Idaho gave families $50M to spend on private education. Then it ended a $30M program used by public school families

A photo illustration of a backpack. Half of the backpack appears normal, while the other half of the backpack has a $100 bill overlay on it.
(Illustration by Shoshana Gordon / ProPublica. Source images: Laboko via Getty Images, U.S. Treasury via Wikimedia Commons)

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By Audrey Dutton, ProPublica

This story was originally published by ProPublica.

Just weeks after creating a $50 million tax credit to help families pay for private school tuition and homeschooling, Idaho has shut down a program that helped tens of thousands of public school students pay for laptops, school supplies, tutoring and other educational expenses.

The Republican leading the push to defund Idaho’s Empowering Parents grants said it had nothing to do with the party’s decision to fund private schools. But the state’s most prominent conservative group, a strong supporter of the private school tax credit, drew the connection directly.

The Idaho Freedom Foundation, on its website, proposed adding the $30 million that fueled Empowering Parents to the newly created tax credit, paying for an additional 6,000 private and homeschool students to join the 10,000 already expected to benefit from the program.

The new voucher-style tax credits have major differences from the grants lawmakers killed.