Florida
Florida families say school voucher reimbursements worse than ever
Barbara Beasley wanted nothing more than to see her role advocating on behalf of voucher-receiving families disappear this fall.
Many of them struggled last year to get repaid for the items and services they bought for their children’s homeschool education. Lawmakers intervened after hearing the complaints, implementing timelines for reimbursements and requiring the creation of updated purchasing guidelines for families and agencies to follow.
More than two months into the new voucher funding cycle, which began July 1, Beasley said the situation has worsened. Her online group of families seeking support and assistance had doubled to nearly 11,000 participants.
“The Legislature did a great job in giving families these choices,” the Longwood mom said. “But the devil is in the details.”
While families are criticizing Step Up for Students, which manages the bulk of the state’s vouchers, and the smaller AAA Scholarship Foundation, Step Up officials say they’ve been working to improve service during the state’s massive expansion project. The group anticipates more than 2 million reimbursement requests this year, up from 1.2 million last year, and said it has implemented review criteria to ensure many of the expenses are educationally appropriate.
“We have heard our families’ frustrations and are continuing to simplify our processes, increase the speed of payments, and resolve issues quickly and efficiently,” CEO Gretchen Schoenhaar said via email.
The group said just over 2% reimbursement requests for students had exceeded the 60-day deadline, with a similar amount of requests on hold. Last year, 13.6% of reimbursements were denied.
Chat rooms are filled with parents telling stories of how they submit claims based on what they understand from the guides, only to be denied for reasons they don’t understand. When they contact the help center for Step Up for Students, which manages all but a handful of the vouchers, they get placed on hold for hours before receiving what they say is confusing and sometimes contradictory advice.
Then the 60-day timeline lawmakers created to improve the repayment is reset, and they’re sent to the back of the growing line of requests.
“Just be patient. That’s what they always say,” said Christin Carlisle, who leads another online group of voucher parents.
But some families are going months without reimbursements, Carlisle said, making it difficult to impossible for many to continue the services and programs they’ve selected for their children. Many service providers have stopped taking payments directly from the voucher funding groups after last year’s troubles, which forced several to take personal loans to make ends meet, she added.
Compounding the situation, the rules keep shifting, she said. For example, she noted that in late August Step Up for Students announced it would not reimburse families for items shipped to addresses other than the one on record for the voucher recipient. That negatively impacts families that use Amazon lock boxes, live in rural areas without delivery, or travel for medical services, among others.
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Making it worse, Carlisle said, families learned of the change through denied claims, not through information sent out alerting them of new rules. That has put the burden more heavily on families, she said.
“It’s not an uncommon problem right now,” said Carlisle, an Orlando mom with two children who get vouchers. “It’s very sad, and it’s very frustrating.”
Ashley Pitter of St. Augustine, whose 10-year-old daughter with autism has received a voucher for three years, said she’s encountered several problems with the system including being unable to submit claims at all for a while. Last year, she said, it took five months for her to get reimbursed $1,000 she had paid for her daughter’s therapies.
This year, it’s “new drama,” she said.
The family submitted claims for monthly internet service, an allowable expense at a student’s home address. Step Up for Students challenged the expense, she said, contending it was a duplicate request. It took four resubmissions to get the issue cleared up.
Pitter said she’s become a “squeaky wheel” to get answers and resolutions. She said that’s not easy for many families to do, especially when they’re already busy fighting for services for their children.
“There are a lot of moms who are in my position who are tired of fighting,” she said.
State Rep. Anna Eskamani, an Orlando Democrat, is no fan of school vouchers. But she’s been fielding calls from parents inside her district and outside, seeking help with voucher reimbursements.
“Every (legislative) staff is going through this,” Eskamani said. “These are not isolated cases. This is a systemic problem. Families are suffering.”
Republican leaders said last spring they would be watching the system closely to determine whether added changes are needed.
Beasley said she has offered several ideas, such as an in-house call center comprised of trained participating parents to process the claims more intelligently and helpfully. She also proposed separating out the handling of vouchers for students with special needs, who lawmakers originally created the program for as a way to help them find more positive life outcomes.
“They could do so much better,” Beasley said.
Florida
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Florida
Read Florida’s lawsuit against Roblox
The Florida Attorney General’s Office on Thursday, Dec. 11, filed a lawsuit against popular online gaming platform Roblox, accusing the company of failing to protect its millions of underage users from predatory adults who would “find, groom, and abuse children.”
“Roblox aggressively markets to young children, but fails to protect them from sexual predators,” Attorney General James Uthmeier said in a post to X. “As a father of three little ones and as Florida’s attorney general, my number one priority is simple: to protect our kids.”
The lawsuit claims Florida children have been talked into taking and sending sexual images of themselves and lists several recent incidences, including a 20-year-old California man arrested last month for having sexually explicit conversations with a Palm Coast child and asking for nude photos.
A Roblox spokesperson said the lawsuit “fundamentally misrepresents how Roblox works.”
“We have advanced safeguards that monitor our platform for harmful content and communications,” Roblox Chief Safety Officer Matt Kaufman said in a statement, adding that the company — currently the most downloaded game in the world — will be rolling out additional safeguards “beyond what is required by law and what other platforms do.”
Read Florida’s lawsuit against Roblox
Can’t see the embedded document? Click here.
What is Roblox?
San Mateo, California-based Roblox, released in 2006, hosts millions of user-created games (or “experiences”) constructed with the platform’s built-in game engine. Any user can create a game and share it with others, and there are millions of games available of all types.
The game platform and most games are free to use, but some cost to play. There is also a thriving economy based on Robux, an in-game virtual currency used to purchase virtual items. Roblox offers a subscription service called Roblox Premium that provides access to more features and a monthly allowance of Roblox.
Voice chat is available, but only for users aged 13 or older with verified ages. Age ratings were introduced for games in 2022, and in 2023, 17+ games were permitted to include more graphic violence, romance, and drinking.
According to Roblox, as of 2020, the monthly playerbase included half of all American children under the age of 16.
Florida
Florida’s complete 2026 football schedule unveiled
GAINESVILLE, Fla. — The 2026 football schedule for the Florida Gators has been set. Next year’s slate was unveiled Thursday night on SEC Network.
The most notable dates are Florida’s SEC opener on Sept. 19 — a Week 3 trip to Auburn, where the Gators haven’t played since 2011 — along with a road game at Texas on Oct. 17 and home games against Ole Miss (Sept. 26) and Oklahoma (Nov. 7).
Next season will mark the Sooners’ first-ever visit to Gainesville. The teams have previously played twice in the postseason, with the Gators defeating Oklahoma 24-14 in their first-ever meeting to win the 2008 national championship.
The Gators open the season in The Swamp on Sept. 5 against Florida Atlantic. UF’s other non-conference opponents will be Campbell (Sept. 12) and at Florida State (Nov. 28).
Florida is also hosting South Carolina (Oct. 10) and Vanderbilt (Nov. 21). The Gators haven’t played the Gamecocks or the Commodores since 2023.
UF takes on Georgia in Atlanta on Oct. 31 after the bye week. Florida’s other road games are Missouri (Oct. 3), Texas (Oct. 17) and Kentucky (Nov. 14).
The Gators will be led by first-year coach Jon Sumrall. He won the American Conference title with Tulane last week and has the Green Wave in the College Football Playoffs. They will have a rematch against Ole Miss on Dec. 20 in the first round after losing in Oxford, 45-10, on Sept. 20.
Sumrall was back in Gainesville this week to assemble his staff. So far, he has hired offensive coordinator Buster Faulkner, defensive coordinator Brade White and defensive line coach Gerald Chatman.
Date
Opponent
Location
Sept. 5
Florida Atlantic
Gainesville, Florida
Sept. 12
Campbell
Gainesville, Florida
Sept. 19
at Auburn
Auburn, Alabama
Sept. 26
Ole Miss
Gainesville, Florida
Oct. 3
at Missouri
Columbia, Missouri
Oct. 10
South Carolina
Gainesville, Florida
Oct. 17
at Texas
Austin, Texas
Oct. 24
Bye
Oct. 31
Georgia
Atlanta, Georgia
Nov. 7
Oklahoma
Gainesville, Florida
Nov. 14
at Kentucky
Lexington, Kentucky
Nov. 21
Vanderbilt
Gainesville, Florida
Nov. 28
at Florida State
Tallahassee, Florida
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