[Congressional Record Volume 161, Number 105 (Wednesday, July 8, 2015)]
[House]
[Page H4872]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
STUDENT SUCCESS ACT FAILS STUDENTS
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentlewoman from
Alabama (Ms. Sewell) for 5 minutes.
Ms. SEWELL of Alabama. Mr. Speaker, today I rise to express my strong
opposition to H.R. 5, the so-called Student Success Act. I am deeply
disappointed in the majority for bringing such an economically careless
and socially egregious bill to the floor today.
If passed, H.R. 5 would take more than $7 million from the highest
need schools in my home State of Alabama. It is really an abomination
that this body would do this to our constituents and do this to our
students.
H.R. 5 abandons the Federal Government's historic role in elementary
and secondary education. Furthermore, this bill neglects our sacred
responsibility to ensure that all children, irrespective of race,
class, disability, or socioeconomic class, are given the opportunity to
attain a high quality education.
Each of us in this body has the opportunity to send our own children
to the finest K-12 institutions in this country, but our privilege
isn't universal, and we shouldn't legislate as if it is.
In the Seventh Congressional District of Alabama, that privilege, the
ability to send our children to the private schools or public schools
of choice, is nearly nonexistent.
{time} 1045
More than 70 percent of the public school students in my district
receive free or reduced lunch, and they live in families that live
below the poverty line. And of the 26 school districts that serve my
constituents, only two of them have a poverty rate that is less than 56
percent.
The Elementary and Secondary Education Act was first written in
recognition of the impact that concentrated poverty has on a school
system's ability to adequately support the educational programs needed
to serve vulnerable communities.
But H.R. 5 would strip the ESEA of the protections for these students
by diverting title I funds. This approach is backwards, and our
children deserve better. If I were grading this bill, I would
definitely give it an F.
As a proud product of Selma High School, this is deeply personal to
me. Today more than 90 percent of the Selma High School students in my
district, from my old high school, receive free and reduced lunch.
Under H.R. 5, this school would lose nearly 20 percent of its Federal
funding.
The greatest opportunity that we can give any child is a quality
education. This is why I cannot support this bill, which diverts title
I funds from 92 percent of the schools in my district. This would
further tilt the playing field against poor kids.
These children belong to all of us. Unfortunately, this bill is proof
that somewhere along the line we have abandoned the most sacred
American principle, that all children--I mean all children--are our
children.
We cannot deny that a rising tide lifts all boats. The economic and
social costs of refusing to accept these facts are steep.
When President Johnson signed the Elementary and Secondary Education
Act in 1964, he stated, ``As President of the United States, I believe
deeply no law I have signed or will ever sign means more to the future
of America than this bill.'' President Johnson was right then, and he
is right now.
To promote our educational progress, we must replace No Child Left
Behind with a strong bipartisan bill, one that advances what works and
improves upon what does not. Unfortunately, this bill does neither.
I urge this body to oppose this reckless bill, H.R. 5. Our children
deserve better. Our constituents deserve better. This Nation deserves
better.
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