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Charlie Crist says Rick Scott cut Bright Futures in half
Former Gov. Charlie Crist continued his attacks on Gov. Rick Scott’s education funding record in a TV ad set at St. Petersburg High School, Crist’s alma mater.
"This isn’t just a doorway to a school. It was my doorway as a public school kid to opportunity. And I want to make sure every child has that same chance for a better life," Crist says in the ad. "But Rick Scott's education cuts are closing that door on Florida's kids, spending almost $200 less per student than when I was governor and cutting Bright Futures scholarships in half."
Here we will fact-check whether Scott cut Bright Futures scholarships in half.
Bright Futures funding and scholarships
Launched in 1997, Bright Futures is the higher education scholarship program funded by the Lottery and designed to keep high-achieving students at Florida schools.
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The program’s costs spiraled up from an initial price tag of $70 million in 1997 to $437 million in 2011. Those rising costs led the Legislature to rein in the program.
In 2010, Crist’s last year as governor, the Legislature reduced Bright Futures scholarships by $1 dollar for every credit hour. The law also raised SAT/ACT requirements incrementally over a few years, which was expected to lead to a drop in the number of students who would qualify. For example, the Legislature raised the minimum SAT requirement for Florida Medallion Scholars -- one subset of Bright Futures -- from 970 in 2010-11 to 1050 in 2013-14.
So that means that the Legislature and Crist reduced the number of eligible students in the future, after Scott took over as governor. When Scott took over, he and the Legislature continued on that same path -- but made it even harder for students to qualify.
In 2011, Scott’s first year as governor, the Legislature decided to further raise test scores for 2013-14 graduates. For example, those Medallion Scholars would now have to score 1170 on their SAT by 2013-14.
When Crist says that under Scott the scholarships were cut in "half," it’s possible for viewers to mistakenly believe that refers to total dollars spent, or the amount of individual scholarships. Instead, what the ad is referring to is the number of scholarships distributed.
The text on the screen shows that it refers to a May 2014 Sun-Sentinel editorial criticizing Bright Futures cuts, and this is what the Crist campaign pointed us to regarding the ad. As the requirements rose, not surprisingly the number of students who obtained the scholarship has dropped.
Due to the tougher standards, "the number of new Bright Futures scholarship students will be cut almost in half – from 41,107 last fall to 21,340 this fall," the editorial board wrote.
That number for this fall is based on an estimate from the state regarding how many students will qualify. After schools verify that scholarship recipients enrolled in eligible courses, the schools submit for reimbursement to the state -- and that’s when we learn the actual number of scholarships that were used.
Here are recent years’ numbers on Bright Futures. The spending picture is not settled for the current and future fiscal years, so we have included an estimate for 2013-14 and 2014-15.
Budget Year
Initial students disbursed
Total number of students served
Amount of money disbursed
Average award per student
50,499
159,170
$379.8 million
$2,387
52,497
169,366
$429 million
$2,533
53,520
177,612
$423.5 million
$2,385
53,800
179,076
$423.3 million
$2,364
51,751
174,047
Verificación destacada
$333.8 million
$1,918
44,846
162,980
$312.1 million
$1,915
2013-14 estimated
41,107
154,160
$309.4 million
$2,007
2014-15 estimated
21,340
127,573
$266.2 million
$2,087
Source: Florida Department of Education
We think there are three main issues with the accuracy of the ad:
• The ad could create the false impression that the amount of money per scholarship (or total money) was cut in half, when it’s actually referring to the number of scholarships.
• The number of scholarships dropping by a half is based on the state’s estimate of how many will qualify this fall. But we don’t yet know the final number.
• Though the ad points the finger at Scott, Crist also oversaw changes to Bright Futures that reduced the number of eligible students during Scott’s administration.
Our ruling
A Crist TV ad says Scott cut Bright Futures scholarships "in half."
Viewers could mistakenly think that Scott cut the dollar amount of scholarships in half -- but he didn’t. Instead, Crist’s campaign zeroed in on the number of scholarships that were distributed last year compared to an estimate for the upcoming school year.
While the ad blames Scott, under Crist the Legislature also raised the standards to reduce the number of scholarships awarded. Scott and the Legislature later raised the standards again, which is projected to reduce the number more.
The statement is partially accurate but leaves out important details. We rate it Half True.
Nuestras fuentes
Former Gov. Charlie Crist campaign, "Doorway" TV ad, July 23, 2014
Sun-Sentinel editorial, "Bright Futures’ broken promise," May 12, 2014
Florida Department of Education, Florida Bright Futures Scholarship Program, accessed March 20, 2014
Florida Department of Education, Florida student scholarships and grant programs, 1997-2012
Florida Office of Economic and Demographic Research, Bright Futures consensus estimate, March 5, 2014
Florida College Access Network policy brief, "College affordability adrift: Florida’s Bright Futures program faces $347 million in cuts by 2017-18," April 2014
Miami Herald’s Naked Politics blog, "Feds investigate Florida Bright Futures scholarships," March 24, 2014
PolitiFact, "Rick Scott presided over Bright Futures cut, Democratic PAC says," April 1, 2014
Miami Herald, "Change to Bright Futures scholarships hits poor, minorities," April 6, 2013
Miami Herald, "Feds investigate Florida’s Bright Futures scholarships," March 22, 2014
PolitiFact, "Scott says all 4-year state colleges offer $10,000 degrees," March 4, 2014
PolitiFact, "Rick Scott presided over Bright Futures cut, Democratic PAC says," April 1, 2014
Interview, Cheryl Etters, spokeswoman Florida Department of Education, July 23, 2014
Interview, Greg Blair, spokesman Gov. Rick Scott campaign, July 23, 2014
Interview, Kevin Cate, spokesman former Gov. Charlie Crist campaign, July 23, 2014
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