Republicans introduce increase in tax credits for private school scholarships into General Assembly

Georgia Rep. John Carson

Date: January 27, 2023

by Dave Williams | Jan 24, 2023 | Capitol Beat News Service

ATLANTA – Georgia House Republicans are backing legislation that would increase the statewide cap on income tax credits offered to donors to a fund that provides private school scholarships.

House Bill 54, introduced by state Rep. John Carson, R-Marietta, would raise the cap from the current $120 million per year to $200 million.

The program offered $58 million in tax credits through 2018, then was increased to $100 million in 2019 and $120 million this year.

“Every time the General Assembly has lifted the cap – as is proposed again this year – Georgia donors have immediately matched it,” said Christy Riggins, director of the American Federation for Children’s Georgia chapter.

“This past year, requests to give through the program reached $150 million, well past the current $120 million cap. Georgians believe in this program and have proven they think it is a great use for their tax dollars.”  

Legislative Democrats have opposed using state tax credits to help fund private school scholarships as diverting government resources to private education.

Carson’s bill has yet to be assigned to a House committee.

This story is available through a news partnership with Capitol Beat News Service, a project of the Georgia Press Educational Foundation.

What to Read Next

The Author

Comment Policy

The Augusta Press encourages and welcomes reader comments; however, we request this be done in a respectful manner, and we retain the discretion to determine which comments violate our comment policy. We also reserve the right to hide, remove and/or not allow your comments to be posted.

The types of comments not allowed on our site include:

  • Threats of harm or violence
  • Profanity, obscenity, or vulgarity, including images of or links to such material
  • Racist comments
  • Victim shaming and/or blaming
  • Name calling and/or personal attacks;
  • Comments whose main purpose are to sell a product or promote commercial websites or services;
  • Comments that infringe on copyrights;
  • Spam comments, such as the same comment posted repeatedly on a profile.