This article is republished with permission from our friends at Cascade Policy Institute.

Families in five states now have access to a special program called Educational Savings Accounts.

Educational Saving Accounts, or ESAs, allow parents to take money the state otherwise would spend on their children in the public system and put it on a restricted use debit card. Parents can spend this money on a wide variety of approved educational options, including private school, individual tutoring, online classes, and other services. Any money not used is rolled over for parents to spend in the future.

The Friedman Foundation for Educational Choice surveyed Arizona families to see how they are choosing to spend the resources allocated for their kids. The survey found that more than a third of participating families used ESAs for multiple educational purposes, not just private school tuition. It also found that families saved a significant amount of their ESA money for future expenses.

This indicates that ESAs not only expand the learning options available to individual children, but they also encourage fiscal discipline within education spending.

Parents and lawmakers in nearly a dozen states, including Oregon, are working to make this flexible learning option available to more children. The next generation of education reform in America needs to embrace flexibility to meet the needs of every child, and Educational Savings Accounts are proving to be a simple but powerful way to do just that.

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EDITOR”S NOTE: Utah has a Education Saving Plan, but it is not like an Educational Saving Accounts.  The Utah Educational Savings Plan (UESP) is a nonprofit 529 college savings plan. 529 plans are tax-advantaged savings vehicles designed to encourage individuals to begin to save for the future costs of higher education. Utah Standard News would be in full support of establishing a Educational Saving Account.