Perhaps the time has
finally come for help to be available to parents who wish to send their children
to yeshivahs or other non-public schools? Recently, 300 interested parents,
school administrators and school choice advocates gathered to discuss the
‘hot’ legislation pending in New York and New Jersey that would give
taxpayers a partial tax credit for contributions to scholarship funds. While the
bills fall short of giving parents an outright tax credit for tuition,
it’s a start. By building up these funds, money will be available for
students to attend non-public schools such as yeshivahs.
The gathering at PS 215 on Ave.
S in Brooklyn was sponsored by the Sephardic Voter's League. David (Hurdle)
Tawil was the emcee, accompanied by Maurice Hedaya and Ben-Gurion Matsas. The
guest speakers Tim Mulhearn of United New Yorkers for Choice in Education
(UNYCE), Rabbi Israel Teitelbaum of School Choice NJ and Robert Schindler, long-
time school choice advocate and brother of former Mayor Brett Schindler of
Jersey City, NJ, all spoke about the importance of moving this issue forward by
activating a grass roots movement to put pressure on politicians to pass pending
legislation. New Jersey's Urban Schools Scholarship Act (S2228) provides for
some form of vouchers to be funded by tax credits granted for corporate
contributions to non-profit organizations. Rabbi Teitelbaum urged parents
and taxpayers to use their voices to help pass these bills. They will help
launch the national drive for universal choice, providing for equal educational
opportunity for every child in America. He stated that the Urban Scholarship
Act bill has bi-partisan support, powerful political interests are preventing it
from being posted in committee for a vote. However, Senate President Richard
Codey can make this happen. Rabbi Teitelbaum handed out a phone number and
encouraged the audience to call Senate President Codey and respectfully ask him
to “please use his considerable influence to move the Urban Schools
Scholarship Act (S2228) which is desperately needed by the children of New
Jersey.” Please leave a recorded message after hours at 973-731-6770.
Rabbi Teitelbaum also was encouraged by Presidential candidate Rudolph Giuliani
who committed to champion School Choice as one of his commitments to
voters. An article, School Vouchers Turn 50, by the late
economist and Nobel Laureate, Milton Freidman, was also distributed by Rabbi
Teitelbaum. Milton Freidman is widly recognized as the originator of the voucher
movement. The article discussed how the results of public education are poor
because government owns and operates most schools creating a monopolistic
system. The article clearly sets forward how choice and competition foster
incentives for “educrats” to satisfy the desires of parents,
treating them like customers who have choices instead of taxpayers with no
options other than mediocre or failing schools. Freidman also describes in the
article how the teachers' unions have used their large income, estimated at
more than $1.5 billion, to influence and gain a major role in the democratic
party which regularly opposes vouchers in any form. To see this article you can
go to www.freidmanfoundation.org. We must form a national voting block to
move proposed legislation forward that would extend school choice as a civil
rights issue so that educational funding is equitably distributed, regardless of
whether a child attends public, private or religious schools. To learn
more about what you and your friends and associates can do to help register at
www.SchoolChoiceNY.org. Written by Susan Cleary, co-founder of Parents for School
Choice. |