You might not think that private schools and welfare recipients have much in common, but over at the Indiana General Assembly, everything is connected if you wait long enough and are willing to connect the dots.
In this instance, it’s private schools and the voucher program on one hand and the drug testing of welfare recipients and limitations on what can be purchased with food stamps, now known as the Supplemental
Abdul Hakim-Shabazz is an attorney and the editor and publisher of IndyPoltics.Org.
Nutrition Assistance Program.
State Sen. Scott Schneider, R-Indianapolis, pushed for an amendment to a bill this week that would let private schools that take voucher students opt out of ISTEP+ testing, as long as they had some standard test to measure student performance. His colleagues in the Senate took a pass on that idea.
At the same time House members by a vote of 71-22 approved State Rep. Jud McMillin, R-Brookeville, measure that would require drug testing for some welfare recipients following a mandatory survey screening for substance abuse and it would also limit what welfare recipients could by with the electronic food stamp cards .They could only purchase food deemed “nutritional “ by the State, so apples are in, apple-flavored candy is out and Apple Jacks; I’m not so sure.
I thought it was interesting that when I brought up these topics on my evening radio program in Indianapolis as well social media, while most of the audience was smart enough to figure out what was going on, there was a distinct minority that just didn’t seem to get it. They said that the government was in too much control of people’s lives and we shouldn’t be telling people what they could eat and where they should go to school.
Fundamentally, I agree. With my conservative-libertarian political philosophy I am the last person who wants the government intruding in someone’s personal life. However, when the government – I’m sorry, the taxpayer – is footing the bill then you don’t get a whole lot of say.  And this is nothing new.
Students who get financial aid are limited on what they can spend the money on. Someone getting a government grant can only spend the grant on the research. The list goes on and on.
Now if welfare recipients want to buy junk food, they are more than welcome to, with their own money. And if private schools want to drop ISTEP+ to measure their student performance levels, they are free to do so, as long as they don’t take the government money. See the pattern?
A lot of this reminds me something my parents used to do. They would tell me and my brothers when we were teenagers that they were not so much in the business of telling us what to do but they were in the in business of controlling how they would spend their money and what they were willing to subsidize, so if one of us wanted to do something and the parents weren’t going to foot the bill, then we had to figure out how to pay for it ourselves.
As my dad would say, if you’re eating the government cheese, don’t expect it to be brie.
Abdul is an attorney and the editor and publisher of IndyPoltics.Org. He is also a frequent contributor to numerous Indiana media outlets. He can be reached at abdul@indypolitics.org.