In his Friday letter, «Money and power drive opponents of vouchers,» Rep. Steve Nass, R - Whitewater, claimed those wanting performance report cards for private schools
receiving public funds under Wisconsin's voucher program are under the spell of the powerful «education bureaucracy.»
If that's not enough, the document — inked by a rural Lee County private school, which is eligible to
receive public funds under the state's controversial Opportunity Scholarship Program — goes on to make this declaration:
Not exact matches
It is important to note that
under Speaker Sheldon Silver's bill, (1)
receiving public funds depends on the candidate's ability to raise money from numerous small donors, so only donations up to $ 250 are matched with taxpayer dollars and that (2) candidates are limited to a maximum amount of
public funds ($ 400,000 for Senate candidates and $ 200,000 for Assembly candidates in the general election race).
The final bill also requires that, by June 30, 2016, the Empire State Development Corp. (ESDC) submit a report «detailing: (a) the total amount of
public funds committed by this program annually; (b) total amount of private
funds committed annually and, if applicable, the amount of such
funds that has been invested by such parties; (c) the location of each area
receiving investments
under this program and the goals for each such area; (d) planned future investments by both
public and private parties; and (e) such other information as the corporation deems necessary.»
Under current law, independent candidates can only
receive 70 % as much
public funding as candidates running in a party primary, during Read more»
If so, the CFB could count those against the $ 182,000 spending cap for the Democratic primary, should Abbate participate in the city's
public matching
funds program, a program which effectively lets candidates multiply sevenfold every donation
under $ 175 they
receive from a resident of the five boroughs.
Under a Fair Elections system, candidates that abide by lower contribution limits and enhanced disclosure rules would
receive public matching
funds for every small donation they raise.
Under the city's
public -
funding system, candidates may
receive $ 6 in taxpayer
funds for each of the first $ 175 donated by a city resident, for a maximum of $ 1,050 in
public funds per contributor.
When Malloy
received a state grant of $ 6.5 million in taxpayer -
funded public financing in 2014
under the clean - election program, he signed a legal agreement with the SEEC promising to abide by Connecticut's ban on state contractors» contributions.
He has little money, struggling to meet the thresholds
under the new
public financing regime and thereby
receive state matching
funds.
UFT lawyers argue that «while charter schools may
receive some
funding from private entities, they are overwhelmingly
funded by
public tax dollars and they are subject to the disclosure requirements applicable to government agencies
under the New York state Freedom of Information Law.»
Instead of the government determining students» eligibility for financial aid, which can cause social division between those who
receive aid and those who don't, Dr. Sara Goldrick - Rab and Dr. Tammy Kolbe recommend that all students should be
funded collectively
under a taxpayer - supported universal
public higher education system.
The strategy will give
public research organizations more autonomy but also places them
under closer scrutiny: in order to
receive public funding, organizations must produce results that clearly make a positive impact on science or the economy.
A private Montessori school in rural Minnesota last week cleared a key hurdle on its way to becoming the nation's first «charter» school, able
under state law to
receive public funds while remaining free from most outside control.
The organization claims that what charter schools
receive, typically 60 to 75 percent of what traditional
public schools
receive per pupil and no
funding for facilities, deprives the children of their right to a «sound basic education»
under the state constitution.
Florida has 4,200 K - 12
public schools, of which 650 are charter schools that
receive taxpayer
funding but are managed by private entities not
under the purview of the school district.
Except as provided in subparagraph (vi) of this paragraph, a local educational agency (LEA) that
received funds under title I for two consecutive years during which the LEA did not make adequate yearly progress on all applicable criteria in paragraph (14) of this subdivision in a subject area, or all applicable indicators in subparagraphs (15)(i) through (iii) of this subdivision, or the indicator in subparagraph (15)(iv) of this subdivision, shall be identified for improvement
under section 1116 (c) of the NCLB, 20 U.S.C. section 6316 (c) and shall be subject to the requirements therein (
Public Law, section 107 - 110, section 1116 [c], 115 STAT.
In a 6 - 3 ruling, the high court said charter schools don't qualify as «common» schools
under Washington's Constitution and can't
receive public funding intended for those traditional
public schools.
Public schools expend considerable resources identifying children eligible for special services, both because they are
under an obligation to provide those services and because they
receive additional
funds from federal and state governments if a child is identified as having a disability that affects their learning.
If one assumes that charter schools get their fair share of Title II
funds as per the underlying ESSA statue, 39 with 5 percent of the nation's students, 40 they stand to lose $ 115 million per year
under the Trump - Devos budget41 — close to one - third of the amount the federal government invested in the Charter Schools Grants program in FY 2017.42 Education Week reports that Eagle Academy
Public Charter School in Washington, D.C., for example,
receives roughly $ 82,000 in Title II
funding annually.43 Joe Smith, the school's chief financial officer, states, «If this was taken away from us, that would hurt.
If the Greensboro Islamic Academy — or any other school
receiving taxpayer
funds under the new school voucher program — finds itself in a situation in which it can not complete the next school year thanks to financial instability, then recovering
public voucher dollars would likely be impossible.
Under a state law regarding the scholarship program, if there is money leftover from program (meaning not as many students used the available
funds), that money is given back to the
public and charter schools, but schools haven't
received any of that excess money since the 2012 - 2013 school year.
Yet after two visits by the education department and an investigation by the attorney general's office, the troubled Indianapolis private school still
received thousands of dollars in
public funds through Indiana's school voucher program and remained eligible to
receive state voucher money until it collapsed
under the weight of its unpaid debts.
The amendment is the latest turn in a long - running fight over whether private schools
receiving voucher
funds should be held to the same non-discrimination standards
under ADA as
public schools.
Collectively, there are five types of low - performing schools, including those
receiving ESSA
funds under Title I of the law as well as any
public schools meeting the criteria listed below.9
Under Connecticut's
public financing system, neither candidate
receives more
funds, so neither one can get use money to buy themselves any last - minute advantage.
Under the bill, charter schools, which are publicly
funded but privately operated, would be added into the school assignment lists that Boston
Public School parents
receive.
The independently operated
public schools haven't
received any
funding under Oakland's previous fundraising measures.
The Secretary shall create and implement a national
public transportation safety plan to improve the safety of all
public transportation systems that
receive funding under this chapter.
Some recent history: in 2011, the environmental advocacy groups Friends of the Earth and
Public Citizen partnered with climate deniers at the Heartland Institute (which
received funding from the Koch Brothers)
under the watchful eye of the Taxpayers for Common Sense to produce the non-partisan Green Scissors report.