South-Carolina
Scoppe: You get a free computer, and you get a free computer, and you … don’t
Some people wait until August to buy a new computer, for the kids or for themselves, and specifically the first weekend in August, so they can take advantage of South Carolina’s silly little back-to-school sales-tax “holiday.” Spend $1,000 on a laptop, and the savings can run from $60 to $90 depending on where you live, which seems like a great deal if you don’t pay enough attention to prices to realize you can probably get a better deal some other time of the year.
Starting this year, select savvy shoppers will have the taxpayers pick up 100 percent of the tab. And cover a lot of other school costs while they’re at it.
A new state law means the lucky parents of up to 10,000 students — rising to a minimum of 15,000 next year — can reduce their costs for sending the kids to public school by as much as $7,500. That’s $7,500 that most parents will still be paying from their own bank accounts, or credit cards.
Scoppe
In addition to the laptop, and printer, and other “technological devices” that our throw-taxpayer-money-at-a-few-parents S.C. Education Department approves, parents can hand taxpayers the bill for school uniforms (if they’re required) as well as any fees they have to pay for their kids to play football or run track or join the cheer squad or participate in band, to attend summer school and afterschool programs and take the PSAT or the SAT or the ACT more than once. We’ll also pick up the field trip fees and technology fees and parking fees and just-because fees, and pay for tutors. And we’ll pay for “any consumables and items necessary to complete a curriculum or that are otherwise applicable to a course of study that has been approved by the department,” whatever that means.
Taxpayers will even provide up to $750 a year for Uber to pick the kids up after school, or drive them to school in the morning, so parents don’t have to be bothered.
Of course, this being a government program, there are caveats.
This taxpayer largesse is not available to parents who send their kids to their neighborhood school — only those whose kids attend a charter school or transfer to a different public school inside or outside their district.
Technically, there’s an income limit, although at $96,450 for a family of four — rising to $160,750 next year — it’ll be hard to find many public school families in South Carolina who don’t qualify.
All about vouchers
And the biggest limitation is that 10,000-student cap, which covers both the public school families reducing their out-of-pocket costs and private-school families. Because this giveaway is part of South Carolina’s new school voucher law.
I suspect that many if not most of the parents who managed to grab those $7,500 “scholarships” for this year are using them to help cover private-school tuition, since those parents and said private schools are the ones who have been lobbying the Legislature for the free government money for years.
But the House has already voted once to eliminate the caps and create a “universal” voucher program, with no income limits and no limit on the number of vouchers. There’s no reason to think it’ll take long for the Senate to come around. And before you know it: You get a free computer, and you get a free computer, and you get a free computer! As long as you don’t attend your neighborhood school.
Remember when legislators used to assure us that the “can’t even begin to project it” price tag for a voucher program just for “poor” kids and kids with disabilities was ridiculous — that even if we didn’t cap enrollment, vouchers would always serve a niche market, because most parents want to keep their kids in the public schools?
The modest expansion of the program to cover expenses for kids in public schools in 2023 and the much larger expansion this year make those assurances seem almost as quaint as those same lawmakers’ assurances that the program would be targeted to poor kids, and that it would come with muscular accountability measures.
From a policy perspective, the public school component is bizarre. We already provide more state funding for charter schools than traditional public schools. And if legislators want to increase public school choice, all they need to do is require every district to allow open enrollment. Well, that and pay for transportation for students attending anything other than their neighborhood school, because that is a real barrier for a lot of kids.
Legal maneuver
But the public school component has nothing to do with policy; it was designed to help legislators weave their way around what a badly written Supreme Court order made them believe were the parameters of a state constitutional prohibition on using public funds to directly benefit private schools.
Both the new law and the one the court struck down last year sought to bypass that restriction by allowing families to receive vouchers if they chose to move their kids to a public school other than the one the district provides for them.
This raises a host of policy questions beyond the ones entailed in the idea of paying parents to send their kids to private schools, mostly revolving around this one: Why is our Legislature so determined to provide financial assistance for kids whose parents are actively involved in their education and not for the kids who most need that assistance — the ones with parents who can’t or won’t do more to help them learn?
If we were prioritizing the extra spending for kids with demonstrated need, that would make some sense. Instead, we’re prioritizing kids lucky enough to be born to active and savvy parents. That is, kids who start off with advantages that many kids will never have. The public school component of the voucher law is just one more way we’re doing that.
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South-Carolina
Missouri beats South Carolina in game two
Columbia, Mo. — The South Carolina softball team (25-21, 4-13) dropped the second game of its series at Missouri (24-23, 7-10) 5-0 Saturday night (Apr. 18).
Kai Byars led the Gamecocks with a pair of doubles on the night. It was her second multi-hit game of the season and her first game with multiple extra base hits.
The Tigers scored a run in the third inning without the aid of a hit. They would extend the lead and add four more in the fourth.
Carolina’s best opportunity for a run came in third. Byars doubled to lead off the inning and Shae Anderson followed with a bunt single. A double play on a potential sacrifice fly ended the rally.
Emma Friedel (8-4) took the loss, allowing one run on no hits in 3 1-3 innings. She struck out six and walked three.
The rubber game of the series will be tomorrow at 2 p.m. ET.
South-Carolina
Former Texas guard Jordan Lee transfers to SEC rival South Carolina
Audi Crooks on being in the transfer portal
USAT’s Sam Cardona-Norberg catches up with college basketball star Audi Crooks, who is still looking for her next team.
Sports Seriously
Jordan Lee entered the transfer portal after a breakout season at Texas and the junior guard isn’t going too far. She’s staying in the Southeastern Conference.
Lee announced on Instagram Friday that she’s transferring to South Carolina to play for Dawn Staley after spending the first two years of her collegiate career at Texas under Vic Schaefer. Lee captioned her Instagram post, which featured a video montage of her visit to Columbia, South Carolina, “Feeling cocky.”
Lee was one of four players from Texas to enter the transfer portal after the Longhorns’ second consecutive trip to the Final Four ended in a devastating loss to UCLA. She was named to the All-Region team in the Fort Worth 3 bracket in this year’s NCAA Tournament following her Sweet 16 and Elite Eight performance, where she recorded 22 points, six assists, three rebounds and four steals while also providing strong defense.
After being limited to five starts her freshman year, Lee slid into the starting lineup last season and started a career-high 38 games. She also averaged career highs in points (13.2), assists (2.5), rebounds (2.5), steals (1.5), field-goal percentage (42%) and free-throw percentage (75%), while shooting 34% from 3-point range.
Texas’ Aaliyah Crump, Justice Carlton and Aaliyah Moore also entered the transfer portal. On Friday, Crump announced she’s transferring to Duke, citing her connection with head coach Kara Lawson.
“For me, choosing Duke University goes far beyond one sentence. The moment I connected with Kara Lawson and her coaching staff, I knew I was exactly where I belonged,” said Crump, who averaged 7.9 points, 2.3 rebounds and 1.4 assists per game her freshman season at Texas.
Crump continued: “Their dedication and vision for the program is truly special, and I couldn’t pass up the opportunity to be a part of it. The connection Coach Lawson and I have built is one of a kind, and I fully trust in her plan for the success of this program. I can’t wait to be coached by genuine people who support my growth not only as a basketball player, but as a person as well.”
Three-time All-American Madison Booker and junior starting forward Breya Cunningham are expected to return to Texas.
Contributing: Mitchell Northam
Reach USA TODAY National Women’s Sports Reporter Cydney Henderson at chenderson@gannett.com and follow her on X at @CydHenderson.
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South-Carolina
South Carolina DB Jalon Kilgore has private workout with Saints
Each offseason, the NFL shakes up the landscape with free agency, as some of the top names at each position move around the league to new teams. The New Orleans Saints have fallen victim to this in 2026 so far, with Demario Davis and Alontae Taylor both moving on, and Cameron Jordan not having re-signed as of yet. Cornerback was a position that could already use a talent influx alongside Kool-Aid McKinstry and Quincy Riley; now, it is even more of an issue.
Adding a new defensive back to fill the STAR role for the defense is certainly going to be a focus this spring, and that has been clear from the Saints’ pre-draft meetings. Recently, they added another name to the growing list; this time, it was South Carolina prospect Jalon Kilgore.
There is a lot to like about Kilgore, especially in that nickel or STAR role long term. He is enormously athletic and absolutely rapid both in straight-line testing and on the field. He got a decent chunk of his collegiate snaps at slot corner, 1,382 to be exact, but also had 541 in the box, 238 at free safety, 53 along the defensive line, and 24 as an outside corner.
His coverage metrics in 2025 were very solid, as on 65 targets, he allowed 34 receptions (52.3%) for 390 yards and 2 touchdowns. He picked up 2 interceptions, 10 pass deflections, 54 total tackles, and 2 fumble recoveries in 694 total snaps this season. Throughout the combine, he ended up performing well in pretty much every drill, which bodes well for his ability to translate to the NFL. If the Saints are looking to add someone with slot experience already, Kilgore may be one of the best options available.
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