Philadelphia City Councilmember Kendra Brooks posted a video on X, formerly known as ‘Twitter’ slamming the rapper as she joined protestors outside the state capitol in Harrisburg Monday.
“Vouchers put public money in the pockets of the rich, while draining resources from public schools in our communities. I don’t give a [damn] what Jay-Z said or meek mill.”
President of the American Federation of Teachers Pennsylvania, Arthur Steinburg, released a statement on X slamming Jay-Z and Pennsylvania billionaire Jeffrey Yass, accusing them of taking funds away from public schools. Yass, a Republican, has donated tens of millions of dollars toward the school choice movement in Philadelphia.
The School District of Philadelphia issued a statement explaining their need for more funding.
“The Pennsylvania public school funding system has inadequately and inequitably funded low-wealth school districts for decades. This is true across Pennsylvania, but is certainly true here in Philadelphia, where we are continually forced to parse insufficient resources, resources which cannot meet the varying needs of our students and staff,” said district spokeswoman Monique Braxton.
“An infusion of funding would enable our students to have the same opportunities for a high-quality education as their peers across the Commonwealth. With the additional funding, as a District, we would be positioned to shift the conversation from how to invest limited resources to how we accelerate academic achievement by focusing on robust academic programming that takes place in 21st-century learning environments.”
If PASS is approved, School District of Philadelphia students could opt out and apply to private schools.
The PASS program would distribute funds to eligible students according to the following scale:
- $2,500 for students in half-day kindergarten
- $5,000 for students in full-day kindergarten through 8th grade
- $10,000 for students in the 9th through 12th grade
- $15,000 for students with special needs
Dania Diaz, Roc Nation’s managing director of philanthropy, spoke out against the criticism and cited a report in the Pennsylvania System of School Assessment, which found 8th-grade students are among those across the commonwealth suffering in underperforming schools.
“Philly in particular, or Pennsylvania in particular, what’s alarming is the proficiency stats. 75% of (eighth-grade) students aren’t proficient in math, and 47% of (eighth-grade) students aren’t proficient in language arts, and when you look at the bottom 15% of the school system, the lowest performing schools, those numbers become even more dire,” said Diaz.
“We are supporters of the public school system … But numbers don’t lie, and the data shows that there must be another avenue for success for the state’s most vulnerable students’” Diaz said.
“Different communities across the country will require different solutions and should be analyzed on a case-by-case basis. For Pennsylvania, we believe PASS scholarships provide caregivers and students an education alternative that they should have the right to consider. We can’t sit idly for another decade as the proficiency rates for students in Pennsylvania plunge lower and lower. We can’t keep failing the next generation of state leaders. The children of Pennsylvania deserve better.”