This report by the National Committee for Responsive Philanthropy dates from 2007, yet it is still a powerful and important read.

It lists every foundation that gives substantial funding to school privatization. By privatization, the report refers specifically to vouchers and education tax credits. It does not include funding for charters, which have become the main vehicle for promoting school choice and privatization since this report was written.

At the top of the funders of vouchers and education tax credits: The Lynde and Harry Bradley Foundation (Wis), Sarah Scaife Foundation (PA), Annenberg Foundation (PA), Jacqueline Hume Foundation (CA), Samuel Roberts Noble Foundation (OK), Lilly Endowment (IND), Mathile Family Foundation (OH), the Roe Foundation (SC), the Carthage Foundation (PA), ExxonMobil Foundation (TX).

And it lists the organizations that receive the most funding to promote school privatization. At the top: the Heritage Foundation, the Hoover Institution, the American Enterprise Institute, the Manhattan Institute, CATO Institute, Parents Advancing Choice in Education (PACE), Focus on the Family, Institute for Justice, National Center for Policy Analysis, and the Oklahoma Council for Public Affairs.

Another list contains the names of the foundations that give the most money to advocates for privatization, in this order: The Walton Family Foundation, the Lynde and Harry Bradley Foundation, Sarah Scaife Foundation, Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, John Templeton Foundation, Herrick Foundation, etc. There are many more on this list.

These lists would certainly have changed in the past 8 years, with new entries and substantially more funding for privatization.

It is interesting to watch the changes in the three reports on the same subject by the NCRP. The first and second see privatization as a distinct threat not only to our public schools, but to our democracy.

The third, published in 2015, is generally complimentary towards the Walton Family Foundation’s effort to increase equity by expanding privatization.

Let us hope that the NCRP soon returns to advocating for the common good rather than for a strategy that will increase segregation, enrich entrepreneurs, and eliminate unions.