Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine isn’t weighing in on the deliberations in the House and Senate over school vouchers. But he is talking about the need to do more to help failing school districts early on.
Some lawmakers have suggested the state do away with the Academic Distress Commissions that provide oversight to three failing districts. DeWine says he thinks the state should continue to monitor the performance of school districts.
“To go in and throw out what we have, even though it’s not perfect, would be a very, very serious mistake and it would be saying ‘we don’t care about those kids.’ We have to care about those kids," DeWine says.
Ohio Gov @MikeDeWine isn’t weighing in on House and Senate negotiations over Ed Choice fix plan. But when it comes to academic distress commissions, he wants the state to work with failing schools and their communities early on to come up with funded plans for improvement.
— Jo Ingles (@joingles) January 30, 2020
DeWine says the state should put money in when districts are showing signs of struggle early on. And the community and the state should come together to develop a plan.