Opportunity Scholarship Expansion Advances to NC Senate | Eastern NC Now

A bill to expand North Carolina’s Opportunity Scholarship Program (OSP) by removing income eligibility requirements advanced to the state Senate.

ENCNow
    Publisher's Note: This post appears here courtesy of the John Locke Foundation. The author of this post is Kaitlyn Shepherd.

    A bill to expand North Carolina's Opportunity Scholarship Program (OSP) by removing income eligibility requirements advanced to the state Senate.

    Yesterday afternoon, the NC House approved House Bill 823, commonly referred to as the "Choose Your School, Choose Your Future" bill. This proposal would remove the OSP's existing income eligibility requirements and replace them with a sliding-scale system in which household income determines the size of the voucher.

    As the Carolina Journal has explained:

    "Using the example of a family of four, the new law would give first priority to households earning $55,500 a year or less, second priority to those earning $111,000 a year or less, third priority to those earning, $249,750 a year or less, and then any remaining funds would be available to households earning incomes higher than these.

    "The value of each scholarship would also ratchet down based on income. Lower income households would qualify for 100% of the scholarship - around $7,400 this year - while the next three categories would receive 90%, 60%, and 45%, respectively."


    House Bill 823 is similar to Senate Bill 406, which received a favorable vote from the Senate Education Committee and was referred to another Senate committee on April 26.

    House Bill 823 is making the most headway, but before either bill becomes law, it must be passed by both chambers and head to the governor's desk. Gov. Roy Cooper has proposed completely defunding the OSP more than once and would likely veto any bill to expand the program. However, now that Republicans have a supermajority in both chambers, they could override a veto and ensure that OSP expansion becomes law.

    It is also possible that OSP expansion could be rolled into the budget. The Senate's biennial budget proposal, released Monday, incorporates provisions of Senate Bill 406 and proposes "increasing the amount in the scholarship fund by almost $60 million by the end of the biennium."

    The Senate version of the budget differs significantly from the House's original proposal, released in March. The two chambers will have to reconcile their differences before a final version can be sent to the governor.

    If OSP expansion becomes law, North Carolina would join multiple other states in passing legislation to dramatically expand school choice. Since 2022, Arizona, Arkansas, Iowa, Utah, West Virginia, and Florida have all passed universal Education Savings Accounts (ESAs), a type of school choice program that gives families a state-funded account that can be used for a variety of educational expenses, including tuition, instructional materials, tutoring costs, educational therapies, and more. North Carolina has implemented an ESA for students with special needs since 2018.

    2023 is already being heralded as the "Year of Universal Choice." Will North Carolina join the club? The exact path forward is uncertain, but the future looks bright.
Go Back

HbAD0

Latest State and Federal

Tax Day is a week away, and the reports are in: North Carolinians are winning big with record-setting tax returns thanks to President Trump and Republicans' Working Families Tax Cuts.
“It is a trust fund, a piece of the American economy for every child that they will be able to take out when they are 18.”
For most of her life, Zofia Cheeseman built her life and schedule around being a gymnast until a health scare forced her to look at her life off the mat.
"We could very well end up having a friendly takeover of Cuba."
You can't make this up. If you turned this script into Hollywood, they'd say it's too on the nose.
"Alaska native" firms, most often in Virginia, were paid $45 billion in Pentagon contracts thanks to DEI law.

HbAD1

Small cities rarely make headlines. Their struggles - fiscal mismanagement, leadership vacuums, the slow erosion of public trust - play out in school gymnasiums and wood-paneled council chambers, witnessed by a handful of residents and largely ignored by the world outside.
"Go that way and get down ... there has been a shooting ... there are people dead over here."
Former provost Chris Clemens has dropped his open meetings and public records lawsuit against the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.
How the Minnesota Senate race became a purity test for the far Left
America is great because for many decades her immigrants came from a similar cultural background that bore a heavy Christian influence.
After years in the limelight for his combative style both with Democrats and his fellow Republicans, Crenshaw's future now unsure.
Conservatives don't always engage with the broader culture. We're going to change that.
A heavy security presence remains in downtown Austin after a chaotic shooting spree early Sunday morning left two victims dead and 14 others injured.

HbAD2

 
 
Back to Top