Media contact for PSBA:
Annette Stevenson
Chief Communications Officer
Pennsylvania School Boards Association
Annette.Stevenson@PSBA.org

For Immediate Release

PSBA Requests that the PA House of Representatives oppose House Bill 1254

Mechanicsburg, PA (September 24, 2021) – The Pennsylvania School Boards Association (PSBA), on behalf of the 4,500 elected officials who govern the commonwealth’s public school districts, requests that the Pennsylvania House of Representatives oppose House Bill 1254, which mandates the creation of a voucher program in school districts. Under the bill, any school district that does not “provide full-time in-person instruction or denies a student full-time in-person instruction” would be required to establish a voucher for students to use at any public or nonpublic school.

“Not only is the bill vague and overly broad,” stated Nathan Mains, PSBA’s chief executive officer “but it serves to establish a foundation that will chip away at Pennsylvania’s public education system by creating a permanent voucher program that could be expanded in the future,” he added.

If the bill were to be passed into law, the voucher program would be implemented in the middle of the current school year with little, if any, options for school districts to absorb the impact of the lost revenue. Moreover, the bill contains no time limit on the applicability of the voucher program, meaning that even if full-time in-person instruction were re-established the mandate to offer vouchers would never end. Additionally, the bill does not even contemplate necessary temporary closure of individual school buildings due to localized COVID-19 outbreaks, or even non-health related issues such as building damage from the recent tropical storm that swept through parts of the state.

Mains explained, “Overall, voucher programs like the one proposed in House Bill 1254 represent bad public policy that will have negative consequences for students, public schools, taxpayers and communities. This is far from a solution that supports public education through the challenges created by the pandemic, but rather takes much-needed resources out of public school classrooms and creates future revenue shortfalls that will require additional property tax increases or student program reductions.”

As written, the bill would provide any student living in a school district, even students who are not enrolled in a district school or are enrolled in a district school not impacted by school closure, with a voucher if the school district were forced to cancel in-person instruction even for a single day. Yet, the bill contains no requirement that the school receiving a student using a voucher provide full-time in-person instruction.

Mains continued,If the intent of the bill is to make sure students have access to in-person instruction, it’s inconsistent that the bill contains no requirement that the voucher actually be used for that purpose. The legislature should be doing all it can to support public schools during a global pandemic, yet instead this bill would take advantage of current challenges to establish an expansive, permanent voucher program.”

PSBA and its members remain committed to providing the best possible education to students as the pandemic lingers on, and into the future. The association looks forward to working with the General Assembly to identify solutions which would help school districts better achieve that goal. House Bill 1254 is not the solution.

Share this page