The governor who wouldn't let parents manage even a tiny portion of federal COVID aid 
                                         
   Tucker: Our leaders benefit from the pain of illegal immigration
 
 
   
        
 
 
   
                                            Even as the public school system operates with unprecedented  levels of resources, some political leaders still find it difficult to  share relatively small sums of education money with families.
     

    © Getty Images  The governor who wouldn't let parents manage even a tiny portion of federal COVID aid   Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer recently vetoed a key item out of a  school budget built on record levels of state funding. Reading  scholarships were left on the chopping block, leaving struggling young  readers out in the cold.
             
 The proposal would have used $155 million out of over $6 billion in  federal COVID-19 relief. Most of the federal aid has gone to district  and charter schools, with the state education department claiming the  rest. The plan took away no funds currently dedicated to literacy, but  would have 
offered $1,000 grants  to parents of elementary-aged students with low reading test scores.  Families could use the funds to help pay for approved after-school  programs, private tutoring, books and instructional materials.
It's  a harsh truth of life after COVID-19: More students have fallen behind  in key skills they will need to succeed. Federal lawmakers have poured  vast sums into school systems to try to overcome this consequential  learning loss. Whitmer's veto only makes it harder for these students to  recover.
Two recent analyses  highlight the depth of the problem. According to the testing group  NWEA, the typical student dropped 3 to 6 percentile points during last  school year, with disadvantaged and lower-performing students losing  even more. Separately, analysts at McKinsey & Company found that  elementary students now lag about five months behind typical achievement  levels.
Shortcomings of that scale call for enlisting help more  broadly. Parents could have used the extra funds to supplement school  interventions with other materials and services that would help their  children catch up.
Since 2018, Florida has 
modeled an inclusive approach  to helping students read. Parents of young learners in the Sunshine  State who registered low scores on a reading test could apply for $500  grants for materials and services designed to help boost their child's  literacy. But policymakers there didn't give enough consideration to  some details that would make the scholarships more useful to families.  Application requirements put too great a burden on parents to show that  their child was eligible. Thus, the program has struggled to attract  large numbers of young learners.
The nonprofit organization 
Step Up for Students  has fixed some of the less helpful features of the program, but it  reports that the $500 scholarship amount doesn't allow many families to  get enough help. Louisiana did better, 
offering $1,000 accounts  to struggling readers through the Steve Carter Literacy Program. Gov.  John Bel Edwards signed the bill in June, one month before his fellow  Democratic governor in Michigan denied funding for a similar plan.
It  isn't clear how many Michigan families would apply for scholarships to  help with reading, but evidence from other states shows the popularity  of similar programs, funded by federal COVID-19 aid, to address  educational needs more broadly. More than 5,000 low-income Oklahoma  families snatched up 
$1,500 "digital wallet" grants to purchase educational curriculum, technology and supplies. And in Texas, 
roughly 7,000 children with disabilities benefited from family-directed online accounts, which they can use to pay for therapies and other resources.
Whitmer could have looked even closer to home for inspiration. On July 1, Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine approved a budget 
creating $500 accounts for families  to spend on an assortment of learning enrichment activities. Lawmakers  in Ohio trust parents to recognize what sort of help an individual  student might need after the disruptions and setbacks associated with  COVID-19 school shutdowns.
Nationwide, the K-12 system has missed  the mark on academic achievement. The pandemic experience pushed many  students further behind. With the system now amply funded, state leaders  should not fear setting aside education dollars for families - whether  for literacy, special education services, school transportation or more.  Building a partnership of trust and responsibility with those who know  their children best is a more promising approach than simply adding the  entire federal windfall to state systems.
Whitmer did not explain  her veto. No Democratic lawmaker joined an attempted override, causing  the vote to fall short. But the legislature should not give up on  reading scholarships. Perhaps a different dollar amount would win the  governor's support, even though the original 
plan represented less than 1 percent of the state's new K-12 budget.
State  leaders, no matter where they live, should rely on parents to help  close the COVID-19 learning gap. Many children need help catching up,  and school systems don't have nearly all the answers.
Ben DeGrow is director of education policy for the Mackinac Center for Public Policy, a research and educational institute in Midland, Mich. Follow him on Twitter @bendegrow.
Typical whitmer and DPST arbitrary, controlling, authoritarian tyrants.
i do feel very sorry for teh poor man who is her husband. 
for the DPST nomeklatura - it is all about 'Obedience' to their rule. 
From my cold dead hands~!