WashingtonSenators
Tim
Scott
(R-S.C.),
Dianne
Feinstein
(D-Calif.),
Ron
Johnson
(R-Wis.)
and
Cory
Booker
(D-N.J.)
today
introduced
the
Scholarships
for
Opportunity
and
Results
Act
to
extend
the
successful
Washington
D.C.
Opportunity
Scholarship
Program
through
2025.
The
program
grants
students
scholarships
to
attend
one
of
51
participating
private
schools
in
the
District.
Bipartisan
companion
legislation
has
been
introduced
in
the
House
of
Representatives
by
Speaker
John
A.
Boehner.
The
bill
would
strengthen
the
program
by
requiring
participating
schools
to
acquire
and
maintain
accreditation.
It
would
also
require
a
study
to
assess
the
scholarship’s
effect
on
academic
achievement.
“Ensuring
all
of
our
nation’s
children
have
access
to
the
best
education
possible
should
not
be
a
partisan
issue,
and
I’m
excited
to
launch
this
bipartisan
effort
with
Senators
Johnson,
Feinstein
and
Booker
to
reauthorize
the
school
choice
program
in
Washington,
DC,”
Senator
Scott
said.
“The
Opportunity
Scholarship
Program
has
greatly
increased
graduation
rates
and
college
success
rates
for
low-income
and
minority
families,
and
it
is
clear
that
school
choice
is
working
in
our
nation’s
Capital.
I
will
continue
working
to
encourage
choice
programs
wherever
possible
because
when
parents
have
a
choice,
kids
have
a
better
chance."
“Too
many
D.C.
students
don’t
have
access
to
a
high-equality
education,
which
is
the
primary
tool
to
get
a
good-paying
job
and
build
a
middle-class
life
in
this
country.
The
D.C.
Opportunity
Scholarship
Program
has
given
more
than
6,000
students
the
chance
to
get
the
education
they
deserve,”
said
Senator
Feinstein.
“This
bill
extends
the
program
so
students
continue
to
have
access
to
high-performing
schools.
It
also
strengthens
accountability
to
ensure
only
the
best
schools
are
participating.”
“Wisconsin’s
groundbreaking
school
choice
programs
have
proven
that
when
you
give
low-income
families
the
opportunity
to
choose
better
schools
for
their
children,
those
children
are
much
more
likely
to
succeed
and
break
the
cycle
of
poverty,”
said
Senator
Johnson.
“As
chairman
of
the
Senate
committee
that
has
jurisdiction
over
the
District
of
Columbia,
I
have
the
unique
responsibility
to
advance
this
principle
in
the
nation’s
capital,
where
the
public
school
system,
often
cited
as
one
of
the
worst
in
the
country,
is
absolutely
failing
these
children.”
Since
the
program’s
creation
in
2004,
6,252
low-income
students
have
received
scholarships.
In
the
2014-2015
school
year,
90
percent
of
scholarship
recipients
graduated
from
high
school
and
88
percent
of
graduates
are
enrolled
in
a
two
or
four-year
college
or
university.
The
program’s
graduation
rate
is
32
percentage
points
higher
than
in
D.C.
public
schools,
which
stands
at
58
percent.
For
the
2015-2016
school
year,
there
were
more
than
8,500
names
on
waiting
lists
at
D.C.
charter
schools,
an
18
percent
increase
over
the
previous
year.
The
scholarship
program
is
supported
by
a
number
of
former
DC
officials,
including
former
Mayor
Anthony
Williams
and
former
councilmember
Kevin
Chavous.
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