Florida
Liz Barker: Florida’s voucher program at a crossroads
What if a state program were bleeding billions of taxpayer dollars, providing funds to nearly anyone who applied, with minimal oversight?
Fiscal conservatives would demand immediate intervention. They would call for rooting out waste, fraud, and abuse, insist on accountability from those in power, and demand swift action to protect public money.
While much public attention has focused on charter school expansion, including Schools of Hope, this discussion concerns a different program altogether: Florida’s rapidly expanding, taxpayer-funded voucher program.
That program, particularly the unchecked growth of the Family Empowerment Scholarship (FES), now allows public dollars to fund private school and homeschool education on an unprecedented scale.
State officials tout a budget surplus, but independent analysts project that an additional $4–5 billion in annual voucher spending will lead to an imminent budget deficit.
The findings of a recent independent audit of FES are alarming. It examined what happens to these public funds and whether they truly “follow the child,” as Floridians were repeatedly promised.
They did not.
The auditor general was blunt: “Whatever can go wrong with this system has gone wrong.”
The audit raises more questions than answers:
— Why would state legislators steer a previously healthy state budget toward a projected deficit?
— Why is the state unable to account for roughly 30,000 students — representing approximately $270 million in taxpayer dollars — on any given day?
— And why is voucher spending deliberately obscured from public scrutiny by burying it in the public-school funding formula?
According to auditors, Florida’s voucher program has grown faster than the state’s ability to manage it. They identified gaps in real-time tracking, limited verification of eligibility and enrollment, and financial controls that have failed to keep pace with explosive growth.
These are not minor administrative errors; they are flashing warning lights.
Waste, fraud, and abuse are not partisan concerns; they are fiscal ones. Any government program that cannot clearly show where public dollars are or whether they are used appropriately represents a failure of the Legislature’s duty to safeguard taxpayer funds.
It is also important to be honest about what voucher growth truly represents. Despite frequent claims of a mass exodus from public schools, data show that roughly 70%of voucher recipients in recent years were not previously enrolled in public schools.
This is not a story of families fleeing public education. It is a story of public dollars being quietly redirected away from it.
That distinction matters because Florida’s public School Districts remain subject to strict accountability standards that do not apply to private or homeschool programs that receive voucher funds. Public schools must administer state assessments, publish performance data, comply with open-records laws, and undergo regular financial audits.
Public education across Florida is not stagnant. School Districts are actively innovating while serving as responsible stewards of public dollars by expanding career pathways, strengthening partnerships with local employers and higher education, and adapting to an increasingly complex choice landscape. When Districts are supported by stable policy and predictable funding, they lead.
But choice only works when transparency and quality accompany it. If state dollars support a student’s education, those dollars should be accompanied by state-level accountability, including meaningful oversight and participation in statewide assessments.
State dollars should meet state standards.
The audit also makes clear that technical fixes alone are insufficient. As long as voucher funding remains intertwined with public school funding formulas, billions of dollars in voucher spending will remain obscured from public scrutiny. The program must stand on its own.
Florida’s fiscally conservative Senators recognized this reality when they introduced SB318, a bipartisan bill to implement the auditor general’s recommendations and bring transparency and fiscal responsibility to school choice. The House must now follow suit.
Families like mine value school choice. But without meaningful reform, the current system is not financially sustainable.
Fiscal responsibility and educational opportunity are not competing values. Floridians must insist on both.
___
Liz Barker is a Sarasota County School Board member.
Florida
Family businesses serving up South Florida’s best bagels and Italian food
Are you feeling some bagels this morning? Two family businesses, both originally from New York, are serving up some of the finest bagels and Italian food in South Florida.
CBS News Miami’s Anna McAllister heads to Fort Lauderdale to check out A&S Deli and Bakery and Goldberg’s Delicatessen and Bagels on North Federal Highway.
When you walk into A&S and Goldberg’s, you’re treated like family.
They’ve serving up Italian deli food and traditional, Jewish New York bagels – all in one shop.
Marc Goldberg and Nick Maltese grew up in their family business – and it’s their passion.
“We started here in Florida in 1971 on Bayview Drive,” Maltese said. “It was called Rotoni’s Italian Deli, and my dad was young. He was making fresh mozzarella, making soppressata. We had a deli and I used to help him.”
Both sides of the shop pride themselves on the freshness of their products, like homemade mozzarella on the A&S side.
The cheese is made fresh every day along with the rolls for every sandwich.
And on Goldberg’s side every bagel is made fresh in house.
“My favorite thing from Goldberg’s is the bagels,” customer Paula Cury said. “We come here in the morning and get our bagels. And them from A&S, I really like their number six. The Nicky’s Favorite. It has fresh mozzarella, tomato, prosciutto and balsamic glaze.”
And, of course, CBS News Miami couldn’t stop by and not try their specialty items like a toasted sesame bagel with vegetable cream cheese, fresh sliced lox, tomato, red onion and capers.
And how about that South Bronx chicken cutlet sandwich? Every single item that CBS News Miami tried, from the bagel sandwiches to the soups and specialty deli creations was outstanding.
“I would say that the my favorite thing about this place is that come in, and you feel like you’re home,” McAllister said.
“We make everybody feel that way,” Maltese replied.
And you can get the best of both worlds seven days a week.
They also take orders online.
Check out the A&S Italian Deli and Bakery website by clicking here.
For more information about Goldberg’s Delicatessen and Bagels, click here.
Florida
Police offer $5K reward to find Florida kid seen stomping, killing duck in disturbing video
Police are searching for a young child seen on video brutally stomping and killing a duck in a Florida resident’s yard, according to authorities and reports.
Disturbing surveillance video released by the Fort Lauderdale Police Department showed two young children running around a duck before one child chased the bird into the paved alleyway of a home Sunday, CBS Miami reported.
The kid stomped on the feathered creature a whopping seven times, killing it, the clip showed.
The Fort Lauderdale homeowner called cops after noticing the juvenile trespassing on his property, and was shocked when he watched the gruesome security footage on his Ring camera, police told WSVN.
Detectives are now seeking help identifying the child and are offering a $5,000 reward for information leading to an arrest.
Residents of the area, home to many waterfowl, described the incident as deeply concerning.
“I was appalled that that would even happen in this neighborhood, for that to happen and see the photo, it is obviously very bad,” neighbor Ross Schmidt told WSVN.
“You know, you don’t know what’s inside people’s minds, but it’s definitely a very big anger issue, and he wasn’t brought up right, or he wasn’t thinking properly,” Schmidt added.
Fort Lauderdale Police have removed the graphic footage of the incident from their social media platforms and did not immediately respond to The Post’s request for comment.
Florida
Multi-vehicle crash causes major delays on Florida’s Turnpike in Osceola County
OSCEOLA COUNTY, Fla. – A multi-vehicle crash caused major traffic delays Thursday on Florida’s Turnpike in Osceola County.
CLICK TO DOWNLOAD THE FOX LOCAL APP
The crash happened on Florida’s Turnpike northbound near mile marker 246.
According to the Florida Highway Patrol, the crash involved four vehicles—a Hyundai Santa Fe, a Chevrolet Silverado, a Chevrolet Trax and an Audi TTS. No one involved in the crash was taken to the hospital, FHP said.
SIGN-UP FOR FOX 35’S BREAKING NEWS, DAILY NEWS NEWSLETTERS
All lanes were temporarily shut down but have since reopened, FHP said.
It’s unclear what caused the crash, which remains under investigation.
The Source: This story was written with information from the Florida Highway Patrol.
-
Sports5 days agoMiami’s Carson Beck turns heads with stunning admission about attending classes as college athlete
-
Illinois1 day agoIllinois school closings tomorrow: How to check if your school is closed due to extreme cold
-
Detroit, MI1 week agoSchool Closings: List of closures across metro Detroit
-
Pittsburg, PA4 days agoSean McDermott Should Be Steelers Next Head Coach
-
Lifestyle1 week agoJulio Iglesias accused of sexual assault as Spanish prosecutors study the allegations
-
Sports4 days agoMiami star throws punch at Indiana player after national championship loss
-
Lifestyle5 days agoNick Fuentes & Andrew Tate Party to Kanye’s Banned ‘Heil Hitler’
-
Technology1 week agoInside the White House shitposting machine
