Kris Nordstrom of the North Carolina Justice Center reports on a shocking study of the state’s voucher program. It found that a significant number of voucher schools receive more vouchers than they have students. Most of those profiting by the state’s negligence are religious schools.
Will anyone care?
He wrote:
This session, General Assembly leaders have placed a massive expansion of the state’s voucher program at the top of their education agenda. Legislative leaders in both the House and the Senate want to triple the program’s size by opening it to wealthy families who have already enrolled their children in private schools. But new data shows that the existing program lacks adequate oversight and is potentially riven with fraud.
Data from the two agencies charged with overseeing private schools and North Carolina’s Opportunity Scholarship voucher program show several cases where schools have received more vouchers than they have students. Several other private schools have received voucher payments from the state after they have apparently closed.
The Department of Administration’s Division of Non-Public Education (DNPE) compiles annual directories of active private schools. The North Carolina State Education Assistance Authority (SEAA) publishes data showing the number of voucher recipients at each private school.
An analysis of this data shows 62 times where a school received more vouchers than they had students.
For example, Mitchener University Academy in Johnston County reported a total enrollment of 72 students in 2022. That same year, the state sent them vouchers for 149 students. Based on this data, either every student received two vouchers, or the school pocketed about $230,000 of state money for students that never existed….
The actual number could be higher. Since 2015, 449 vouchers have been awarded to schools that failed to report their enrollment to DNPE.
In addition, 23 schools continued to receive vouchers after they stopped reporting to DNPE altogether. It’s unclear whether these schools were operating in the years they received vouchers. For example, Crossroads Christian School of Statesville submitted reports to DNPE from 2009 through 2019. They stopped reporting to DNPE in 2020. Yet that same year, the school received $57,300 for 15 voucher students, even though it’s unclear whether the school was operating for the entire school year.
These data discrepancies should represent a major red flag for lawmakers pushing voucher expansion. These discrepancies could represent innocent mistakes, or they could represent massive fraud. Unfortunately, lawmakers have failed to equip either DNPE or SEAA with the staff or authority to determine the reason for the discrepancies.

It’s amazing to me that the same political party that works constantly to prevent even one person, who MIGHT be able to work, gets a food stamp, is in full support of their rich private school operators get vouchers for non existent students.
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That’s because convenient political myths alway trump (only way I’ll use that word) reality (facts), scope (I “saw” it, so I know it’s real), and context (i.e., Lincoln was a Republican).
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Soundtrack for post:
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In N.C. most of the voucher money goes to protestant Christian schools unlike states like Ohio, where the overwhelming amount of money goes to Catholic schools. N.C.’s religious right have developed law templates with the state Catholic Conferences or, they have acted independently.
The photo/video accompanying a Fox story (6-12-2023) about school choice’s MVP this year features the Executive Director of the Oklahoma Catholic Diocese. The article is written by Ashley Hayek of America First Works and America First Policy Institute and, Corey DeAngelis.
The article’s content disparages the head of the teachers’ union. The article’s snark is that the union head is the “valuable player” that makes parents dislike public schools, not the diocese. Fox chooses not to identify the libertarian financial backers of astroturfers for school choice nor that they loathe collective bargaining which aims at a fair shake for the people who toil for the bread that the wealthy eat, as described by Lincoln.
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America First Policy is described as a dark money group led by Trump’s Larry Kudlow. Kudlow is a Catholic convert of the D.C.-based, disgraced Father McCloskey. Axios identified the first year budget of America First at $20 mil. News articles describe the group’s first TV ad buy as, $5 mil. for Amy Comey Barrett’s confirmation. America First has links to Charlie Kirk and Heritage Action.
A couple of “btw” – In 2011, Patrick Wolf of the University of Arkansas wrote, “School Choice and the Branding of Catholic Schools.” Secondly, media reported that three Catholic dioceses and the Kansas Catholic Conference donated $3.5 mil. combined in support of an anti-abortion initiative on the ballot in Kansas.
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Well! I for one am gobsmacked! Fraud in the voucher system. Never would have thunk it.
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Roy I used to be fully naive and wholly optimistic about such things. Now I’m a confuse cross between naive optimism and skeptical pessimism, with fringes of nihilism and hope. Sigh . . . . CBK
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They should just do a big Oprah show in NC. If they looked under their seats, “…you get a voucher, and you get a voucher and you get a voucher…
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