{"id":1091,"date":"2025-04-16T16:36:08","date_gmt":"2025-04-16T16:36:08","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/entouragecover.com\/?p=1091"},"modified":"2025-04-16T22:49:17","modified_gmt":"2025-04-16T22:49:17","slug":"ahead-of-pivotal-vote-texas-leaders-share-unfiltered-thoughts-on-future-of-education","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"http:\/\/entouragecover.com\/index.php\/2025\/04\/16\/ahead-of-pivotal-vote-texas-leaders-share-unfiltered-thoughts-on-future-of-education\/","title":{"rendered":"Ahead of pivotal vote, Texas leaders share unfiltered thoughts on future of education"},"content":{"rendered":"
AUSTIN (Nexstar) \u2014 This week, a two-and-a-half-year saga over the future of Texas education <\/a>may come to an end. Two consequential pieces of legislation are expected to be taken up on the House floor. <\/p>\n Most eyes are on Senate Bill 2<\/a>, which would create an education savings account <\/a>(ESA) program to allow families to help pay for private school with taxpayer dollars.<\/p>\n In conjunction, the House will likely vote on House Bill 2<\/a>, which increases funding for public schools. However, many critics say HB 2 does not fund public schools enough, and it would instead be beneficial to put money earmarked for an ESA program into public school finance.<\/p>\n Here’s your ultimate guide to ESA legislation, which supporters often refer to as school choice, as it heads to a vote.<\/p>\n SB 2, which will likely head to the House floor this week, has changed dramatically since the Texas Senate passed it as its first bill of 2025.<\/a><\/p>\n For those who get admitted to the program, the initial version of SB 2 would give them $10,000 a year to a student who attends an accredited private school in Texas. The bill would provide $11,500 for students with disabilities and $2,000 for students who are homeschooled.<\/p>\n The initial version also prioritized including as many middle-class families as possible by only having one “low-income” requirement. To be classified as low-income under the Senate’s version of the bill, households would have to make less than five times the Federal Poverty Line (FPL). <\/p>\n Using 2025’s FPL<\/a>, a family of four making under $160,750 would be eligible to qualify as “low-income,” putting themselves in a lottery with all other “low-income” families and families of students with disabilities. The first round of families admitted to the program would draw from this lottery until 80% of the funds are disbursed. The last 20 percent of funds would be drawn from a lottery available to all students.<\/p>\n According to the U.S. Census Bureau<\/a>, the median Texas family made $76,292 a year between 2019 and 2023, less than half the amount a family of four would need to be qualified as “low-income” by the FPL.<\/p>\n \u201cIs there any other program in the state where we define low income as 500 percent?\u201d state Sen. Jos\u00e9 Men\u00e9ndez (D-San Antonio) asked during the floor debate of SB 2 in the Senate.<\/p>\n \u201cI don\u2019t think we want to remove the middle class from an opportunity to be able to have a fighting chance,\u201d state Sen. Brandon Creighton (R-Conroe) and the bill’s author, replied, adding that the threshold roughly works out to the income of a family of four, with the parents working as a teacher and a firefighter.<\/p>\n In House Bill 3 (HB 3), which was initially considered by the Texas House Committee on Public Education before tabling it for an amended version of SB 2, the funding amount and eligibility requirements were vastly different.<\/p>\n Instead of giving families a flat rate, HB 3 would award admitted families with 85 percent of the estimated amount of funding each public-school student gets if their child enrolls in an accredited private school. According to the Legislative Budget Board’s (LBB) fiscal note<\/a>, this amount would likely equal $10,330 per student in 2027 \u2014 increasing to $10,899 per student in 2030. Admitted home school families would also be eligible for up to $2,000, while students with disabilities enrolled in private school would be eligible for more funding not to exceed $30,000.<\/p>\n HB 3 is also geared a lot more towards low-income families, setting four prioritization buckets. The first bucket would be families who make under five times the FPL whose student has a disability. The second bucket would be families who are at or below two times the FPL, or $64,300 a year for a family of four. The third bucket would be for families between two times the FPL and five times the FPL, and the last bucket is open enrollment. Under HB 3, everyone who applied for bucket one has to be admitted before funds can start being given to bucket two, and so on.<\/p>\n The amended version of SB 2 sent to the Texas House floor took both the funding and eligibility formulas from HB 3. If the House passes SB 2 without amendments, the House and Senate will have to come together to find middle ground on those issues.<\/p>\nWhat does the Education Savings Account bill do?<\/h3>\n