But a recent Heritage Foundation report offers a fuller picture of the significance of the scholarship program: it's helping kids in the most dangerous public-school system in the country. A 2007 U.S. Education Department study shows that in 2005, 12.1 percent of D.C. students in grades 9 through 12 "reported being threatened or injured with a weapon on school property during the previous 12 months."

That's higher than any state in the Union and is well above the national average (7.9 percent). During the 2007-2008 school year, there were 1,828 incidences of crime reported at D.C. public schools, almost half of them involving violence.

Crime is such a reality in the lives of D.C. schoolchildren that 17 percent of the charter group of parents who signed up for the scholarship program considered safety their top reason for doing so.

That elected officials in Washington refuse to fully consider these readily accessible numbers, choosing instead to turn their backs on the children whose lives could be transformed -- even saved-- by this program is a true shame. They're choosing abdication in a modern-day civil-rights movement. Sometime before it adjourns for the summer, Congress will be holding hearings on the future of D.C. Opportunity's future. Dan Lips, co-author of the Heritage report, offers a message to members: "The Obama administration has said that they will prioritize funding for education initiatives by supporting programs that work. If that's the case, they should strongly favor continuing and expanding the D.C. Opportunity Scholarship Program. The evidence is clear: students in the program are improving academically compared to their peers who remain in public school. And the evidence also shows that they are in a safer learning environment, which is really important to D.C. parents given the problems in the public school system."

It's important, too, that Congress pays attention to what's going on in its back yard. Lives depend on it.