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Archbishop O’Brien lobbies for BOAST bill

Posted: 6:50 pm Wed, March 17, 2010
By Capital News Service
By Daniel Leaderman

ANNAPOLIS — Archbishop of Baltimore Edwin O’Brien personally asked the House Ways and Means Committee Wednesday to support a controversial tax credit for donations to scholarships and enrichment programs for public and private schools.

The Building Opportunities for All Students and Teachers, or BOAST, bill would offer businesses an income tax credit for contributions to nonprofits that provide scholarships to private school students and grants to teachers in both public and private schools.

“At the same time that our own resources are decreasing, the needs of those we serve have become greater and even more compelling,” O’Brien said.

The tax credit has been introduced in previous legislative sessions, but is yet to get the approval of both chambers of the General Assembly. In the past two years, the House Ways and Means Committee hasn’t brought the bill to a vote.

The bill has the support of Gov. Martin O’Malley. It passed the Senate Wednesday morning, and Del. Sheila Hixson, D-Montgomery, the Ways and Means chair, has hinted that the tax credit could see a vote this session.

But some committee members expressed concern that private schools without non-discrimination policies would be able to take advantage of the tax credit. Washington recently began allowing same-sex marriage, a move that prompted Catholic Charities in the district to change its health benefits to avoid providing them to same-sex couples.

In addition, Maryland Attorney General Douglas F. Gansler last month issued an opinion that the state should recognize same-sex marriages performed in other states.

“If a high school child is openly gay, would that prohibit them from going to … your schools?” Del. Justin Ross, D-Prince George’s, said to O’Brien.

Ross then asked if the archbishop would be opposed to an amendment that would establish a non-discrimination policy for the children who attend those schools.

“I think we would expect to have the values that, traditionally, we do embrace, to be retained, whether or not we get a tax credit,” O’Brien said. “I would hope that this would not become a political football. … Our kids are at stake.”

O’Brien’s testimony comes in the wake of the Archdiocese of Baltimore’s announcement this month that it will consolidate 13 of its 64 private schools at the end of this year due to shrinking student populations.

Opponents of the bill, which include organizations such as the Maryland chapters of the American Federation of Teachers and the American Civil Liberties Union, argue that it would undermine funding for public schools.

“This bill would create a quasi-private school voucher system, which would draw needed funds away from public institutions meant to serve all Marylanders,” said Michael Minh Nguyen of AFT-Maryland in written testimony submitted to the committee.

But the bill’s sponsors say that while it would establish the tax credit, it wouldn’t provide money for the program right away.

“It is not being funded now,” said Del. James Proctor, D-Prince George’s. Instead, the credit will go unfunded until “happy days are here again, when the state can afford to put this money in the program.”

The 2011 budget “is already out,” Proctor said. “We cannot add to that budget.”

Comments

  • Bubba says:

    Let me get this straight. We send our delegates to Annapolis to take care of the state’s business, adopt a budget, and figure out how they’re going to pay for everything they think needs doing, right? And they’re actually spending time debating and voting on a program they have no intention of funding unless and until happy days are here again? What is wrong with those people?

    Delegates – Get back to business figuring out how you’re going to keep the trains running, metaphorically speaking, and quit messing with ideological message nonsense, especially when it potentially could suck the Treasury dry to shore up a failing private enterprise. (Sound familiar?)

    Posted on 03/18/10 at 9:14 am

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