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    Written by Christopher Freind

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    Written on Wednesday, 22 February 2012 09:01 in Local
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  • Christopher Freind Chris Christie And Whitney Houston: Not Perfect Together
    Written by Christopher Freind

    Lowering state flags for Whitney Houston? Is that what it's come to, Governor? With the sparse media coverage of Whitney Houston’s death and funeral, it’s not surprising that her years of military service have gone largely unnoticed, as were her activities as an undercover cop in New Jersey (was she really killed after a sting went bad?).  After all, she must have done these dangerous things to warrant all Jersey state flags being flown at half-mast in her honor, as ordered by Governor Chris Christie. Because the opposite simply defies common sense. If Houston was not a police officer gunned…





    Written on Friday, 17 February 2012 11:55 in National News
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  • Christopher Freind Opposing Drug Testing For Welfare Recipients? Are You High?
    Written by Christopher Freind

    Randomly testing all public workers is simply common senseRandom drug testing of welfare recipients and public workers is racist, discriminatory and blatantly unconstitutional.And if believe any of that, you’re smoking something.Once again, the drug testing issue is making headlines in Pennsylvania, as such a program is now underway. Unfortunately, because the Legislature dragged its feet (what else is new?), the current initiative is a scaled-down version of the original bill, and has been put into effect via an emergency budgetary order from the Governor. It only applies to welfare recipients who have been convicted of a felony in the last…





    Written on Tuesday, 14 February 2012 12:48 in National News
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  • Christopher Freind Rendell As Inquirer Owner? Might As Well Be Philly Enquirer
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    A Jerry Maguire-like treatise for how to resurrect the media’s credibility Famed political strategist James Carville once referred to Pennsylvania as two major cities with Alabama in between.  What an insult to Alabama. The folks in the nation’s fifth-largest state --- all of them --- are the backwards ones, the sad result of refusing to hold their leaders accountable for broken campaign promises and abject failures. All the while, their neighboring states --- AKA “the competition” --- continue to make gains at Pennsylvania’s expense. Ohio and West Virginia are successfully courting natural gas and oil companies, which are beginning to…





    Written on Tuesday, 07 February 2012 11:54 in National News
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  • Christopher Freind Hey Chris Christie, Get On The Treadmill --- You May Be President
    Written by Christopher Freind

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    Written on Friday, 03 February 2012 10:13 in National News
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  • Christopher Freind Gingrich Is Right To Shoot For The Moon
    Written by Christopher Freind

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    Written on Thursday, 02 February 2012 12:53 in National News
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Thursday, 10 November 2011 10:45

PA Poll: Dump Low Income Vouchers, Increase Tax Credit Featured

Written by Christopher Freind
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(Poll Questions and Results below)

There is an age-old adage: if you’re going to do something, do it right --- or don’t do it at all.

Based on poll results exclusively obtained first by Freindly Fire, nowhere is that more applicable than in the fight for school vouchers in Pennsylvania. According to the Pulse Opinion Research poll conducted on behalf of UNITE PA, which surveyed 500 likely voters across the state, the majority of Pennsylvanians prefer that any school choice program be open to all students (or at least most of the middle class), as opposed to just low income, predominantly inner city students. This result is not surprising on any level, and, undeniably, leads to five rock solid conclusions:

1) The middle class realizes that ALL schools need improvement, and competition through choice is the best way to achieve that objective;

2) Pennsylvanians, by a whopping 78 to 9 margin, favor a broad-based choice program;

3) If a comprehensive choice program isn’t offered, citizens would prefer an expansion of the EITC educational tax credit --- by a 3 to 1 ratio;

4) The reason voucher legislation failed in the Spring, and in all likelihood won’t pass now, isn’t due to opposition to school choice, but because the senate refuses to consider a broader, more inclusive bill, and therefore:

5) If a suburban or rural legislator supports vouchers only for low income families, while their constituents would be left out in the cold without receiving a penny, they do so at their own peril.  A full 40 percent of likely voters stated that they will be “less likely” to support that lawmaker in his or her next election based on that vote.

The message of this poll is clear: do vouchers the right way, or don’t do them at all.  And since the senate has already passed a low income version by the slimmest of margins, with its leaders stating that’s all they will do, expect the voucher bill to die what may be its final political death, and look for the EITC expansion to pass as a stand-alone bill (which it did in the Spring by a virtually unanimous 190-7 bipartisan vote on Rep. Tom Quigley’s House Bill 1330).

Failure to act responsibly will leave the GOP politically vulnerable, and, infinitely more important, abandon yet another generation of Pennsylvania’s future.

*****

Since last January, Republican Senator Jeff Piccola has been trying to pass legislation offering school vouchers only to students in underperforming schools who meet low income requirements. Despite crafting Senate Bill 1 (SB 1) during the Rendell Administration (when there was a Democratic State House and an anti-choice governor), Piccola never bothered to broaden the bill to reflect the new ten-seat Republican majority in the House, and pro-school choice Governor Tom Corbett.

Piccola, along with Democratic co-sponsor Senator Tony Williams, ran the bus over anyone who dared question why SB 1 was being treated as hallowed legislation, scoffing at --- but not answering --- queries as to why no attempt was made to broaden the bill, given the favorable legislative climate.  In the process, many SB 1 proponents demonized long-time political allies for their “brazen” attempt to improve a badly flawed education reform bill that would neither educate nor reform.

That intransigence directly led to vouchers dying on the vine in June.  Despite repeated assurances that it would pass the Senate, it was never brought to the floor for a vote. Piccola’s excuse for not running the bill was that the House wasn’t embracing SB 1 with the same fervor, yet the truth is that he didn’t even have the votes in his own chamber.

Last month, a watered-down version of SB 1 finally passed the senate after much arm-twisting, but as the poll shows, it’s back to Square One, meaning that SB 1 faces a tough road ahead. Many folks in Pennsylvania view vouchers favorably, but when they learn that the only voucher bill being considered is one that will never impact them, their support plummets.

Many traditional supporters of school choice have had SB 1 sold to them as the be-all-and-end-all.  But the huge irony is that these people in turn become the biggest detractors of SB 1 upon learning what the legislation does, and, more importantly, doesn’t do. From Catholic school advocates to Tea Partiers to everyday parents, the majority of those who favor school choice become irritated, if not downright angry, after discovering that in SB 1, a full seven years after enactment, middle income students would still be excluded. Because of this, many look at SB 1 as nothing more than yet another targeted entitlement program for Philadelphia and Pittsburgh.

The results of the Pulse Opinion Poll are so clear cut that it’s a good bet many House members on the fence will now be moved to oppose the voucher aspect, instead calling for other educational reform measures to be considered individually rather than part of an SB 1 package.  Charter school reforms, teacher evaluations, and the EITC should be debated on their merits and not held hostage by certain senators hell-bent on ramming an ineffectual voucher bill down the House’s throat --- or all-else be damned.

And if the House decides to eliminate the voucher and significantly expand the EITC, what then? Will Piccola once again call that legislation “dead on arrival” and kill it upon its return to the senate?

And if so, will the House leaders do the right thing and relegate Piccola to the dustbin of irrelevancy by simply mandating that the EITC expansion be part of the 2012 budget? 

It’s time to stop playing games.  Pennsylvania students are 42nd in SAT scores, ranking low in literacy, graduation rates and those attending college.  Their performance on the National Assessment of Education Progress exam has not improved.  And most startling, nearly HALF of all 11th graders are not proficient in math and reading.  This cannot be attributed to just the poor-performing urban schools pulling down scores, but is testament to an across-the-board educational failure. 

Advocating school choice for only low-income students results in the default perception that education is adequate everywhere else, which is not remotely accurate. We cannot afford to waste another decade, forsaking our children --- our future --- because some choose to ignore the widespread failure occurring on a daily basis.

The poll clearly shows what common sense already dictates: only competition can begin to reverse decades of educational failure. Comprehensive school choice provides that free-market solution, and, if passed, would be a model for the nation.  But since stubbornness, personal agendas and lack of political will are still prevalent in the Senate, let’s hope the House of Representatives acts responsibly and does the right thing for our children.

As Voltaire said, “Don’t let the perfect be the enemy of the good.”

And jettisoning a bad voucher program while passing other meaningful reforms is a very good start.

Chris Freind is an independent columnist, television/radio commentator, and investigative reporter who operates his own news bureau, www.FreindlyFireZone.com  His self-syndicated model has earned him the largest cumulative media voice in Pennsylvania. He can be reached at This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it

 Poll Results

Pennsylvania Survey of 500 Likely Voters
Conducted November 5, 2011
By Pulse Opinion Research

1* A proposal is currently before the Pennsylvania General Assembly that would give tax-payer funded vouchers to students of low income households.  These vouchers would allow students to attend a private school.  Do you favor or oppose this proposal?

41% Favor
45% Oppose
13% Not sure
 
2* Under current Pennsylvania law a business can donate money to a non profit organization that grants scholarships to children so they can attend the private school of their choice.  The business receives a 100% tax credit for this donation.  Do you favor or oppose this tax credit system?

53% Favor
31% Oppose
16% Not sure
 
3* Okay….given a choice which system is a better way to offer school choice to students…the voucher system or the tax credit system?

32% The voucher system
31% The tax credit system
37% Not sure
 
4* The voucher system is available only to low income families in a limited number of schools, while the scholarships funded through the tax credit program are available to middle and low income students statewide.   Knowing this which system would you prefer….the voucher system or the tax credit system?

20% The voucher system
59% The tax credit system
21% Not sure
 
5* If your representative voted for the voucher plan, would you be more or less likely to vote for him or her in the next election?

27% More likely
40% Less likely
25% It would have no impact
  7% Not sure
 
6* If the state is going to support a school choice program should it be available only to low income, mostly inner city students or should the program be available to all students?

  9% A school choice program should only be available to low income, mostly inner city students
78% A school choice program should be available to all students
13% Not sure

NOTE: Margin of Sampling Error, +/- 4.5 percentage points with a 95% level of confidence

 

Last modified on Thursday, 10 November 2011 10:58
Christopher Freind

Christopher Freind

Chris Freind is an independent columnist and investigative reporter who operates his own new site, The Artorius News Bureau.  Readers of his column “Freindly Fire” hail from six continents, thirty countries and all fifty states. His work has been referenced in numerous publications including The Wall Street Journal, National Review Online, foreign newspapers, and in Dick Morris' recent bestseller "Catastrophe."

Freind also serves as a weekly guest commentator on a Philadelphia-area talk radio show, WCHE, and makes numerous other television and radio appearances.

 

Website: www.freindlyfirezone.com E-mail: This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it

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