State Sen. Mark Pody

State Senator Mark Pody ‘Much Happier’ with Senate Version of Governor’s School Choice Bill Compared to House Version

Mar 11, 2024

Tennessee State Senator Mark Pody (R-Lebanon) said he is “much happier” with the Senate’s version of Governor Bill Lee’s universal school choice bill compared to the House’s version, which includes additional incentives not particularly related to school choice.

Pody said the Senate’s version is a “much more stripped down version” of Lee’s bill, explaining how each $7,000 voucher would “follow” qualifying students, granting them the “right to have the choice of where they want to go.”

“The money is going to follow that student. Now, the student or the parents don’t get the money directly, but it will be in a situation where they would be able to say, ‘Hey, we want to go to this private school, we want to go to a homeschool co-op’ or can even go to another public school in a different county and the money would actually follow them,” Pody said on Monday’s edition of The Michael Patrick Leahy Show.

“Now the House side has much different language and their language is going to include a lot of things,” Pody added, noting how the language also addresses other issues in regards to education.

Pody agreed when Leahy said the House version seems to be “incentivizing separate legislators to come on board” with the idea of school vouchers.

“I would characterize that correctly because if they’re feeling if they can give enough to public education, that maybe it’ll help some of the educators to come on board with this, or they won’t be as adamantly opposed,” Pody explained. “They’re also saying maybe they can relax some testing issues, or they can relax other things that are perhaps things that the educators have been talking about for a long time. If they can do that, maybe they won’t be as opposed to this bill.”

“I’m not for that,” Pody added. “I would rather have the bill vote up or down based on what it is and not by all the side deals that, ‘Hey boy, if we can give you this, maybe you’ll be okay with it.’ So I’m much happier with the Senate side of this bill rather than what the house is looking for.”

Noting how he’s “confident” that the Senate’s version of the bill will pass, Pody said he’s “not sure” how close the margin of the bill passing in the House will be, due to the added incentives.

Meanwhile, Pody said the Senate bill’s next destination is the Finance Committee, as the legislation carries a $144 million fiscal note.

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Kaitlin Housler is a reporter at The Tennessee Star and The Star News Network. Follow Kaitlin on X / Twitter.
Photo “Mark Pody” by Mark Pody.

Roger Simon on Pro-Hamas, Anti-Israel Protests on College Campuses: ‘What Happened in Germany in 1937’ Is ‘What We’re Undergoing Now’

Roger Simon on Pro-Hamas, Anti-Israel Protests on College Campuses: ‘What Happened in Germany in 1937’ Is ‘What We’re Undergoing Now’

Roger Simon, the co-founder of PJMedia and current columnist for The Epoch Times, said the pro-Hamas protests unfolding on Ivy League college campuses across the nation are comparable to the scene in Germany in 1937.

Simon made the comments on Tuesday’s episode of The Michael Patrick Leahy Show after listening to audio of a clip taken from Columbia University where pro-Palestine protesters formed a human chain to keep Jewish students out of an encampment on the university’s campus.

NewsChannel 5’s Phil Williams Refuses to Explain His Failure to Get Justin Jones on the Record about Allegations He Covered Up Report of 2020 Sexual Assault, Tries to Distract with False Claims About Tennessee Star Reporter

NewsChannel 5’s Phil Williams Refuses to Explain His Failure to Get Justin Jones on the Record about Allegations He Covered Up Report of 2020 Sexual Assault, Tries to Distract with False Claims About Tennessee Star Reporter

Tom Pappert, lead reporter at The Tennessee Star, addressed personal attacks from NewsChannel 5’s chief investigative reporter Phil Williams over the weekend, saying such attacks are “absolute silliness” and a common tactic used by Williams when pressed on his “journalistic failings.”

On Sunday, Pappert reported on an interview between Williams and Dan Mandis, host of Nashville’s Morning News with Dan Mandis on SuperTalk 99.7 WTN, where Williams said that he once asked Tennessee State Representative Justin Jones (D-Nashville) to respond to claims made by his former close colleague Jeneisha Harris on June 18, 2020 that the state lawmaker had covered up the sexual assault of two protesters by a homeless man.