Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis this week signed into law one of the largest private school voucher expansions in the nation, following similar moves by several other conservative states since the start of the pandemic.

The new legislation, which has an unclear price tag, mimics new options in Iowa, Utah and Arkansas, which passed major private school choice bills this year, as well as Arizona and West Virginia, which also offer all or nearly all students in their respective states the option to use taxpayer dollars to cover private school tuition or other expenses.

Teachers unions and other groups have criticized the measures, saying they will rob public schools of already scarce funding and allow private schools to discriminate against students, including those with disabilities. Some parents, however, applaud the new laws, including parents who already send their kids to private schools.

DeSantis hailed the new Florida legislation when signing the measure into law Monday at a private, all-boys Catholic high school in Miami.  

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The legislation makes all Florida students eligible for taxpayer-financed vouchers to attend private schools – a roughly $8,500 award that Democrats deride as a taxpayer supplement to wealthier parents with kids already enrolled in private education.

Christopher Columbus High School, where Education Commissioner Manny Diaz noted that his son is a 2016 graduate, carries a $15,400 cost for tuition, fees and textbooks next year, according to its website. 

DeSantis and Florida’s ruling Republicans, however, praise the “universal school choice” approach. With the governor a likely contender for the GOP presidential nomination, the voucher expansion is another policy step certain to appeal to Republican voters across the nation.

“The state of Florida is number one when it comes to education freedom and education choice,” DeSantis said. “Today’s bill signing cements us in that number one position.” 

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The expansion sped hastily through Florida’s Republican-controlled House and Senate, where House Speaker Paul Renner, R-Palm Coast, had made the push his top priority. For weeks during the session, the House estimated the cost of the expansion as $209.6 million to public schools, while a Senate analysis had tagged it at $646 million.