Minnesota governor candidate Scott Jensen pitches voucher style school choice plan Twin Cities

Minnesota governor candidate Scott Jensen pitches voucher style school choice plan Twin Cities

Minnesota governor candidate Scott Jensen pitches voucher-style school choice plan - Axios Twin CitiesLog InLog InAxios Twin Cities is an Axios company.

Jensen pitches scholarships for private school Here' s what it would mean for public funding

Illustration: Shoshana Gordon/Axios A campaign trail clash over "school choice" could have implications for public education funding in Minnesota. State of play: Scott Jensen, the GOP's nominee for governor, unveiled this week an education policy framework that calls for giving Minnesota families public funds to offset the cost of going to private schools. The catch: Minnesota pays for its public schools based on enrollment. That means districts could see their state dollars decline as students seek education elsewhere. for a similar "educational scholarships" proposal backed by Senate Republicans estimated that the change would shift $178 million from public schools over two years. What they're saying: Jensen and running-mate Matt Birk argued the change would give students more options tailored to their academic needs and that competition would motivate public schools to improve their offerings. Democrats, including incumbent Gov. Tim Walz, generally oppose such plans and argue they would "decimate" public schools. Zoom in: Jensen hasn't released funding details or a dollar figure for his plan. But he's questioned whether it makes sense to keep sending more cash to schools without seeing student outcomes improve. Walz, meanwhile, says he wants more funding for schools. His surplus proposal . Zoom out: Jensen's plan also calls for giving parents more access to curriculum and school materials, cracking down on truancy and possibly converting low-performing public schools to private or charter institutions.The former school board member said that while he wouldn't sign similar to the one that passed in Florida, he would look to ban certain topics, including sexually-explicit content and some race-related teachings, from classrooms. The intrigue: Jensen has previously floated eliminating personal income taxes, which make up a $15 billion chunk of the state's budget. It wasn't immediately clear how the education proposals would be paid for if that happened. The bottom line: Pandemic learning losses, along with debate over what topics should be taught in classrooms, have catapulted school issues to the forefront of campaigns in Minnesota and beyond. Get more local stories in your inbox with .Subscribe Support local journalism by becoming a member.

More Twin Cities stories

No stories could be found Get a free daily digest of the most important news in your backyard with Axios Twin Cities.Subscribe Support local journalism by becoming a member.
Share:
0 comments

Comments (0)

Leave a Comment

Minimum 10 characters required

* All fields are required. Comments are moderated before appearing.

No comments yet. Be the first to comment!