State Senator John DiSanto (R-Perry and parts of Dauphin Counties) proposed a bill that would, according to DiSanto, establish "state-funded, flexible spending accounts that parents can use to pay for Department of Education-approved educational expenses such as private school tuition, higher education tuition, textbooks and curriculum, testing and industry certifications."
The accounts would provide between $5000 and $6000 for educational needs and the unused money would roll over annually. The bill has the support of educators in the region, including the REACH Foundation - a school choice advocacy group in Pennsylvania.
Aaron Anderson, Head of School at Logos Academy in York, lauded the bill, saying "Educational Savings Accounts are a way of recognizing that parents are the best arbiters of what is best for their children."
Critics contend educational savings accounts like these are little more than voucher programs. Nina Esposito-Visgitis, president of the Pittsburgh Federation of Teachers, told the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette "Senator DiSanto's plan to establish so-called 'education savings accounts' is yet another attempt to divert attention from the real issues that plague our public schools every day and prevent us from working on the things that would make our public schools better for all students."
On the Friday edition of WITF's Smart Talk, we will discuss his Education Savings Account legislation with Senator DiSanto.
Also, Central Pennsylvanians will transition to a ten-digit telephone dialing code; we'll discuss the changes and answer your questions with Nils Hagen-Frederiksen of the Pennsylvania Public Utilities commission.
Finally, petroglyphs are a form of art carved into rocks by native-Americans centuries ago. One of the greatest concentration of petroglyphs in the northeastern part of the country is located in the lower Susquehanna River Valley that runs between Lancaster and York Counties.