Bush NCLB Renewal Agenda Includes Parochial School
Bailout

FUNDING URGED FOR CATHOLIC SCHOOLS
Washington Times -- April 14, 2007
by Jon Ward and Natasha Altamirano

   President Bush yesterday said he will try to prevent an
increasing number of inner-city Catholic parochial schools from
closing by adding funding for them in the upcoming renewal of
the No Child Left Behind law.
  America's Catholic schools "have given millions of Americans
the knowledge and character they need to succeed in life,"
Mr. Bush said during a short speech at the National Catholic
Prayer Breakfast.
  "Today, these schools are also serving thousands of
non-Catholic children in some of nation's poorest
neighborhoods," the president said. "I am worried that too many
of these schools are closing, and our nation needs to do
something about it."
  The fourth annual breakfast -- established in 2004 in
response to Pope John Paul II's appeal for a "new
evangelization" -- attracted political and religious leaders,
including Supreme Court Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr.,
Supreme Court Justice Samuel A. Alito Jr., and the Most. Rev.
Pietro Sambi, the Vatican's envoy to the United States.
  Washington Archbishop Donald W. Wuerl lauded the history of
faith's influence on U.S. public policy and called on the nearly
1,500 attendees to continue the legacy.
  "As believers, we look to our faith," Archbishop Wuerl said
at the Washington Hilton. "We should look to our most deeply
held convictions when we address matters that affect our
nation's activities at home or abroad."
  Archbishop Wuerl pointed to issues that still demand
attention, including abortion, immigration and education.
  "Religious faith has played and continues to play a
significant role in promoting social justice issues just as it
has in defending all innocent human life," he said.
  Mr. Bush also made reference to abortion, stem-cell research
and human cloning.
  "Renewing the promise of America begins with upholding the
dignity of human life," Mr. Bush said.
  "In our day, there is a temptation to manipulate life in
ways that do not respect the humanity of the person. When that
happens, the most vulnerable among us can be valued for their
utility to others -- instead of their own inherent worth."
  After the event, Mr. Bush met at the White House in the
afternoon with parochial school leaders and parents from across
the nation.
  The closing of Catholic schools, especially in low-income
neighborhoods, is "a national concern" for the National
Catholic Education Association, said NCEA President Karen
Ristau.
  Mr. Bush wants to expand school choice, similar to what
exists in Washington, to states across the country. His proposal
for reauthorizing No Child Left Behind would include funds for
scholarships that would allow students in low-performing schools
to transfer to private schools.
  The president's reauthorization plan would also push for
more Catholic schools to be allowed by states to provide
after-school tutoring to public school students.


http://www.washingtontimes.com/national/20070414-122242-3837r.htm



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