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Ohio Senate’s private school voucher expansion unsurprisingly divides parents

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COLUMBUS, Ohio — The Ohio Senate's proposed expansion of private school vouchers has unsurprisingly divided parents across the state.

Parents want what is best for their kids.

"Having that private education is important, especially ours is focused on our faith," Lynette Haehn said.

For the mother of three, the Senate budget couldn’t have come at a better time.

RELATED: Ohio Senate passes conservative $94B budget focusing on tax cuts and education

She has been sending her kids to private school for years now – but with inflation and the cost of school, "money is tight," she added.

The Senate budget expands the EdChoice voucher system, which would allow her to apply for a scholarship to send her kids to the private or charter school of her choosing.

The current cutoff is about $88,000 per year for a family of five, like Haehn’s. Under the new budget, that amount gets bumped up to nearly $160,000. Families making more can still get a voucher, but they would only get a partial scholarship.

But for other parents and public school advocates, this system is unfair and undemocratic.

"You shouldn’t defund public schools to fund charter schools," Kia Woodward said. "And we shouldn't be competing for the same pot of money."

Woodward sends her daughter to public school and said seeing money get pulled from public schools and sent to private is destroying local districts. Just this fall, Columbus educators held a strike to get air conditioning and heating.

"I want the kids, especially the public school kids, to get a quality education and not have to fight for just basic amenities that everyone should have," she said.

Haehn understands this argument, she said. However, there is a solution.

"As a school system, make your school system the best that it can possibly be, and then people will choose you," the mom said.

Public schools can't get better if their funding is going to private schools, Woodward said.

This budget is not final. The House will need to vote to concur with it or head into a conference committee, which will likely happen.

Both parents should know by June 30 if and by how much vouchers will be expanded.

Follow WEWS statehouse reporter Morgan Trau on Twitter and Facebook.