School choice is a high-risk taxpayer-funded experiment. Don't change Kentucky's Constitution.

Like salmon swimming home to spawn, lobbyists are again roaming the hallways of the Kentucky State Capitol.

This year, big-dollar lobbyists representing corporate-run private schools and churches are pushing House Bill 208 to change the state’s constitution to allow politicians to throw millions of tax dollars into private and religious schools.

Other states have tried this risky school choice experiment

The bad news is, other states are trying this risky experiment and it’s busting their budgets and turning into welfare for wealthy people and churches.

For example, Indiana’s government is forcing every taxpayer to pay for private schools, and pandering Hoosier politicians are diverting $500 million dollars a year into vouchers. Ninety-nine percent of that voucher money is going to religious schools.

So, if private school lobbyists in Frankfort have their way, every time a Kentuckian buys a toaster, a Big Mac, or a Ford or Toyota, a portion of the sales tax will go to church-based schools, which generally pay no taxes and want a public handout.

Indiana is a tragic example of a state that started a voucher program aimed at low-income families, but now gives vouchers worth about $6,000 per child to families with incomes up to $220,000 per year. Most voucher recipients were already attending private schools before government swooped in and forced taxpayers to cover those costs.

Florida's 'vouchers for everybody'

Likewise, Florida now offers taxpayer-funded more than $8,000 private school vouchers to every school-aged kid, regardless of family income.

When it was signed into law last year, it was estimated that Florida’s “vouchers for everybody” would cost between $200 and $700 million a year. However, once this school year started with everybody eligible, the cost exploded, and is now estimated at between $2.8 and $4.2 billion, and about 70% of the new recipients were already attending private schools before vouchers.

As a gift (and re-election tool) from Florida politicians, individual voucher recipients can now spend taxpayer money on “instructional materials” such as theme park tickets, 55-inch TVs, video game consoles, skateboards, foosball tables and surfboards.

Meanwhile, Florida ranks 48 in teacher pay, and has about 12,000 teacher and support staff vacancies in its traditional public schools.

School choice lobbyist-created disaster is looming in Arizona

Another lobbyist-created disaster is looming in Arizona, where that state’s voucher program is estimated to cost taxpayers over $943 million in the current school year (creating a $319 million deficit for the 2024 fiscal year) and more than 53% of all new education spending is going to only eight percent of Arizona students.

In Arizona and other states where taxpayer vouchers are being spread around like manure on a pig farm, there’s minimal accountability or transparency for the use of taxpayer money in private schools. There’s little or no auditing of private school finances, testing of students, standards for teachers or parental rights as there are in public schools.

That’s because private school lobbyists pushed through legislation in those states that creates a shocking transfer of taxpayer money to churches and corporations that operate schools without rules – many hastily created, fly-by-night operations that can reject or dismiss any student they don’t want, or close without notice, leaving families in the lurch.

“We know that academic instability, bouncing around between schools, school closures, are really bad for children,” said Josh Cowen, a Michigan State University researcher who’s studied the impact of vouchers on students. “The last four voucher evaluations have shown test score drops from kids who moved from public to private school that are on par with what Hurricane Katrina did to learning rates in New Orleans – and more recently what Covid-19 did to test scores after exams began to resume.”

The Kentucky Constitution protects taxpayers from the high-risk experiment of taxpayer-funded school vouchers. The state shouldn’t change that so politicians can gamble with Kentuckians’ hard-earned money.

John Schaaf is an attorney living in Scott County, and he is the co-author of "The Hidden History of Kentucky Political Scandals" (History Press).  He had coffee with George Russell every Tuesday.
John Schaaf is an attorney living in Scott County, and he is the co-author of "The Hidden History of Kentucky Political Scandals" (History Press). He had coffee with George Russell every Tuesday.

John Schaaf is an attorney and co-author of “The Hidden History of Kentucky Political Scandals.” He can be emailed at John.Schaaf1975@gmail.com

This article originally appeared on Louisville Courier Journal: School voucher programs pose risk to Kentucky public school funding

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