New Hampshire House Again Votes to Expand School Voucher Program
CONCORD — After voting to cut off debate on the latest Education Freedom Account expansion bill, the House Republican majority approved a bill that would do away with an income cap beginning July 1.
Under the bill, there would be a 10,000 student cap on the program that has grown in four years from 1,635 students to about 5,400 students and in cost from $8 million to over $30 million.
Currently there is an income cap of 350 percent of the federal poverty level — or $112,525 for a family of four — on the program that would be eliminated next school year under Senate Bill 295, which the House passed Thursday.
Get stories like this delivered straight to your inbox. Sign up for The 74 Newsletter
House Bill 115, which is now before the Senate, would eliminate the cap beginning with the 2026-2027 school year, and would have a cap of 400 percent next school year, or $128,600 for a family of four.
Deputy Majority Leader Joe Sweeney, R-Salem, moved the previous question as the bill came to the floor which cuts off debate on the issue.
The House has debated the issue at length this session and in the past, he said.
But Rep. Laura Telerski, D-Nashua, opposed the motion saying the issue of school vouchers is extremely important to the public and voters want to hear what their representatives have to say about it, and urged her colleagues to vote against 'the silencing of the debate.'
But the House voted 185-155 to cut off debate before it began.
Under the bill, if enrollment in the program reaches 90 percent of the student limit, the cap would be increased by 25 percent or to 12,500 the following school year.
The bill also sets up a priority system if the cap is reached before the expansion.
The priorities would be:
1. Student currently enrolled in the program,
2. Sibling of an enrolled student,
3. Student with disabilities, and
4. Student with family income less than 350 percent of the federal poverty guidelines.
Rep. David Luneau, D-Hopkinton, tried to amend the bill to require a performance audit currently being done by the Legislative Budget Assistant's Office, be completed and the organization administering the program have 'a clean bill of health' before there could be any expansion of the program.
He noted a sample audit several years ago found that 12 out of 50 applications were approved in error by the Children's Scholarship Fund that administers the program.
The amendment would force the company to comply with 'The laws and rules we have passed in this body and to take what we are doing seriously,' Luneau said.
But House Education Funding Chair Rep. Rick Ladd, R-Haverhill, called the amendment another trap and delaying tactic to implementing the EFA program, noting no date has been set for the audit's release.
And he said most performance audits are 120 pages with many findings that would have to be resolved before the program could be expanded.
The amendment was defeated on a 199-165 vote.
Rep. Hope Damon, D-Croydon, urged her colleagues to defeat the bill.
'(We should not be) expanding the EFA voucher program to a cost of $100 million when we lack adequate revenues to fund essential needs of New Hampshire citizens, such as Medicaid, the state employee retirement system, affordable housing, and corrections safe staffing,' Damon said. 'We should fund our impressive university system that benefits our economy rather than paying stipends to wealthy families. And most importantly the public statewide has overwhelmingly and repeatedly opposed this Free State marketing scheme.'
But Ladd said the program is not a voucher program or a voucher scam and not a recruiting tool for people moving into New Hampshire, but for parents justified in wanting alternatives if their child is struggling, or being bullied or not being challenged in a 'one-size-fits-all situation.' The bill was initially approved on a 188-176 vote and was sent to the House Finance Committee for review before coming back for a final vote.
House Bill 115 has had a public hearing before the Senate Education Committee but has yet to come before the Senate for a vote.
The House also approved Senate Bill 292 which would establish a floor under state aid for special education costs that exceed three-and-a-half times the average per pupil cost the previous year. School districts have been receiving prorated state reimbursement for those costs under what was the catastrophic aid program that have been about 50 percent of their expenditures.
The bill would require that school districts receive at least 80 percent of their special education costs that reach the catastrophic level.
The bill was referred to House Finance for review before a final vote is taken on the bill.
Garry Rayno may be reached at garry.rayno@yahoo.com.
This article first appeared on InDepthNH.org and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


NBC News
10 minutes ago
- NBC News
A Republican got jeered at a townhall. He plans to hold more.
Rep. Mike Flood, R-Neb., faced off with a raucous crowd that hurled boos, jeers and middle fingers at him at a town hall in Lincoln on Monday. The conservative Republican said he has no regrets and would do it all over again. 'I don't regret it at all,' Flood said in a phone interview on Tuesday. 'Every member of Congress has to do it the way they see fit. But for me, this comes with the territory. And I feel like you got to put yourself in the town square if you want to be a member of Congress for your district.' 'And if you feel strongly about how you're voting and the choices you're making,' he added, 'you should be able to stand on the town square and be accountable for those votes and tell people why you did it and take their input.' In this polarized political climate, the vast majority of lawmakers, in both parties, are opting not to hold town halls this August recess. Last spring, after a series of GOP town halls went off the rails, Rep. Richard Hudson, R-N.C., the GOP campaign chief for the 2026 election cycle, urged his Republican colleagues not to hold in-person town halls, calling them 'no longer effective' due to Democratic disruptions. And violent threats against politicians have seen a steady uptick in recent years. But Flood, the chairman of the Republican Main Street Caucus, whose members call themselves 'pragmatic conservatives,' didn't heed Hudson's advice. He held a town hall in Columbus in March and another in Seward in May before Monday's event on the University of Nebraska campus in liberal-leaning Lincoln, the largest city in his district. 'As elected officials, we have to put ourselves in environments that are not comfortable,' he said, though he made clear he was not judging colleagues in either party who have chosen not to hold town halls. House Republican Conference Chair Lisa McLain, R-Mich., called him Tuesday morning and commended him for hanging tough, Flood said. His next town hall will likely be held in the spring. Flood said concerns about cuts to Medicaid in the GOP's 'big, beautiful bill' dominated Monday night's 87-minute town hall, which was carried live by public television. 'Medicaid, Medicaid, Medicaid, Medicaid — that was the No. 1 issue and something I started out with, just because I'm looking at the calls my office gets,' Flood said, adding that he spent time during the town hall addressing confusion in the audience about how the bill would affect them and reassuring seniors that they wouldn't lose their Medicare coverage. The Trump law does require recipients of Medicaid — the health care program for low-income people and those with disabilities — to work 80 hours per month if they are able-bodied adults under age 65, with some exceptions. 'If you're 28 years old and you don't want to work, you shouldn't expect free health care, if you can work,' Flood said. 'And that resonates with like 70% of people, that you'd have some work requirements.' Democrats believe the Trump law will cost Republicans the House majority in 2026, and they say Flood's hostile town hall is evidence of just how unpopular it is with voters. 'Every single vulnerable House Republican should follow Mike Flood's example and be brave enough to face their constituents in-person to see firsthand how unpopular and hated the Big, Ugly Law is,' said Viet Shelton, spokesman for the House Democrats' campaign committee. Flood, 50, the former speaker of the Nebraska House who was elected to Congress in 2022, also fielded tough questions about Trump's recent firing of the Bureau of Labor Statistics commissioner and whether he backs releasing more information from the Jeffrey Epstein probe. He said he'll sign onto a resolution by House Rules Committee members on Wednesday to release the Epstein files. 'As long as it protects the victims and doesn't re-victimize those folks,' Flood said, 'I'm for its release.' But he opposes a bipartisan effort led by Reps. Thomas Massie, R-Ky., and Ro Khanna, D-Calif., to bypass GOP leadership and force a vote on the floor in September to compel the Justice Department to release the files. 'I don't sign discharge petitions,' he said, 'and it goes back to my day as a speaker of the legislature, where I wouldn't do the same thing.' Nebraska is a red state that went for Trump by more than 20 points in 2024, but the university's Kimball Recital Hall on Monday evening was mostly packed with Democrats, said Flood, who recounted how he recognized some individuals who had attended all three of his town halls this year. A former attorney, Flood said he prepared for about five to six hours for the town hall, anticipating what questions he might get and how he'd respond. Before the event got started, he told the university police officers on hand he didn't want anyone kicked out of the town hall for exercising their First Amendment rights. Only one individual was told to leave after protesting the situation in Gaza, Flood said, and he left peacefully. 'I said, 'I don't want people kicked out or removed just for voicing an opinion, no matter how they voice it. If somebody is fighting somebody else, yes, do what you got to do,'' Flood said. 'When you look at the video, it looks pretty hardcore. People are literally screaming, flipping me off. They are jumping up and down. They are standing with their back to me,' he recounted. 'None of those folks get asked to leave. They don't. I don't even say, 'Please stop.'' Just a handful of lawmakers are choosing to hold town halls during the weekslong August recess. For many, there are few upsides. On the same night as the Flood town hall, veteran Rep. Adam Smith, D-Wash., had to abruptly cancel his town hall midway through after a group of protesters 'took over the stage' and disrupted the gathering, local police said. Three individuals were arrested on trespassing charges. Things were much tamer at a separate town hall hosted by freshman Democratic Sen. Elissa Slotkin in Michigan. At one point at his town hall, someone asked Flood: 'How are you helping the working class?' He talked about how the Trump law included no tax on tips, an expanded child tax credit and other provisions. Then he said something that infuriated many attendees: 'Today's Republican Party is comprised of the heart and soul of the working class.' 'That brought the house down. They were very upset that I said that," Flood told NBC News. "But that's the reality. ... Every day Americans recognize that something's changed in our country, where, as a Republican, we have won the hearts and minds of the working class. And that was very hard for the crowd to accept. But I think, to an objective person, if we haven't won their hearts and minds, we're darn close to it.'


Politico
10 minutes ago
- Politico
California's war with Texas gets real
STATE STANDOFF: The longstanding tension between California and Texas has gone from a dull hum to an all-out conflagration. Lone Star State Republicans' efforts to redraw their congressional map at the behest of President Donald Trump prompted Democratic lawmakers to abscond to New York, Illinois and Massachusetts in a last-ditch attempt to resist the maneuver. But it's California where Gov. Gavin Newsom's pledge to reconfigure districts to pick up Democratic seats could have a significant impact on the balance of power in Congress in the midterms. It's perhaps the biggest moment in the modern political battle between California and Texas, whose long-running feud has for years served mostly as a symbolic proxy war for Democrats and Republicans. Now, things are getting real. 'I'm not going to sit back any longer in the fetal position, a position of weakness, when in fact California can demonstrably advance strength,' Newsom said at a recent news conference. Things were less serious in 2014, when then-Texas Gov. Rick Perry drove through Sacramento in a Tesla to needle then-California Gov. Jerry Brown as the two were competing to host the company's battery plant. Perry had already run California radio ads promoting Texas' business-friendly climate, which Brown waved away as 'barely a fart.' Before Perry's L Street cruise, former GOP Assemblymember Chuck DeVore praised tax policies in Texas — a place he's since made his home. And he was hardly alone. Democratic leaders rail against Texas gun and abortion policies, while Republicans portray California as an overregulated nanny state plagued by crime and homelessness. 'Texas is an easy punching bag for liberals. California is an easy punching bag for conservatives,' Kevin Shuvalov, a Houston-based strategist, told POLITICO way back in 2017. Newsom is no stranger to this rhetoric. In 2022, he spent campaign money on billboard and newspaper ads touting California's abortion rights and denouncing Texas' gun-friendly politics. The same year, the governor signed legislation allowing Californians to sue people and companies that dispense banned guns — an answer to Texas' 'bounty'-style anti-abortion law that employed a similar legal mechanism. This time, Newsom's offensive could affect national politics far more than a billboard showing a woman in handcuffs. If he succeeds, California could pick up five Democratic congressional seats, a change the governor and House members say is necessary to combat GOP tactics. 'When Trump actually says he's at war, and the war's with Democrats, we're not bringing a butter knife to a gun fight,' San Diego Rep. Scott Peters told Playbook. IT'S TUESDAY AFTERNOON. This is California Playbook PM, a POLITICO newsletter that serves as an afternoon temperature check on California politics and a look at what our policy reporters are watching. Got tips or suggestions? Shoot an email to lholden@ WHAT YOU NEED TO KNOW TODAY KICK 'EM OUT: Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton today announced he's moving forward with plans to remove absent state Democrats from office, our Andrew Howard reports. Paxton said he would begin asking Texas courts on Friday to remove the Democrats if they do not return to Austin. 'Democrats have abandoned their offices by fleeing Texas, and a failure to respond to a call of the House constitutes a dereliction of their duty as elected officials,' Paxton said in a statement. 'Starting Friday, any rogue lawmakers refusing to return to the House will be held accountable for vacating their office. The people of Texas elected lawmakers, not jet-setting runaways looking for headlines. If you don't show up to work, you get fired.' The legal process to remove the lawmakers will likely take time. First, Paxton must file a case against each individual absent Democrat in various district courts, a process that would surely lead to appeals and could drag out long beyond the end of the special session on Aug. 19. IN OTHER NEWS CLOSING TIME: Newsom's administration yesterday announced it will close a Riverside County prison by fall 2026, following through on the governor's pledge to shutter a fourth state-owned facility. The state Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation will shut down the California Rehabilitation Center in Norco, which the agency estimates will save $150 million per year. Newsom has closed three state-owned prisons and a leased facility staffed by state corrections employees during his time in office. The governor announced plans to close another prison as a cost-cutting measure during his revised budget presentation in May. FOX'S ELEX-IT: Longtime Fox 11 Los Angeles anchor Elex Michaelson announced today he's leaving the station to 'pursue an exciting new opportunity.' Michaelson, who hosts the California politics show 'The Issue Is,' said in an X post that his last day will be Aug. 15. He said he's not allowed to share information about his next move 'just yet.' 'What I can talk my enormous gratitude to my incredibly talented FOX 11 colleagues, all the guests I've had the honor of interviewing, and so many of you for your support,' Michaelson said. WHAT WE'RE READING TODAY — Los Angeles County chief executive Fesia Davenport warned the Board of Supervisors that the county is grappling with financial pressures that will require program cuts, including the potential closure of a public hospital. (LAist) — Families in Central California have been preparing for potential ICE raids by planning who they will call and who will take care of their kids. (The Fresno Bee) — AT&T, which provides much of California's landline service, has taken its battle to drop landline service to California customers to the legislature after regulators blocked its bid last year. (The Mercury News) AROUND THE STATE — Religious leaders and volunteers can now accompany people to San Diego's immigration court under a pilot program that focuses on offering spiritual support to those who need it. (The San Diego Union-Tribune) — The city of San Diego will use more than $8 million in settlement funds from SeaWorld's unpaid rent lawsuit to improve public parks, but some South Bay residents expressed disappointment that their communities weren't included. (inewsource) — A Los Angeles college's culinary program had an uptick in enrollment last academic year even as other programs and hundreds of restaurants in the region have shuttered. (The Los Angeles Times) — compiled by Juliann Ventura

Epoch Times
10 minutes ago
- Epoch Times
Vance ‘Probably Favored at This Point' for 2028 Nomination, Trump Says
WASHINGTON—President Donald Trump said Vice President JD Vance is 'most likely' the leading contender to carry the MAGA torch in 2028, calling him 'probably favored' to become the Republican presidential frontrunner. 'I think most likely, in all fairness—he's the vice president,' Trump said, when asked whether Vance was the heir apparent to his Make America Great Again movement.