Florida bill would let bullied students go to private school
FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. — From third to fifth grade, Alyson Hochstedler says bullies slammed her son into lockers and punched him. One threatened to stab him. The public school’s administration did little to stop his tormentors, she says, so the mother of five transferred her son to private school, using a state grant for low- and middle-income families to pay his tuition.
The Florida Legislature is considering a proposal that would give parents like Hochstedler a second, more controversial option, especially if they aren’t eligible for an income-based grant. That option is a state-funded private school voucher averaging $6,800 a year expressly for children who say they have been bullied, regardless of income.
The “Hope Scholarships” would be the nation’s first such program. The grants would be funded by car buyers who voluntarily redirect $105 from their registration fee to the program, under a bill passed by the Florida House. Religious and secular private schools would be eligible.
Hochstedler, a Tallahassee resident, wishes such a program had existed for her son, now 15 and thriving at a private school.


