Teach the Vote's Week in Review: Nov. 18, 2022
Texas Legislature Curriculum | Instruction TEA | Commissioner | SBOE Privatization | Vouchers School Safety
Date Posted: 11/18/2022 | Author: Jennifer Mitchell, CAE
The ATPE Governmental Relations team recaps the past week’s education news, legislative and election updates, and regulatory developments.
- SBOE takes strong stance against vouchers during final 2022 meeting
- SPED funding commission weighs pros and cons of vouchers
- Bill prefiling period begins ahead of 2023 legislative session
- TEA to hold public hearing on school safety rule proposal
- Updates and resources for ATPE members
SBOE: The State Board of Education (SBOE) met this week in Austin for the last time this year. Their work included finalizing a revision to the Texas Essential Knowledge and Skills (TEKS) curriculum standards for social studies. The bare-bones revision implements changes required by Senate Bill (SB) 3, passed in 2021.
The SBOE also approved a set of legislative recommendations for the upcoming session that begins Jan. 10, 2023. The board began preliminary discussions of the recommendations during a committee meeting Wednesday, as ATPE Lobbyist Mark Wiggins reported on our blog. The recommendations were finalized today and include a strong anti-voucher statement by the board. By a vote of 11-2, SBOE members urged the Texas Legislature to oppose private school vouchers in all forms.
It was the final meeting for outgoing SBOE Members Georgina Perez (D), Ruben Cortez (D), Lawrence Allen, Jr. (D), Matt Robinson (R), Sue Melton-Malone (R), and Jay Johnson (R) who are finishing out their terms. Six newly elected members will be sworn in when the 15-member board next meets in January: Melissa Ortega (D), L.J. Francis (R), Staci Childs (D), Julie Pickren (R), Evelyn Brooks (R), and Aaron Kinsey (R).
Read more about the SBOE meeting in this Teach the Vote blog post.
SPED: The Texas Commission on Special Education Funding met Monday, and its agenda included a discussion of private school vouchers for students in special education. Specifically, the commission heard invited testimony only about Education Savings Account (ESA) vouchers, which would force students in special education to surrender protections under federal and state law while asking parents to pay for services their children are entitled to receive free of charge within the public school system. Special education advocates and experts testified during the meeting and debunked several of the popular myths espoused by voucher supporters. Read more about the hearing in this blog post from ATPE’s Wiggins. View an archived video of the meeting here. The commission plans to vote on final recommendations to the Legislature at its next hearing.
Related: The Texas Commission on Virtual Education has also been meeting throughout the year to develop recommendations for the upcoming legislative session. The commission’s next hearing is scheduled for Nov. 30.
BILLS: Although the legislative session won’t start until January, the bill prefiling period began Monday, Nov. 14. Well over 1,000 bills have been prefiled already with many of them relating to public education, House bill numbers 1-20 and Senate bill numbers 1-30 are reserved – typically used for bills that reflect the highest priorities of each chamber’s leadership – and none of those bills had been filed yet as of midday Friday.
Among noteworthy bills filed already are measures to fund schools based on enrollment rather than attendance, a proposal to require that content ratings be supplied for books sold to school districts, and numerous bills to limit or abolish property taxes that are used to fund public schools. Gov. Greg Abbott (R) has said he wants the Legislature to devote half of the state’s funding surplus for tax relief. A few bills calling for private school vouchers have also been prefiled. Senate Bill (SB) 176 by Senator-Elect Mayes Middleton (R-Wallisville) establishing the “Texas Parental Empowerment Program” and House Bill (HB) 619 by Rep. Matt Shaheen (R-Plano) both would offer private school vouchers by way of a tax credit program.
Related: The Texas Tribune hosted an event in Lubbock this week on “The Future of Rural Texas,” which included a panel discussion Friday about education in rural schools. State Rep. Ken King (R-Canadian) was one of the panelists and spoke about the prospects for voucher legislation in 2023. King said he viewed such a proposal as “dead on arrival,” and he criticized attacks on teachers and uproar over critical race theory (CRT) as an attempt by members of the far right to make vouchers seem favorable. Archived video from the event will be available soon at texastribune.org/events/.
ATPE: Did you know ATPE members have access to exclusive tools to help them provide input to legislators, policymakers, and researchers? Using Advocacy Central, members can connect with their elected officials and communicate with them about the issues they care about, such as compensation, student testing, voucher threats, and more. It's also a great place to look up and track bills at the state or federal level. ATPE also provides our members with “Opportunities to Share Feedback” through research, testimony, and stakeholder committees. Log into your ATPE web account and check out these tools today.
ATPE State President Stacey Ward, State Vice President Jayne Serna, and Executive Director Shannon Holmes were guests of the Missouri State Teachers Association at their annual convention this week.
ATPE thanks our members who signed up to take part in our Teacher Trot Virtual 5K Fun Run/Walk next week. Good luck to all the participants!
The ATPE state office will be closed Nov. 23-25 for Thanksgiving, so we’ll have no Week in Review blog post next week. We wish all our readers a happy Thanksgiving!
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