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AP Poll: Public Mixed on Vouchers
By WILL LESTER
.c The Associated Press

WASHINGTON (AP) - Like many Americans, Steve Klug likes the idea of
providing school vouchers to parents that would give them a choice between
public and private schools for their children. But the father of two quickly
loses enthusiasm when he hears that tax-supported vouchers would probably
drain money from public schools.
"Now that gets confusing," said
Klug, a 51-year-old cook from Glenellyn, Ill.
Those mixed feelings are reflected in the findings of an Associated Press
poll on school vouchers. The poll conducted for the AP by ICR/International
Communications Research of Media, Pa. showed people favored the idea of
school vouchers to help send children to private or parochial schools by a
51-40 margin. When asked if they still support the idea if it takes money
from public schools, they oppose vouchers by a 2-to-1 margin.
Klug has his children in good public schools in his community just west
of Chicago and he is wary of any plan that would take money away from those
schools.
The proposal of funneling tax money to private and parochial schools and
the likelihood that would drain money from public schools, is a hot
political topic. About half of Republicans, Democrats and independents
support the idea of school vouchers to give low-income children a choice in
schools. Young adults were more likely than older Americans to support such
vouchers.
When the possibility is mentioned that vouchers could take money from
public schools, Republican support drops to just under four in 10,
independent support drops to three in 10 and Democratic support to fewer
than three in 10.
The U.S. Supreme Court ruled in late June that school voucher programs
are constitutional if they provide parents a choice among a range of
religious and secular schools. The court endorsed a 6-year-old pilot program
in inner-city Cleveland that provides parents a tax-supported education
stipend. Parents may use the money to opt out of one of the worst-rated
public school systems in the nation.
The issue is still a source of turmoil within the courts. In Florida, a
circuit judge ruled Monday that the state constitution forbids the use of
tax money to send children to religious schools. The decision could affect
up to 400 students who hoped to participate this year in the nation's only
statewide voucher system.
Some in the poll said their support for vouchers is fueled by their
frustration with public schools.
"If public education got its act together, then we wouldn't need
vouchers," said Ann Strickland, a 68-year-old retired nurse from Miami.
"It's not the fault of these kids that the school isn't good enough to
teach them."
The Supreme Court ruling cleared a constitutional cloud from vouchers, an
education idea popular with political conservatives and championed by
President Bush. Opponents say they will siphon tax money from struggling
public schools.
The debate now continues state by state.
Lawmakers in as many as 20 states are poised to push school voucher
legislation, now that the Supreme Court has ruled that these programs do not
violate the Constitution's requirement of separation of church and state.
Lawmakers in California, Texas, Pennsylvania, Colorado, Kansas and
Missouri are ready to move on voucher programs, while Congress could
consider one as early as this fall for students in the District of Columbia.
But it could be months or even a year or more before legislatures develop
such voucher programs, officials say.
More than half in the poll, 56 percent, said private schools that accept
taxpayer-funded vouchers should be required to accept all students who
apply, while just over a third, 37 percent, said the schools should be
allowed to choose who they accept. Republicans were evenly split on that
question, while almost two-thirds of Democrats said they should accept all
and about six in 10 independents felt that way.
The poll of 1,011 adults was taken July 17-21 and has an error margin of
plus or minus 3 percentage points. Those in the poll who had children under
18 now living with them were about evenly split on whether they would take
school vouchers if they were available.
Mike Stachowiak a 26-year-old resident of Nanticoke, Pa., is not a parent
now, but said he plans to be one day. He isn't sure whether he would take
vouchers for his own child.
"The vouchers wouldn't cover the entire cost of the private
school," he said. "It depends on how much more I would have to
dish out."
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