school-bus3I’m a little confused.  I thought that Republicans were in favor of school choice.   So I’m more than a little surprised to learn that Iowa House Republicans, at the request of State Representative Scott Raecker (R-Urbandale) – the Iowa House Appropriations Chair – stripped out a tax credit for people who donate to School Tuition Organizations.

Let me get this straight – Iowa Senate Democrats want to increase the tax credit from $7.5 million to $10 Million in SF 533, their version of the Standings bill.  They of course did this with strings attached – they want to increase public school allowable growth to 2%.  House Republicans want to zero it out for next year.

In order to resolve this, Raecker through a strikeout amendment, removed the tax credit all together.  So the State Representative who wants to reign in spending removed a tax credit that has been proven to save the state money.  What the state spends per child who benefits from the tax credit is far, far less than what they would spend on that child if he or she stays in the public schools.  so Raecker can’t say the State can’t afford it.  We can’t afford not to do it.

Correction: The increase to the tax credit was removed, not the entire tax credit itself. I apologize for my error.

You May Also Like

Tax Reform & Priority-Based Budgeting Can Solve Iowa’s Economic Problems

John Hendrickson: Priority-based budgeting along with prudent tax reform will create an opportunity for Iowa’s economy to grow and keep vital government functions funded.

Former Romney Staffers Launch Priorities for Iowa, Swing at Bruce Braley

Former staffers and supporters of Mitt Romney’s 2012 Presidential campaign launch Priorities for Iowa with an attack on Congressman Bruce Braley (D-Iowa).

Taylor Back on Campaign Trail Following Deployment

Republican candidate Jeremy Taylor returned to the campaign trail in Iowa’s 4th Congressional District race after a three-week military deployment.

Mark Sanford Suspends Campaign That Was Nonexistent in Iowa

Mark Sanford’s short-lived presidential campaign was virtually non-existent in Iowa after taking one trip here after announcing his entry into the race.