Republican Oklahoma Gov. Kevin Stitt touted school choice legislation on Monday as the state legislature continues to debate its individual education plans.
In the 2023 legislative session, the Oklahoma House and Senate passed differentiating school choice legislations to establish a tax credit to fund students outside the public school system, though the higher chamber’s bill puts a household income cap of $250,000 on the initiative, according to KFOR News.
While the chambers continue to debate, Stitt, though in favor of no eligibility cap, called for a compromise to get the school choice legislation “across the finish line,” he told the Daily Caller News Foundation.