APIndiana News

Broad school voucher expansion makes Indiana GOP budget deal

Indiana House Speaker Todd Huston, R-Fishers, speaks alongside Senate President Pro Tem Rodric Bray, R-Martinsville, during a news conference at the Statehouse in Indianapolis, Wednesday, April 26, 2023. Republican legislative leaders announced Wednesday a state budget agreement that includes a major expansion of its private school voucher program and a speedup of planned income tax rate cuts. (AP Photo/Tom Davies)

INDIANAPOLIS (AP) — Indiana’s new state budget will expand eligibility for its private school voucher program to higher earners and speed up planned income tax rate cuts under a deal announced Wednesday by Republican legislative leaders.

Senate Republicans had resisted both House-backed moves but they were included in the budget agreement after an updated tax revenue report released last week showed the state is projected to collect about $1.5 billion, or 2.5% more than previously expected through July 2025.

Republican leaders said the budget deal increases K-12 school funding by nearly $1.2 billion, or 8%, over the budget’s two years. The voucher expansion, however, could take up more than $500 million of that amount by raising the family income limit and lifting other restrictions on qualifying for state money toward private school tuition.

Supporters of the voucher expansion argue it empowers parents to decide which school is best for their children. The plan raises the voucher income limit for a family of four from the current $154,000 to $220,000.

Democratic Rep. Greg Porter criticized the voucher expansion as a “despicable” step that will leave traditional school districts with funding increases below the inflation rate while benefiting well-off families.

The budget deal also includes speeding up i ndividual income tax rate cuts approved a year ago. Under the plan, the tax rate would decline in small steps from the current 3.15% to 2.9% in 2027 — two years earlier than currently scheduled.

The budget agreement comes as the Republican-dominated Legislature faces a deadline to conclude this year’s session by the end of this week.

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1 comment

Democrats are anti-family April 27, 2023 at 3:56 pm

Parents should always have school choice, and ALL the money for each kid should always follow the student.

Pretty simple

Democrats think your kids are owned by the State, so their comments should be ignored.

Reply

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