
The federal tax-credit scholarship program isn’t open yet, but Virginia’s already in line.
by Chad Aldeman
Republican Glenn Youngkin will leave office as governor of Virginia later this month. To his credit, he spent a lot of his tenure pushing for higher standards for public education. He revised the stateโs accountability system to bring more transparency and urgency to school ratings. And he raised the stateโs cut scores in the name of closing the โHonesty Gapโ between state tests and true content proficiency.
But on January 1st, Youngkin did one more thing: He attempted to make Virginia the first state to opt in to the new federal tax-credit scholarship program created in last yearโs tax bill. I use the word โattemptedโ here though, because his letter to the U.S. Treasury Department is not binding. In fact, the Treasury is currently in the midst of a regulatory process to define the parameters of the new program.
Why did Youngkinโs team decide to do this on their way out the door? My hunch is it was a political move to try to trap incoming Democrat Abigail Spanberger into eventually joining the program. But I donโt think it will work, and it could even backfire. (more…)












