Caroline Hendrie, a veteran journalist who wrote for many years at EdWeek, wrote an overview of the implementation of vouchers (or “Education Savings Accounts“) in states that have endorsed “universal” access, removing almost all limits on access to them. Vouchers for rich and poor alike. As Josh Cowen has written in many articles, most students who use vouchers never attended public schools. And those from public schools who use vouchers are likely to do less well academically than the peers they left behind. No longer do you hear that vouchers will “save poor kids from failing public schools” because they don’t. In red states, they are a gift of public funds to families who happy to collect $6,000-$10,000 to underwrite their private school tuition.
Hendrie explains that voucher fans fall into two camps: On one side are those who want voucher families to restrict their use of public funds only to authorized expenditures, like tuition, tutoring, computers, school supplies. On the others are parents who say they want no restriction on what they purchase.
Like Florida, the states of Arkansas, Iowa, and Utah have all enacted laws this year that would open ESAs—sometimes after a multiyear phase-in—to most if not all school-age children in their states. Those four followed Arizona and West Virginia, which started implementing similar universal programs in 2022.
That wave plus other legislative action in 2023 brought to 13 the number of states with one or more education savings account programs funded directly from state revenues. In addition, Missouri has an operating ESA program paid for through tax credits.
Amid this growth, controversies have flared over ESA implementation—most notably but not exclusively in Arizona.
Critics complain that voucher money has been spent on non-education expenses, like swimming pools, kayaks, bbq grills, greenhouses, chicken coops, pianos, pizza ovens, and trampolines.
But parent groups have advocated for maximum flexibility, in which parents get a debit card and are free to purchase whatever they want, with no oversight.
Of course, vouchers create new for-profit opportunities. A company named ClassWallet has emerged to provide financial services to voucher states.
In 2019, Arizona contracted with the company ClassWallet to facilitate ESA transactions on its online spending-management portal. ClassWallet is also used by ESA programs in Indiana, Missouri, New Hampshire, and North Carolina.
On its website, the Florida-based ClassWallet lists its offerings:
ClassWallet is a digital wallet with an integrated eCommerce marketplace, automated ACH direct deposit, and reloadable debit card with pre-approval workflows and audit-ready transaction reporting. ClassWallet reduces overhead costs, saves valuable time, and better visibility and control for decentralized purchases.
Save Our Schools Arizona, which led the campaign to stop voucher expansion in 2018, is convinced that the state’s new commitment to universal vouchers will prove harmful to public schools, where most students are enrolled.
Save Our Schools Arizona, which advocates for public schools and opposes the 2022 ESA program expansion, argues that ongoing disputes over implementing the broader program prove it has become, as the organization’s executive director, Beth Lewis, puts it, “too big to succeed.”
Lewis said that the program is “wide open” for fraud. “It is interesting to watch my taxpayer dollars be used to build a garden in everybody’s backyard, when my public school can’t afford one,” she said. “It’s just this unspoken rule of, if you see it in a public school, then it’s approvable.”
Other states should view Arizona’s move to universal eligibility not as a model but as a cautionary tale, Lewis argues. She sees evidence of that happening in states such as Arkansas and Iowa, where newly passed laws call for incremental, multiyear expansions before getting to universal eligibility.
“I think they looked at Arizona and saw that this is a complete disaster and is not serving families well,” Lewis said. “There’s no way to ensure transparency. And they said, ‘Well, at the very least, we need to phase this in.’”
School-choice advocates tend to defend Arizona and see its uneven expansion process as par for the course when states try something different to promote educational freedom.
The last thing the choice lobby worries about (if ever) is the well-being of public schools, even though they enroll the vast majority of students in the state.

Vouchers, like Charters are BAD!
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“Other choice supporters see such fears as overblown. Enlow of EdChoice said he gets “really frustrated” by predictions of negative publicity eroding support for ESAs.”
What support for ESAs? The public never votes for any of these schemes.
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The public always votes against referenda to send public funds to private schools, aka vouchers.
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We’ll be losing two public school supporters in LAUSD to retirement. This morning’s Los Angeles Times tells of Jackie Goldberg and George McKenna’s plans to retire which would open the corporate education reformer wallets in upcoming elections. I fear for the future of the district and hope we can push for pubic school supporters to replace them. Mr. Blume has been a charter-friendly writer for the LA Times for many years. (In 2015 the Broad Foundation helped pay for LA Times education reporting so go figure). https://www.latimes.com/california/story/2023-08-02/goldberg-mckenna-l-a-education-icons-will-not-seek-reelection-to-board-of-education
“Jackie Goldberg, George McKenna, LAUSD ‘pillars,’ will not seek school board reelection
By Howard Blume Staff Writer Aug. 2, 2023 3 AM PT
Jackie Goldberg, a veteran state lawmaker, city council member and current president of Los Angeles Board of Education, on Tuesday announced that she would not seek another term, departing from the board along with her retiring colleague, George McKenna, who rose to fame in a movie about his career as a determined inner-city high school principal.
Both officials intend to serve out the remainder of their terms, which run through 2024.
Their departures throw open the future political course of the nation’s second-largest school system on such issues as school police, charter schools and even the priorities of L.A. schools Supt. Alberto Carvalho. In 2024, four seats, the majority of the seven-member board will be on the ballot. Both Goldberg and McKenna have been strong backers of Carvalho and were part of a unanimous school board that hired him in December of 2021.
“Jackie Goldberg and George McKenna are pillars in the Los Angeles Unified community,” Carvalho said Tuesday. “Their commitment, achievements and impact could never be captured in a single statement as their work has transcended what we often expect from public servants. Both are trailblazers on educational and social issues not only in our community, but across the entire nation.”
L.A. Mayor Karen Bass also extolled the two leaders.
“Both Dr. George McKenna and Jackie Goldberg have dedicated their lives to the betterment of this city by transforming the lives of countless students and teachers,” Bass said Tuesday. “Both leave legacies that will benefit generations to come.”
Both Goldberg and McKenna have carved out lengthy and notable careers.
Goldberg, 78, became school board president in January, 40 years after she previously held the job. In the interim, she had lengthy stints on the L.A. City Council and in the state Legislature. As a college student in the 1960s, she was a key leader in the landmark campus protest movement. She then began a lengthy tenure as an educator, starting in the late 1960s in Compton.
Los Angeles, California June 6, 2023-LAUSD school board member Jackie Goldberg holds up a book ‘The Great Big Book of Famialies’ during a board meeting in Los Angeles Tuesday. (Wally Skalij/Los Angeles Times)
“I got into this work, starting with teaching, because I wanted the best educational experience for teachers and students everywhere,” she said in a statement. “LAUSD is filled with the most astounding, remarkable, inspiring kids, and they are taught and supported by teachers and staff who fight hard every day for them.”
Before returning to the board in 2019, she had been semiretired — and would once in a while make public comments at board meetings. She was especially adept at fiery oratory directed at pending school board decisions. The teachers union and other supporters pressed her to return to the other side of the dais after the resignation of Ref Rodriguez over campaign-finance violations.
Her name and reputation proved unbeatable in a special election to serve out the unfinished term and in a subsequent reelection bid.
Her District 5 comprises most of the northeast in L.A. Unified, including Eagle Rock, Glassell Park and Echo Park. To the southeast, it includes the cities of Huntington Park, Maywood and South Gate.
A distinctive feature of Goldberg’s presidency has been a focus on making public meetings more understandable and accessible. Even at times when she appears frustrated or exhausted, she explains patiently and carefully how the board is conducting its business. And she has strived to make sure that meetings and public comments start on time — which was not the common practice.
But she can still call up her oratory skills, as she did recently in defending a Gay Pride assembly at an elementary school. Goldberg also was a trailblazer as an openly lesbian elected official.
As a politician, McKenna, 82, proved equally unbeatable — even though he never thought of himself as one.
“I am and will always be an educator,” McKenna said in an interview with the Los Angeles Sentinel, in which he made his announcement. “I never asked to be a politician and was elected reluctantly due to the unfortunate passing of my friend.”
He was referring to Marguerite Poindexter LaMotte, who died while in office in 2013. As with Goldberg, admirers lobbied him to run — and his bid, too, was backed by the teachers union, United Teachers Los Angeles.
“I have been able to make a difference in some ways, and not as much as I would like in others,” McKenna told the Sentinel.
McKenna grew up in segregated New Orleans, a high achiever who majored in math and became a math teacher.
He achieved his greatest fame relatively early in his career as the hard-charging young principal of Washington Preparatory High School, for a decade starting in 1979. The South L.A. campus enjoyed a renaissance of positive attention during his tenure. He became the inspiration for a movie in which he was portrayed by a young Denzel Washington.
McKenna later became a superintendent for several years at nearby Inglewood Unified, where his plain speaking and righteous impatience did not always play so well within political and education bureaucracy. He also was entrusted with senior leadership roles in the Compton and Pasadena school districts as well as in L.A. Unified.
The board’s only Black member, he has focused especially on spurring efforts for Black student achievement. He’s also been a staunch supporter of school police — departing strongly from the anti-police position of the teachers union. He has refrained from second-guessing Carvalho — giving the superintendent one less political minefield to navigate. His District 1 stretches west from Koreatown to Mid-City to the Westside and south to Baldwin Hills and South L.A.
Goldberg and McKenna were elected with strong teachers union support — and their departure could usher in a new political dynamic. The races to succeed them are likely to be hotly contested and expensive.
The two veteran officials — who’ve had health issues in recent years — were under some pressure to make a decision because the fundraising window for the school board campaigns opens Sept. 5.”
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That’s sad news. Goldberg and McKenna are outstanding board members. You are right that the charter money will swamp the next school board election. You are wrong about Howard Blume of the LA Times. He is an excellent journalist. Unbiased.
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Blume farmed me for charter data in the mid 90s when I first started researching and speaking out against LAUSD’s lack of oversight with special education students enrolled in (and counseled out) of charters. Giving me the impression he’d use it for writing an article about discriminatory enrollment practices, he sat on my data findings then and gave charters benefit-of-the-doubt treatment for years without providing the full facts to the public – facts he had in hand early on.
No one at the Los Angeles Times has called out Nick Melvoin for his duplicitous actions either (see link following) and for years has usually supported the corporate charter candidates. He may be somewhat unbiased now, but hasn’t been in the past. Had those stories been written earlier, we may not be in such a mess now. https://michaelkohlhaas.org/2019/07/31/it-appears-that-icky-sticky-nicky-melvoin-revealed-confidential-attorney-client-information-from-lausds-office-of-the-general-counsel-to-the-california-charter-school-association-in-a-secret-meeting/
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Sonja, I’m sorry to hear that. I am obviously a critic of charters, and Howard Blume has always given me a fair shake, including interviews on his radio show.
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Howard Blume has a tendency to interview charter and testing favoring astroturf groups without giving equal time to us teachers. And I will never forget when the Times published all the elementary teachers’ VAM scores and personal information and sued us for the secondary teachers’ data. I remember the resulting death. Blume led the charge. He never apologized. He has a lot of unbiased reporting to do to make up for his mistakes.
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THat was the two Jason’s at the LA Times who led the charge on concocting VAM scores, then releasing them to the public. The Jason’s wrote the articles. It was Disgusting. Roberto Ruelas should never be forgotten.
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And I appreciate that he has treated you well, Diane. That is important and not to be overlooked. But it’s not enough.
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Oh, you are right, Diane. I forgot about the Jasons and projected onto Howard Blume. Apologies. I wish Blume would get UTLA’s perspective more often, though.
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I somehow recall that the two Jasons fared poorly after their bombshell story. Did you ever read John Ewing’s “Mathematical Intimidation”? It destroys the LA Times on VAM.
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I was just going back in time on the blog, and I saw your reply, Diane. No, I haven’t read Mathematical Intimidation. But I’m about to as soon as my order arrives. Thank you. The best part of the blog for me is the books!
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It’s an article, not a book. But maybe he turned it into a book. I think you can download the article. You will love it.
Click to access rtx110500667p.pdf
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Oh, I see it’s a paper, not a book, and available as a pdf. That’s easy.
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Class Wallet is not currently being used in FL. Guess the “lower overhead” would cut into the profits of the “nonprofit” agency currently in charge of FL ESAs, Step Up 4 Students…
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How much is the CEO being paid to monitor Step Up for Students in Florida?
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Accountability should always accompany public funds. Otherwise, handing out free public funds without strings results in waste, fraud, embezzling and profiteering. What happened to Covid funds and federal charter school funds provide insight into what happens to funds without accountability. There should academic accountability as well. If public schools are subjected to public scrutiny, private vendors should be held to the same standards. If the right wing believes the private sector does a better job, they should have to prove it.
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You’re right, but Utah, at least, is doing none of that. Strings attached for public schools, but not for vouchers.
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“Accountability should always accompany public funds.”
Tell that to the US Military. . . the largest, by far, death and destruction machine in the world.
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