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by Christen Smith, The Center Square | June 03, 2021 07:00 PM Print this article
Gov. Tom Wolf stood firm Monday in his resolve to reform Pennsylvania’s decades-old charter school law.
But he will face a tough – nearly impossible, some say – battle in the General Assembly, where preserving school choice remains popular within the GOP-controlled Legislature.
“Let’s create a level playing field here,” Wolf said during a news conference Monday in Lancaster. “We are all in the business of taking taxpayer dollars to make students lives’ better.”
Wolf’s proposed changes, encapsulated in House Bill 272, would standardize cyber charter tuition to $9,500 per student and recalculate a charter school’s special education funding using an updated formula the Legislature approved in 2015. In total, districts could save $395 million, the administration said.
Gov. Tom Wolf stood firm Monday in his resolve to reform Pennsylvania s decades-old charter school law.
But he will face a tough â nearly impossible, some say â battle in the General Assembly, where preserving school choice remains popular within the GOP-controlled Legislature. Let s create a level playing field here, Wolf said during a news conference Monday in Lancaster. We are all in the business of taking taxpayer dollars to make students lives better.
Wolf s proposed changes, encapsulated in House Bill 272, would standardize cyber charter tuition to $9,500 per student and recalculate a charter school s special education funding using an updated formula the Legislature approved in 2015. In total, districts could save $395 million, the administration said.