Arizona Officials Offer Heated Responses About School Choice Cost Projection

by Cole Lauterbach

 

Arizona’s universal school choice program is estimated to see significant growth over the next fiscal year to 100,000 students with a price tag of $900 million. Opponents of the program say its cost will bankrupt the state but others say the expense will be offset.

In complying with state law, the Arizona Department of Education offered the Joint Legislative Budget Committee its annual estimate on what it would need to fund empowerment scholarship accounts for the upcoming fiscal year. With nearly 58,000 students already enrolled in the program, ADE projects the program will grow to 100,000 students in fiscal year 2024 at a cost of $900 million.

Started in 2012 but recently expanded, the ESA program was the first universal school choice option in America. It allows parents to take 90% of the state funding meant for their student’s public school education and spend it on private school tuition or other approved expenses. The average scholarship amount is $10,000, according to state data.

News of the projection was met with outrage from Democrats who called for a rollback of ESAs in the latest budget agreement.

“This runaway spending is simply another example of fiscal irresponsibility by the Republican majority at the Legislature,” said State Sen. Christine Marsh, D-Phoenix. “With over 80% of the funding going to families who were already paying private school tuition, we know this sham expansion doesn’t help the students that truly need it. This is outrageous and any Republicans who continue backing this irresponsible and unchecked growth cannot call themselves fiscally conservative.”

As of February, ADE said the ratio of ESA participants who previously attended public schools and those who left a public school is roughly equal. The students who were attending private schools would represent a taxpayer cost previously paid for by their parents.

“The school voucher program in its current form is not sustainable, and Republican legislators need to explain why they are forcing this runaway spending on Arizona taxpayers,” Gov. Katie Hobbs tweeted. “We need to bring an end to this out of control and unaccountable spending, and I will work tirelessly to make that happen.”

ADE officials said the $900 million cost estimate isn’t purely a net negative on the state budget.

“For budgeting purposes, it is also important to note that many of the students that are enrolling now are coming from the public school system, which in the end saves the state money because the empowerment scholarship accounts are funded at a lower percentage than the state aid for a pupil in the public school system,” ESA Executive Director Christine Accurso wrote in the letter to JLBC.

State Superintendent of Public Instruction Tom Horne said in a Wednesday informational meeting that ESAs should result in some savings because the funding follows the student from taxpayer-funded public schools. ESA costs are lower, with the exception being special needs students.

The nonprofit Common Sense Institute Arizona’s May 26 report found an estimated $639 million savings from the statewide equalization formula due to less-than-expected public school enrollment growth since the COVID-19 pandemic. That’s based on current ESA enrollment. Participants in the ESA program also come from households with incomes lower than the median Arizona family. The report found the median income of families in the ESA program as of Dec. 31, 2022, is about $60,600, while the median income of families in Arizona with at least one child is $69,700.

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Cole Lauterbach is a managing editor for The Center Square covering the western United States. For more than a decade, Cole has produced award-winning content on both radio and television.
Photo “Katie Hobbs” by Katie Hobbs. Photo “Christine Marsh” by Christine Marsh. Background Photo “Classroom” by Wokandapix.

 

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3 Thoughts to “Arizona Officials Offer Heated Responses About School Choice Cost Projection”

  1. Bruce_in_AZ

    “ESA allows parents to take 90% of the state funding meant for their student’s public school education and spend it on private school tuition or other approved expenses.”

    How does this “bankrupt the state”? The money is simply diverted to the school chosen. It is taken from the money that would be paid into the public school system. Naturally, the democrats are lying, trying to save the teacher’s union and their campign contributions.

  2. phxgeo

    What unadulterated crap spewed by Hobbs and Sen. Marsh. To say that Republicans are irresponsible with funding need to answer just how much it is costing the State to provide illegal immigrants with a golden parachute. Hoods decision to remove Ducey’s shipping container “wall” proves she does not give a damn with fiscal responsibility. Do not give me that crap that the feds are paying the illegal’s bills because the money will come from the same tax payer’s pockets thereby making the voucher even more beneficial to the fleeced taxpayers. The Country will benefit more from better educated students than from illegal immigrants.

  3. Gracie

    I am a taxpayer in AZ, and when I ready the full content of the letter that our democrat representative quoted from, you could see that ESA saves the taxpayers money, and the students get a better education – if not – we can fire them. Katie Hobbs needs to quit smiling as she is LYING with every breath she takes.

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