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Politics : Politics for Pros- moderated -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: John Carragher who wrote (132152)8/13/2005 8:19:50 AM
From: John Carragher  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 793799
 
District in Santorum flap changes policy
It will pay for cyber schooling for some. But it still seeks repayment by the senator.

Associated Press

PENN HILLS, Pa. - A school district involved in a dispute with Sen. Rick Santorum (R., Pa.) over the cost of his children's education will now pay cyber school tuition for residents who are called out of the district to work elsewhere.

The policy change was approved by the Penn Hills School District board Wednesday night, but the board is still trying to get reimbursed for money it paid to educate Santorum's children at an Internet charter school during the 2003-04 and 2004-05 school years.

The district did not want to pay for the children's education because the Santorums primarily live in Leesburg, Va. Santorum also owns a house next to his in-laws in Penn Hills, where he is registered to vote.

Santorum has said the dispute was a partisan attack by local Democrats.

State law requires school districts to pay for cyber or other charter schools used by its residents' children.

The district said it spent about $70,000 on tuition to the Pennsylvania Cyber Charter School, which is based in Midland. Santorum said the district's costs were about $34,000, once state subsidies are included.

State education officials said last month that the school district did not object soon enough in Santorum's case, so the district is not owed a refund. The district is appealing that ruling.

The school district's new resolution passed 6-2. Board member Erin Vecchio, who opposed the measure, said she did not think the new exception should apply to Santorum because he has never lived full-time in the municipality.

"You have to be able to prove you're a resident. He doesn't sleep there," said Vecchio, a local Democratic committeewoman who raised the issue last fall.

Santorum's spokesman, Robert Traynham, said the new policy proves Santorum did nothing wrong.

"This is a complete vindication for the men and women who wear our country's uniform, to missionaries, and to elected officials who are Pennsylvania residents that are forced to live out of state," Traynham said.

Santorum's children are now being home-schooled in Virginia.