As more states introduce school choice bills and adopt government education savings accounts (ESAs) programs, Virginia’s largest homeschooling organization is weary of government ESA programs because they are sure it will lead to mandates and interference.
ESAs might change all of that.
ESAs involve state governments putting funds into an electronic account, which is to be accessed by the parents for their child’s education needs. ESAs vary from state to state, but most of the funds cover private school tuition and fees, online learning programs, private tutoring, community college costs, higher education expenses, and other preapproved learning services and materials.
However, Bunn is concerned that ESAs could change all that. “Any time the government gives out money, there are strings attached to that,” Bunn said during a recent interview with The Epoch Times.
“What the government funds, the government controls,” Donnelly said during a May 25 virtual panel discussion hosted by the Cato Institute and attended by homeschooling policy experts and advocates. The 60-minute discussion covered a wide array of concerns homeschoolers have about ESAs.
Currently, homeschools and private schools in Virginia are free from government mandates and can decide what they want to teach based on their values, beliefs, and what best suits their child. However, if homeschooling parents start opting for ESA funding, the government is “going to start requiring some type of evidence that you are implementing the principles that they think you should be implementing in order to get this money,” Bunn said.
According to Bunn, ESAs would provide another easy route for the government to influence what children learn by preapproving ESA providers.
“Alabama is another state where the State Superintendent openly admitted that the goal of the ESA program was to gain control through testing homeschoolers and private school students. Since there was a lack of transparency and accountability in the flow of the ESA funds,” Bunn said.
“If people are going to be able to use state dollars for homeschooling,” he said, “we have to completely rewrite our homeschool regulations. At this point, we don’t even have a list of who those homeschoolers are.”
“They should have to go through some minimum standards,” Mackey said.
The homeschool community in the United States has fought hard to be recognized as a legitimate form of education and have the government stay out of their business, so they can educate their children as the parents see fit, said Donnelly.
“The homeschool community engaged in some very significant legislative and court battles to realize his freedom,” Donnelly said. “They believe that, with a lot of money coming into the space, that that could create regulatory pressure and impose additional regulations.”
Donnelly said new ESA programs could confuse state education officials.
“I can tell you, having served the homeschool community across the country for 20 years, it doesn’t take a lot to confuse public school government officials,” Donnelly said.
Arizona’s Solution
The solution is more complicated than not taking the money from a state’s ESA program, said Donnelly.According to Donnelly, the fear is that to mitigate the complexity of some homeschoolers taking ESA funds and some not, the state may end up imposing regulations on all homeschooling families.
“We, the private homeschoolers who aren’t taking the money, don’t want that kind of pressure building or additional regulations being imposed,” said Donnelly.
At the same time, Donnelly said: “Nobody at HSLDA wants to prevent parents from leaving the public school system and doing something different. We just want to protect the homeschooling community from regulatory capture.”
The solution that some states came up with and that HSLDA agreed to was to separate homeschooling completely from ESAs, so traditional homeschoolers could completely opt-out.
“The Arizona statute is very clear. It says the government, the state does not have the authority to alter the curriculum or creed or regulates for private or homeschool education,” said Beienburg.
In Arizona’s ESA program, the unused funds roll over to the following year, Beienburg added.
Know the Law
Jamie Buckland, founder of West Virginia Families United for Education and a mom who has homeschooled all of her children, said she opted to use the ESA for her youngest child, which came with more regulation, but she was willing to meet the requirements in order to use the funds.“There’s been a lot of misinformation from traditional homeschool groups who think that it comes with many more hoops, and it actually does, so I like to remind people that we can define what hoops we’re jumping through, and some of them may be feasible for many families,” said Buckland during the May 25 panel discussion.
Because homeschool and ESA laws vary from state to state, Buckland recommends that parents learn about what is required by the ESA funding in their own state and consult HSLDA for specific details in deciding if they want to take government school choice funding.
In 2022, Virginia Republicans introduced four school choice or ESA bills, which all failed to pass the Democrat-led Senate.
“In fact, we want to assure if any homeschool does take the ESA money, that they are called something else [and] they do not file a notice of intent to homeschool,” said Bunn.
Currently, all homeschooling parents have to sign a notice of intent with the Virginia Department of Education.
“It’s a very complicated thing. Really. We consider this a great challenge to homeschooling. I don’t think we’ve ever seen the government want to come in and regulate in the way that this could be set up for them to do,” said Bunn.