This news just in from the Education Law Center about resistance to vouchers in Tennessee. Vouchers are a huge waste of public money. Studies in recent years have converged on the conclusion that students who use vouchers fall behind their peers who remain in public school. Meanwhile, the public schools lose money that is diverted to subpar voucher schools. Why do politicians like Governor Lee of Tennessee want to spend public dollars on low-quality religious schools?
Here is a press release from the Education Law Center:
The plaintiffs in McEwen v. Lee, a case challenging Tennessee’s unconstitutional Education Savings Account voucher law passed in 2019, have filed an amicus curiae (friend of the court) brief in an appeal of a companion challenge to the law.
In Metropolitan Government of Nashville & Davidson County v. Tennessee Department of Education, Shelby and Davidson Counties – the two counties targeted by the voucher law – obtained an injunction blocking the voucher program while the case is on appeal. Because the law applies only to students in those counties, the Davidson County Chancery Court ruled that it violates the state constitution’s Home Rule provision, which prohibits the state legislature from passing laws targeting specific counties without local approval. The case is now before the Tennessee Court of Appeals, with oral argument scheduled for August 5.
The McEwen lawsuit, brought by public school parents and community members in Nashville and Memphis, is on hold pending the appeal in Metro Government. The McEwen plaintiffs have filed an amicus brief in support of the Metro Government plaintiffs to emphasize several key points.
First, the McEwen plaintiffs’ brief affirms that the plaintiffs in both cases have standing to challenge the voucher statute, meaning they are legally entitled to file their lawsuits. Second, the brief explains that the State of Tennessee has a constitutional duty to fund public schools but has no such duty to fund private schools. The brief also explains that because the voucher program would be funded with taxpayer dollars intended for Metro Nashville Public Schools and Shelby County Schools, it would severely harm those counties’ ability to maintain adequately funded public schools.
Finally, the McEwen plaintiffs’ amicus brief responds to several amicus briefs filed by voucher proponents in support of the State of Tennessee’s position. These briefs assert that voucher programs benefit students and public schools. In response, In response, the McEwen plaintiffs demonstrate how the history of private school vouchers is steeped in efforts to preserve racial segregation, and voucher programs continue to exacerbate school segregation. Research also shows that vouchers fail to improve students’ academic outcomes and drain money from already underfunded public schools, harming students and communities.
The McEwen plaintiffs are represented by Education Law Center and the Southern Poverty Law Center, which collaborate on the Public Funds Public Schools (PFPS) campaign to ensure public education funds are used exclusively to maintain, support and strengthen public schools. The plaintiffs are also represented by the American Civil Liberties Union of Tennessee and represented pro bono by the law firm Robbins Geller Rudman & Dowd LLP.
The Court of Appeals will hear oral argument in the Metro Government case on August 5 at 1 p.m. CT. A livestream will be accessible here, and a video recording will be available here.
Press Contact:
Sharon Krengel
Policy and Outreach Director
Education Law Center
60 Park Place, Suite 300
Newark, NJ 07102
973-624-1815, ext. 24
skrengel@edlawcenter.org
Lee also announced today that his people would come up with a plan to let the community know if school Covid cases pop up. He had previously cited hippa laws to defend a policy of keeping Covid in the schools a secret. He did a similar move a few weeks back when he got flak for not giving the death toll by county.
Definition: Trollee: a governor who is taking his constituents on a ride.
Lee is an abomination.
If any child or teacher does, he done it.
It’s good to see some still fight in Tennessee.
This bill targets Democratic cities, clearly, and omits irritating Knoxville or Chattanooga. It is clearly a partisan political attack.
In Ohio, our expert on a related matter, William L. Phillis, had this take on a funding issue for public, charter, and private schools brought forward by the Espinoza decision
Begin quote:
Ohio law provides that charter schools are public. The same is true in other states. Then why was the charter industry eligible (and has received) hundreds of millions in federal stimulus money assigned to small businesses. The answer is that charters are businesses not public education institutions. Lawmakers have labeled charters as public so that charters can collect public tax dollars.
Charters have no geographic base or public taxing authority. They are operated by private individuals and/or groups. Unlike public entities, although they receive public funds, they operate as private enterprises, free of many, if not most government regulations, pertaining to public education. A body of case law finds that charters are comparable to publicly-subsidized private schools.
Some future court ruling could declare charters as private schools subsidized by public funds. That would open the possibility of religious groups to open charter schools. Under Espinoza, the states would be required to fund religious charters on the same basis as secular charters.
The U.S. Supreme Court in Espinoza held that if a state subsidizes private schools, it cannot withhold the subsidy from religious private schools. End quote.
I think the dismantling of public education will continue with legal cases about the only way to resist these efforts. Legal cases are expensive, and they require specialized expertise. Thanks to all who help us learn about education cases and laws.
Great news from Missouri-
In a primary yesterday, DFER’s Democrat, a member of the Congressional Black Caucus and establishment Dem- Lacy Clay, was defeated by a progressive, BLM candidate, Justice Democrat, Cori Bush.
Reportedly, during the election, Clay gave $180,000 of his campaign money to his sister’s law firm. All Republicans are in office to profit themselves and their families and some establishment Dems are there for the same reason.
Did you see this, Linda?:
https://crooksandliars.com/2020/08/nuclear-bibles-cause-blow-charleston-navy
Another case from May-
An Army chaplain e-mailed John Piper’s books to 35 of his subordinates. Piper is known for his opposition to the ordination of women. (As expected, the anti-woman bias gets euphemistic labeling- Complementarianism.)
Apparently, Piper’s writings about calamities like Covid as God’s curse for sins prompted the book’s dissemination.
John Piper is from Minneapolis. I could speculate his opinion about BLM.
WaPo recently published an interview (Jennifer Rubin) with the author of a new book that describes how white supremacy infected Christianity and the Republican Party.
Rep. Clay was supported by Dem establishment.
Cori Bush was endorsed by Justice Democrats, Senator Sanders and the newly famous Jamaal Bowman.
a sentence which brings much hope in the midst of current chaos