
Under the provisions of the education
tax credit
proposed by Cuomo, people and businesses can donate up to $ 1 million to a
scholarship fund to send underprivileged children to private schools, or the publicly funded, but privately run, charter schools.
Under the provisions of the education
tax credit
proposed by Governor Cuomo, people and businesses can donate up to $ 1 million to a
scholarship fund to send underprivileged children to private schools, or support enhanced programs at public schools.
He has also
proposed extending college tuition assistance to undocumented immigrants — a proposal known as the Dream Act — as well as creating a new
tax credit to offset donations to private and parochial school
scholarship funds and public schools.
Senate Co-Leader Dean Skelos (R - Long Island) and Sen. Martin Golden (R - Brooklyn) said they would not support expanding a
proposed education investment
tax credit to help fund
scholarships for the college kids of illegal immigrants — a plan some saw as a compromise to the DREAM Act that was voted down in the Senate last week.
Tuition
tax credits for families enrolling students in private schools and corporate - ax - credit
scholarships, both
proposed by Gov. Mark Sanford for use in private schools.
Rather than reallocating dollars slated for education, supporters
proposed to give
tax credits to individuals and businesses that donated money to nonprofit organizations providing low - income students with
scholarship grants to attend private schools (see Table 1).
This attack on a
proposed expansion of the Florida
Tax Credit
Scholarship shows a remarkable indifference to basic facts.
But her attack on a
proposed expansion of the Florida
Tax Credit
Scholarship suffers not only from a lack of sensitivity to the plight of desperately poor parents, mostly of color, who have their children on waiting lists.
This report updates a 2005 analysis by Arizona's Joint Legislative Budget Committee (JLBC) that looked at the fiscal impact of a
proposed corporate tuition
tax - credit
scholarship program and reflects the program as actually passed in 2006.
He also
proposed expanding an existing program that gives
tax breaks to businesses and individuals to fund
scholarships for students to attend private and religious schools.
For example, Bedrick said, the bill
proposed by Rubio and Rokita would have given federal
tax credits only for donations to
scholarship - granting organizations that don't «earmark or set aside contributions for
scholarships on behalf of any particular student, or to any specific school or group of schools.»
The
proposed School Choice
Scholarship Act (HB 1607) creates a scholarship tax credit program that is designed to save money by reducing state spending more than it reduces t
Scholarship Act (HB 1607) creates a
scholarship tax credit program that is designed to save money by reducing state spending more than it reduces t
scholarship tax credit program that is designed to save money by reducing state spending more than it reduces
tax revenue.
Proposed House legislation gives funding for struggling students to parents, not schools, and it broadens eligibility for
tax credit
scholarships.
The regulation
proposed in Georgia would require all SGOs participating in
tax - credit
scholarship programs to issue
scholarships to any student wishing to attend any school.
But regulations like the one that was
proposed in Georgia would alienate all mission - driven SGOs like these from
tax - credit
scholarship programs and ultimately force them out of business.
Such programs include education savings accounts (ESA's) and
tax - credit
scholarships as
proposed in Senate Bill 3, which passed 18 - 13 earlier on Thursday.
There are others in that category as well, including the
proposed Opportunity
Scholarship Act (OSA) that would provide private school
scholarships paid for by public
tax credits.