Jan Resseger writes here about a lawsuit against vouchers filed by 100 school districts and the Ohio Coalition for Equity and Adequacy.
She begins:
On Tuesday, 100 Ohio public school districts and the Ohio Coalition for Equity and Adequacy of School Funding filed a lawsuit challenging the legality of Ohio’s EdChoice Scholarship Program under the provisions of the Ohio Constitution. EdChoice is Ohio’s rapidly growing, publicly funded school voucher program.
The Cleveland Plain Dealer’s Laura Hancock reported: “A coalition of 100 school districts sued Ohio over private school vouchers Tuesday, saying that the hundreds of millions of public dollars funneled away from public schools have created an educational system that’s unconstitutional.”
The lead plaintiffs are Columbus City Schools, Cleveland Heights-University Heights City Schools, Richmond Heights Local School District, Lima City Schools, Barberton City Schools, Cleveland Heights parents on behalf of their minor sons—Malcolm McPherson and Fergus Donnelly, and the Ohio Coalition for Equity and Adequacy of School Funding. The Cleveland law firm of Walter Haverfield is representing the plaintiffs.
In their lawsuit, plaintiffs declare: “The EdChoice Scholarship Program poses an existential threat to Ohio’s public school system. Not only does this voucher program unconstitutionally usurp Ohio’s public tax dollars to subsidize private school tuitions, it does so by depleting Ohio’s foundation funding—the pool of money out of which the state funds Ohio’s public schools… The discrepancy in per pupil foundation funding is so great that some districts’ private school pupils receive, as a group, more in funding via EdChoice Vouchers than Ohio allocates in foundation funding for the entire public school districts where those students reside. This voucher program effectively cripples the public school districts’ resources, creates an ‘uncommon’, or private system of schools unconstitutionally funded by taxpayers, siphons hundreds of millions of dollars of taxpayer funds into private (and mostly religious) institutions, and discriminates against minority students by increasing segregation in Ohio’s public schools. Because private schools receiving EdChoice funding are not subject to Ohio’s Sunshine Laws or most other regulations applicable to public schools, these private facilities operate with impunity, exempt from public scrutiny despite the public funding that sustains them.”
Please open the link and read the rest of the post, which explains the grounds for the lawsuit.

Awesome!
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“Not only does this voucher program unconstitutionally usurp Ohio’s public tax dollars to
subsidize private school tuitions, it does so by depleting Ohio’s foundation funding – the pool of money out of which the state funds Ohio’s public schools – otherwise available to already-struggling school districts for the education of their students.”
It is long overdue for public schools in states to start fighting back in the courts. This lawsuit is based on the notion of “common” schools as stated in the state constitution. This law instead provides for “uncommon” schools that end up with more money than the public schools when funding simply follows the student. If public schools prevail in this lawsuit, it will help to establish a precedent in other states in which corrupt politicians scheme for ways to defund public education.
So-called scholarships are a tool to drain public school budgets. Florida, for example, has a similar “common schools” statement in its state constitution that has largely been ignored as a variety of “education products” can dip into public funds intended for common schools.
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“I, (name), do solemnly swear that
I will support the Constitution of
the United States and the
Constitution of Ohio…”
In 1991, the Ohio Coalition for
Equity & Adequacy of School Funding,
representing more than five hundred
school districts in Ohio, filed suit
in the Perry County courts against
the State of Ohio for failing to
provide adequate funding to educate
the state’s students.
(DeRolph v. State)
The Supreme Court of Ohio ruled
that the state’s method for funding
public education was unconstitutional.
“I, (name), do solemnly swear that
I will support the Constitution of
the United States and the
Constitution of Ohio…”
On Tuesday, 100 Ohio public school
districts and the Ohio Coalition
for Equity and Adequacy of School
Funding filed a lawsuit challenging
the legality of Ohio’s EdChoice
Scholarship Program under the
provisions of the Ohio Constitution.
George Santayana is credited with the
aphorism, “Those who cannot remember
the past are condemned to repeat it,”
Winston Churchill changed the quote
slightly when he said (paraphrased),
“those who fail to learn from history
are condemned to repeat it.”
What are words for doing the same
thing over and over again and expecting
different results?
Seeking solace through fantasy???
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“condemned” feels about right these days
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“What are words for doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results?”
Word: stupidity
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Words: Faith beliefs
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Salon, 12-19-2021, “Theocrats are coming for the school boards”, Mary Hasson of EPPC is identified in the article.
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