Monday, September 3, 2012

Pa. Tax Credit Aid for Schools off to a Slow Start

From today's Phila. Inquirer:
 
Pa. tax credit aid for schools off to a slow start
 
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Gov. Corbett's education agenda and Pennsylvania's school-choice movement got a big boost in late June when the legislature targeted up to $50 million in business-tax credits to help students living near low-achieving public schools attend private schools or public schools in other districts.
But the new Opportunity Scholarship Tax Credit Program has gotten off to a slow start. As most schools prepare to open this week, only $10 million in tax credits have been snapped up by businesses.Also, schools and other nonprofit scholarship organizations that distribute the money to students have yet to receive notice of how much they will receive. Some scholarship groups say it will be a full year before much of the money finds its way to students.And the list of participating schools is not yet complete.There is certainly intense interest in the program, which gives businesses tax credits for donations that fund scholarships.Many schools and scholarship organizations have been deluged with aid requests from public school parents, especially since districts with low-achieving schools sent out notices about the scholarships in mid-August."I get calls and e-mails constantly," said Kelly Grattan, development director at the Gesu School, an independent Catholic school in Philadelphia. "They're coming from as far away as Altoona and Pittsburgh," even though the school only serves the North Philadelphia area. "Parents are desperate."Many of those pleas seem likely to go unanswered, however, at least for the coming school year. Most of the money will probably go instead to students already attending private schools.Grattan, for example, said Gesu was at full enrollment, with a long waiting list. So the school's Opportunity Scholarship funds will instead boost the overall pool of aid money for current students, many of whom come from low-income families, she said.Also, many scholarship organizations that will get Opportunity money said they work a year ahead, getting aid applications in the spring from parents who want their children to attend private school the following fall. It will be difficult, they said, for many students to transfer from public to private school once classes begin. "The process hasn't caught up with the demand yet," said Dennis Walsh, board president of the Bravo Foundation, which received more than $1 million last year from the Educational Improvement Tax Credit (EITC) program, an older and larger state scholarship effort.Ina Lipman, executive director of the Children's Scholarship Fund Philadelphia, a large EITC recipient, said her organization was in limbo with the new program until it knows how much money it will get and can start accepting applications. "We've gotten hundreds of requests," she said. "It breaks my heart that I can't do anything. I try to walk families through what their next step should be and tell them to hang tight."One school where students may benefit immediately from Opportunity Scholarships is Drexel Neumann Academy, an independent Catholic school in Chester. All schools in the Chester Upland District are on the low-achieving list.Sister Margaret Gannon, the academy's president, said the 190-student school, which has gotten EITC money in past years, would get at least $37,500 in Opportunity Scholarship money this year from a local pharmacy and medical-supply business. There are still openings in some grades, she said, adding: "We're so grateful for this new opportunity."The Opportunity program is much like the EITC, which has been in operation since 2001.Both give tax credits of up to 90 percent for corporate donations of up to $400,000 to designated scholarship organizations. The total amount for the EITC program was increased by $25 million this year, to $100 million; $70 million goes to scholarships, the rest to public school enrichment programs.The Opportunity Scholarship program differs from the EITC in several ways, however. It is limited to students living in the attendance area of the lowest-performing 15 percent of public schools in Pennsylvania, not including charter schools. That list has 414 schools; 158 of them are in Philadelphia. There are 34 other low-achieving schools in nine other Philadelphia-area districts: Bristol Township in Bucks County, Chester Upland, Chichester, Ridley, Southeast Delco, Upper Darby and William Penn in Delaware County, and Norristown and Pottstown in Montgomery County.Scholarships for the new program are limited to $8,500 for each regular education student and $15,000 for each special-education student. Family income eligibility limits are the same in both programs - $60,000, with an additional $12,000 for each additional student in the household. But the Opportunity Scholarship program sets additional priorities for which students get the money. Preference is given to those in Philadelphia, the Chester Upland School District, Duquesne in Western Pennsylvania, Harrisburg, and York City. Students who qualify for reduced-price lunches ($44,643 for a family of four, for example) also get preference.Schools have to sign up to participate in the Opportunity Scholarship program, unlike the EITC, through which all private schools can get scholarship money. And public schools can participate by establishing a special tuition rate for students from outside their districts. So far, 12 schools in four districts, none in the Philadelphia area, have signed up, along with 638 private schools. Several hundred more schools are still awaiting approval, state Education Department spokesman Tim Eller said.

8 comments:

Anonymous said...

A slow start siphoning money from public to private schools all in the name of 'choice'.

Anonymous said...

Our own super super loves vouchers and mike fitzpatrick and rita ledger and marlys mihok.

Jon said...

Bill Ferrara says he supports vouchers if they're fair, but said they're not fair in the bill PA is considering, because private schools get to use their own admission criteria to accept or reject applicants, something public schools can't do. He made a statement about it at a school board meeting, I'd say within the last year or so.

I'd have to dig it up, but if I find it I'll post it.

That reminds me - several of the links to school board minutes on the district's website still don't work.

Jon said...

October 26, 2011:

WILLIAM FERRARA - SUPERINTENDENT
• Mr. Ferrara discussed the School Choice Voucher Bill which is now going through the
Senate as SB #1 and the level playing field this would give Private Schools. He
discussed the disadvantages and costs that the School Choice Voucher Bill would present
to our district and all districts. He advised everyone that their public funding, if this Bill
is passed, would be going to Charter and Private schools. The Board will have no say as
to what Charter Schools will be opening in their district. He feels it is a great plan that
the politicians are hiding behind for lower socio-economic schools and failing schools
which are mostly in the big cities. He advised everyone to get in depth information on
this matter and he suggested that everyone contact their State Senators and ask that they
consider not passing this Bill.

Anonymous said...

CatholicPhilly.com

Posted in News, on May 31st, 2012

Students encourage support of vouchers

By Liz Fisher
Special to the CS&T

With school vouchers and Educational Improvement Tax Credits (EITC) under Pennsylvania’s legislative microscope, students in the Archdiocese focused on the benefits of a Catholic education on May 20, Voucher Sunday.

Teens like Mary Fitzpatrick, a senior at Conwell-Egan Catholic High School in Fairless Hills, urged the faithful to contribute to their parish schools and parochial high schools, and put pressure on their legislators to approve vouchers that would provide parents with the financial resources to select the best school for their child.

Mary, a senior who plans to study elementary special education at Bloomsburg University in the fall, said she received a positive response from fellow parishioners at Queen of the Universe Church in Levittown.

“I wanted to help everyone understand how important it is to get the religious, as well as the academic education offered by Catholic school,” she said. “And Catholic school classes are smaller and you can have a more comfortable environment.”

Mary is the daughter of U.S. Congressman Mike Fitzpatrick, and she knows well that her father will be among those lawmakers contacted about the issue by constituents of the Eighth Congressional District.

Voucher Sunday was also meant to call attention to the need for an expanded EITC program in Pennsylvania. EITC allows businesses to use tax credits to support local schools. In Bensalem, for instance, the Parx Casino provides assistance to students of St. Ephrem School and St. Charles Borromeo School.






Msgr. Kenneth McAteer, pastor of St. Ephrem, said he fully supports the voucher program because it would allow parents — who are taxpayers — more educational options.

“They could choose any school but hopefully they’d choose a Catholic school,” Msgr. McAteer said.

Conwell-Egan was one of many schools recently slated for closure by the archdiocesan Blue Ribbon Commission. St. Ephrem was designated as a “receiving” school, which means it was tapped to accept students from one of the elementary schools on the closings list.

Archbishop Charles Chaput spared Conwell-Egan and three other high schools, as well as several elementary schools. But keeping them open will require pro-active measures by parish communities, he said.

In his May 16 column, the Archbishop issued a plea for Catholics in the Archdiocese to e-mail, call or meet with their legislators to urge that the voucher and EITC initiative to be brought to the House floor and approved.

Matthew MacNamara, also a senior at Conwell-Egan, spoke at Our Lady of Grace Church in Penndel on Voucher Sunday. He told his listeners that the quality of education he received ensured a brighter future for himself and his classmates.

Matthew will begin business studies at Penn State University in September, but he made it clear during his talk that he believes the morals and values instilled in him at Conwell-Egan will steer him through pitfalls that young people navigate once they go away to college.

Approximately 500 students spoke at more than 1,000 Masses throughout the Archdiocese.

Anonymous said...

St. Joseph's buying cardinal's mansion for $10M

September 08, 2012|By David O'Reilly, Inquirer Staff Writer

The 16-room mansion , set on 8.9 acres, has housed Phila. prelates since 1935.

St. Joseph's University announced Friday that it would acquire the cardinal's residence on City Avenue from the Archdiocese of Philadelphia for $10 million.

The stone mansion, on 8.9 acres, has served as the home of the archbishops of Philadelphia since 1935, when the church bought it for Cardinal Dennis Dougherty for $115,000.

Archbishop Charles J. Chaput, who assumed leadership of the archdiocese one year ago, put the 16-room residence on the market in January. In June, he reported that the archdiocese faced a $17.5 million operating debt.

Sources said Chaput, a Franciscan Capuchin friar, was not comfortable living in a baronial-style mansion as he was preparing his flock for school and parish closings to trim the deficit. He has also put the retired priests' summer home in Ventnor, N.J., up for sale, with an estimated value of $6 million.

The Rev. C. Kevin Gillespie, president of St. Joseph's, said the university had no immediate plans for the property but might use it temporarily for administrative offices. He also said it would be "integral to the university's long-term strategic planning."

Funding for the purchase will come from "donor support and internal resources," according to the university.

The grounds, which sweep from City Avenue to Overbrook Avenue and flank the one-block Cardinal Avenue (formerly 57th Street), are directly adjacent to the university's 48-acre campus.

Chaput said in a recent interview that when the residence is sold, he will relocate to the apartment at St. Charles Borromeo Seminary in Wynnewood that the late Cardinal Anthony J. Bevilacqua occupied after his retirement in 2003.

In 1999, while the archbishop of Denver, Chaput sold his predecessors' villa and moved into the diocesan seminary.

Surrounded by a tall iron fence, the Philadelphia property includes a gardener's cottage and a six-car garage, and is entered through a gate on Cardinal Avenue. Its only contiguous neighbor is a convent of cloistered nuns.

Cardinal John Krol, who took over in 1961, installed a par-3 golf hole and putting green on the grounds. To Bevilacqua's considerable irritation, Krol not only stayed in the residence but kept the better apartments until his death in 1996.

Visitors have included Pope John Paul II, in 1979, and Cardinal Eugene Pacelli, the future Pope Pius XII, in 1936.

Jon said...

I hear ya. And yes, I do believe Mr. Ferrara supports Mike Fitzpatrick, who supports vouchers, and Catholic schools would be a primary beneficiary of vouchers and the infusion of public money they would provide.

Ledger and Mihok, I don't want to go there. I have a hard time imagining love as one of the emotions he would feel about Mihok. If it is, I nominate him for Sainthood.

Jon said...

FYI, some earlier threads about vouchers:

http://mvbulldogbanter.blogspot.com/2011/06/vouchers-bill-sb1-moving-today.html

http://mvbulldogbanter.blogspot.com/2012/06/archbishop-pass-voucher-bill-now-or.html