deadline

Parents *STILL* choose public schools

HB153, the budget bill, increased the availability of school vouchers for private schools from 14,000 to 30,000 last year and to 60,000 this year. Clearly the legislators was expecting a private school voucher gold rush.

When that didn't happen last year, excuses were made. This year, according to reports in the Dispatch, application levels are almost as miserable.

An additional 1,544 requests for a new special-needs voucher program were made by Sunday’s deadline.

Among the 17,438 applications for an Educational Choice Scholarship were 3,814 new applicants. That deadline was Friday. About 17,000 applications were filed last year to use vouchers this school year.

There are 60,000 vouchers available next school year for students in low-performing schools. They’re worth $4,250 for younger students and $5,000 for high-school students.

The Dispatch headline catagorizes this as "School-voucher programs prove popular". the reality and the truth is obviously quite different. Approximately 3,438 additional students have appliedfor vouchers above the original cap of 14,000. That amounts to just 5.7% of the new 60,000 cap.

ohio voucher expansion

The voucher expansion in Ohio is clearly a massive failure. Lawmakers obvously expected demand for these vouchers to be over 30,000, hence the increase to 60,000 this year. For those that continue to believe that parents in Ohio want "choice", for the second year in a row, they have been proven to be wrong. Parents in Ohio continue to overwhelmingly support public schools - it's time politicians listened and began to support it fully too.

The White flag as seen from around Ohio

We reported on yesterday's surprising news of the Governor finally conceding that SB5 went too far and should be toned down. Here's the news of that white flag being raised, as reported from around the state.

The Cincinatti Enquirer gets a quote from the author of SB5, State Sen. Shannon Jones

The Southwest Ohio legislator who authored Senate Bill 5, state Sen. Shannon Jones, R-Springboro, dismissed suggestions that the GOP leaders’ offer reflects concern that voters might pass Issue 2, the ballot measure aimed at repealing the reform of the state’s 1983 collective bargaining law.

“I don’t think that’s a fair analysis at all,” said Jones, who represents eastern Hamilton County and all of Warren County.

“This is just a reminder that an offer that was there from the start – to sit down and talk, to look for common ideas – is still open,” she told the Enquirer. “If they want to do that, fine. If not, we’ll have an election.”

The Toledo Blade reminds us that it's difficult to change SB5 if the Legislature isn't in session, and won't be until after the August 30th deadline

"These politicians who passed Senate Bill 5 have the ability to come back and repeal the law, and that's what they should do—repeal the entire law," We Are Ohio spokesman Melissa Fazekas said. "Or they can join us and vote ‘no' in November on Issue 2."

Lawmakers, however, are on summer recess and are not scheduled to return before the Aug. 30 deadline.

The Dispatch has this choice quote from the Governor

Kasich said avoiding a fight over state Issue 2 is in "best interest of everyone, including public employee unions." He asked the unions to "set aside political agendas and past offenses."

Some might call that projection.

The Marietta Times has a quote from a teacher, one we've heard expressed many times already too

"But a divisive fight on these issues that could possibly be avoided is in the best interest of everyone, including public employees and people who support public employees," Kasich said.

Marietta resident Sarah Beaver, a 59-year-old retired teacher, isn't buying it.

"Don't trust him farther than I can throw him," she said "He's just afraid (the repeal) is going to pass and this is his way to avoid it."

This is why reapling then dealing is the only way forward.

Finally, in the 3rd of a 3 part series, Plunderbund has what might be the real reason for yesterday's developments

We’ve heard all sorts of crazy rumors shaking out today. Mostly, that Building a Better Ohio’s fundraising has been shockingly poor. We can’t confirm because Building a Better Ohio, by legal design, has organized itself to avoid having to report as regularly and as transparently as We Are Ohio… this from the same campaign that asserts unions oppose public transparency in labor negotiations.

Double digits behind in the polls, no grass roots support, poor fundraising, a record massive 1.3 million signatures collected, and lots of evidence of voter anger over SB5, those are the kinds of conditions that make any politician want to have a do over.

SB 5 - The Citizen Veto Basics

[list class="bullet-check"] [li]April 6, 2011- last day to pass SB 5 and file it with the SOS so that a referendum would have to be at the 2011 general election. If filed after April 6th, the referendum would be at the 2012 general. The law must be signed by the Governor, Speaker of the House and President of the Senate before filing.[/li] [li]Full or Part- a referendum petition may be filed on all of the law or only sections.[/li] [li]Effect of Referendum Petition- delays the effective date the law is filed with the SOS.[/li] [li]1,000 Signatures- before a referendum petition may be circulated, the referendum committee must write a summary of SB 5 and submit it to the SOS & Ag with the full text of the law and a petition signed by a minimum of 1,000 electors. The SOS compares the full text to the law on file in his office and issues a certification. The AG compares the summary with the full text of the law and issues a certification that the summary is “fair and truthful.” The summary and both certifications must be printed on the referendum petitions and the full text of the law must also be attached to each. The SOS and AG have 10 business days to act. If the AG states that the summary is in his opinion not fair and truthful, the committee may repeat the process and/or challenge the decision in the Ohio Supreme Court. There is no limit on the number if times the process may be repeated, but it takes time away from the 90 days the committee has to circulate a referendum petition. The 90 days begins the day after the law was filed by the Governor with the SOS.[/li] [li]231,149- The minimum number of signature that must be collected to file the referendum petition. This is equal to 6% of the total vote for governor in 2010. In addition, the signatures must meet a minimum distribution requirement of 3% of the gubernatorial vote in 44 counties.[/li] [li]90 Days- The referendum petition must be filed with the SOS no later than 90 days after the law was filed with the SOS.[/li] [li]July 5, 2011- If SB 5 is filed with SOS on April 6th, this will be the deadline for filing the referendum petition.[/li] [li]July 26, 2011- Last date by which the SOS must determine if there are sufficient valid signature of registered voters on the petition to meet the overall 6% and the 3% in 44 counties requirements. After the petition is filed, the SOS sends the individual petitions to the county boards of elections to validate the signatures and review the circulator statements and if the summary and full text is included of the law are included.[/li] [li]10 Day Period- If the SOS determines that the petition contains insufficient valid signatures, the committee has 10 days to file supplemental signatures. Based on past interpretation of the law, this is a deadline for “filing” supplemental signatures and the committee may actually begin collecting such signatures beforehand.[/li] [li]August 5, 2011- Deadline to file supplemental signatures if SOS gives notice of deficiency on 7/26.[/li] [li]September 4, 2011- Deadline for SOS to determine sufficiency of supplemental signatures.[/li] [li]Ballot Language- The ballot language is written by the 5 member Ohio Ballot Board made up of the SOS, and one member each appointed by the majority and minority leadership of the House & Senate.[/li] [li]Vote NO- Referendum supporters are the vote “no” side. The ballot question is “shall the law be approved?”[/li] [li]Challenges to the Petition- Must be brought in the Ohio Supreme Court. Decision must be issued 85/45 days before the election.[/li] [/list]