Voucher deception on ballotMay 20, 2008
St. Petersburg Times Editorial
Two of the constitutional amendments on this fall's lengthy presidential ballot are described to voters the following way:
No. 7: "Religious freedom."
No. 9: "Requiring 65 percent of school funding for classroom instruction; state's duty for children's education."
Here's a pop quiz: How many of you just guessed from the amendments' official titles that they are intended to invalidate a 2006 Florida Supreme Court and separate appellate court ruling against school vouchers?
If the actual purpose eluded you, then the Florida Taxation and Budget Reform Commission would be pleased. The intent behind the baldly political game commissioners played in putting two school voucher issues on the ballot was obvious: Get voters to approve vouchers without knowing they did.
This was never supposed to be the commission's job anyway. The commission was created in 1988 after a bruising political battle the previous year over tax reform. The decision to impose, and then to revoke, a sales tax on services left the Legislature's head spinning and led it to propose a commission that would analyze the tax structure. A separate body, the Constitution Revision Commission, is charged with examining other issues.
The tax commission's agenda was hijacked this year by appointees aligned with former Gov. Jeb Bush, who has refused to accept the court's ruling against "Opportunity Scholarships." The result was Amendments 7 and 9, aimed at providing constitutional protection for school vouchers. The first would remove the prohibition on spending tax money "directly or indirectly" on religious schools. The second would add private schools to the list of ways the state fulfills its "paramount duty" to educate children.
Not surprisingly, the Florida Education Association now says it is going to take the ballot issue to court, and the frustration is understandable. The tax commission was never intended to deal with vouchers and the separation of church and state and, worse, it has posed the questions in a classic form of political misdirection. The commission purposefully attached to Amendment 9 an unrelated and largely meaningless requirement that 65 percent of education funding be directed to the classroom.
The commission had no business meddling in vouchers.
.....
Are we sufficiently tired of the lies and vicious manipulation by Jeb Bush and his zealots?
Please support the lawsuit by the Florida Teachers Union, and vote NO to Amendments 5, 7 and 9 in November. This deception on the November ballot will affect us all if we do not end it.
Florida teachers union to file lawsuit against Jeb Bush's stealth school voucher amendments, May 18, 2008
A brief synopsis of these 3 amendments:
Amendment 5: "The Tax Swap".... would eliminate $9.5 billion in property taxes for schools and replace it with a penny increase in sales tax.
The catch is that the sales tax increase would replace only about one third of the money taken from the public school coffers, with the *promise* that the Legislature would *find the rest of the money for the schools somewhere.*
Bottom line: This amendment further starves money from our public schools, without full replacement of the school funds. This amendment is a set-up for the two stealth voucher amendments 7 and 9. Look for Jeb Bush and House Speaker Marco Rubio to be pounding this into the airwaves soon.
Amendment 7: Will remove the state's century-old ban on using state money to fund religious institutions.
Amendment 9: Will change the Constitution to state that the use of taxpayer money to fund public schools will not be barred from funding religious schools as well.
WE MUST VOTE NO TO ALL THREE OF THESE DECEPTIVE AMENDMENTS PUT ON THE BALLOT BY JEB BUSH AND HIS OPERATIVES.