For the first time ever, a state voucher program was canceled. The Illinois Legislature failed to renew “Invest in Kids,” which puts an end to vouchers in that state. Retired teacher Fred Klonsky explains in this post why Illinois had a voucher program and who was behind it.
He wrote on his blog:
The veto session of the Illinois General Assembly ended yesterday and in spite of a full court press by the state’s Republicans, the right-wing Illinois Policy Institute and the Catholic Church, the state’s million dollar tax credit voucher program was allowed to die.
Good riddance.
The original idea emerged during the administration of Illinois’ last Republican governor, Bruce Rauner.
The law allowed up to $75 million in tax revenue to be diverted to private schools each year. More than 250 million oof state dollars have now been siphoned off to private schools in our state.
Invest in Kids was only supposed to last five years. It was extended an extra year and voucher supporters wanted to extend it again and make it permanent.
Democratic governor JP Pritzker said that if the General Assembly passed an extension he would sign it.
Instead, the General Assembly adjourned taking no action and so it is done.
In 2017, when Invest in Kids was being considered, the schools in the Archdiocese of Chicago was losing money as Catholic school enrollment was declining.
What to do?
Cupich met with Chicago’s mayor Rahm Emanuel and Illinois governor Bruce Rauner and asked for a life-line.
Of course, the U.S. Constitution’s separation clause prohibits direct government support for religious schools.
But Cardinal Cupich, Bruce Rauner and with behind the scenes support by then-mayor Rahm Emanuel, created the idea of Invest in Kids tax credit as a workaround to the Constitutional prohibition.
Illinois’s program funded a considerable amount of discrimination with taxpayer money. Illinois Families for Public School found at least 85 schools in the Invest in Kids program, nearly 1 in 5, have anti-LGBTQ+ policies.
Only 13% of private schools in the Invest in Kids program last year reported to the Illinois State Board of Education that they served any special education students. The majority of schools in the program are Catholic schools, and four of six Catholic dioceses in Illinois have policies that say schools may refuse to accommodate students with disabilities.
Policies that discriminate against pregnant and parenting students, students who have had an abortion, English-language learners, students with disabilities, undocumented students, and more are widespread in Illinois voucher schools as well.
More specific examples include Yeshivas Tiferes Tzvi Academy of Chicago, which reserves the right to expel any student whose family listens to secular music. Westlake Christian Academy of Greyslake will not admit students if they or their custodial parents maintain a “lifestyle” that violates biblical principles; this would include “promiscuity, homosexual behavior, or other violations of the unique God-give roles of male and female.” In fact, Westlake only accepts students from families in which one parent is “a born-again Christian.”
Defeating the attempt to extend Invest in Kids represents a major defeat for vouchers and school privatization.
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A letter to the blog by reader Martin Gartzman described the small number of unfunded activists who fought against the renewal of the Illinois voucher program. The Illinois Families for Public Schools never lost hope. A true David beats Goliath story.
Illinois Families for Public Schools is a small group. It basically is 3-5 people at any given time, spearheaded by political activist Cassie Cresswell and retired educator Diane Horowitz. They have very little funding. They have no full-time employees and perhaps a couple of part-timers. Cassie is not an educator; she got involved in this work as a parent-activist. But there is zero doubt that without their advocacy and incredible organizing, we’d still have a school voucher program in Illinois. This little group was the engine behind the effort to end Invest in Kids. They got over 60 organizations to support the sunset of the voucher program! They provided the mechanism for other education and political activists to get involved. And they organized the two main teachers unions to make the Invest in Kids sunset a priority (while supplying the unions with much of the data and other “ammunition”).
This isn’t the first time they made the improbable happen. About two years ago, an amazingly ill-conceived proposal for the State testing system was sailing through the Illinois State Board of Education. It was the pet project of the then State Superintendent of Schools and was being pushed hard by a major testing company that was likely to get the ten-year contract to develop and administer the test. The skids were greased for its passage until Illinois Families for Public Schools got involved. The “sure thing” boondoggle turned out to be derailed by relentless opposition that was organized by Illinois Families for Public Schools. Again, there is zero doubt that without those efforts, Illinois K-12 students would be languishing today under a disastrous state assessment system.
We owe a great debt of gratitude to this small group of activists.

Cassie, Diane and Illinois Families for Public Schools are a force to be reckoned with! I am proud to know them and to have to worked with them for the last few years! Public funds are for public schools!
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Congratulations Illinois public school families! Cassie, it was such a pleasure to meet you at NPE this year!
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Great news. I wonder what will happen in Flor-uh-duh when the full bill comes due. By that time, a lot of parents who are sending their kids to religious schools using vouchers will have an investment in the continuance of the program, but it will be bankrupting the state.
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Florida needs to have a new state referendum on vouchers. One was held in 2012, and voters opposed vouchers. Jeb wanted to strip language blocking vouchers out of the state constitution; he called his proposition the “Religious Freedom Act.” People had to vote against “religious freedom” to oppose vouchers. 55% did. So the state constitution still prohibits vouchers for religious schools. The state’s leaders decided to ignore the referendum. Some smart lawyers need to strengthen the language already in the state constitution.
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People may have to start a petition to put ending vouchers on the ballot in Florida. The state has been working to make it harder for citizen-led proposals to get on the ballot. DeSantis and the GOP are no champions of democracy. They want to dictate.
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Of course. The MAGA party believes in total control, and they go to great lengths to demolish democracy. Voter suppression, gerrymanders.
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Cassie is an amazing activist; she also led the fight for a strong IL student privacy law and co-chairs the Parent Coalition for Student Privacy with me. If you’d like to donate to her organization, you can do it here: https://www.ilfps.org/donate
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Thanks for the post and to the Illinois activists who recognized the critical need to stop the advance of the axis of Catholic theocrats and the Koch network.
The axis plots in every state to destroy democracy.
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“Yeshivas Tiferes Tzvi Academy of Chicago, which reserves the right to expel any student whose family listens to secular music.”
That was very alarming to me when I first read it because I did not know that until I read it here Friday night –and that school is close to where I live, so their families and 1500 students have been my neighbors since I moved here 8 years ago! In fact, just a few feet away from my building is a Save Our Scholarships sign, which I had been tempted to remove after learning that Pritzker (who I have otherwise adored for being as progresive as it gets around here) vowed to sign the extension if it came across his desk (and I’m glad it didn’t.). I had decided to leave the scholarship sign alone so I can still see it from my window now.
I’m glad I didn’t read this Friday morning though because I was trying to put air in my tire that day and I fell on the broken curb in front of my building, landing flat on my face, and I could not get up. I injured myself in six different places (my nose, the bridge of my nose, my finger, the top of my hand, my knee and my back.) I didn’t know until later that my glasses had cut into the bridge of my nose and a lot of blood was dripping down. I looked around for help, in my very diverse neighborhood, and I saw an Arab man and a black man nearby who were both looking at me and, just then, I saw a black hatter (an ultra Orthodox Jewish man) was also walking by, so in Hebrew I said to him, “If you please.” He stopped and I told him in English that I fell and couldn’t get up and asked him if he could give me a hand. He asked if I wanted him to call an ambulance and I said no, that I just needed help getting back up. Then I said I was sorry because I had forgotten that he could not touch me, and I told him that I’m Jewish, too. He then stuck out his elbow so I could pull myself up, which I was able to do successfully and I thanked him.
Then I got into my car to rest awhile & I was shocked to see all the blood on my nose in the mirror. I had to move my car for future street cleaning but the USPS truck was blocking the parking space I wanted and I saw the mailman delivering on the next block. Knowing he still had to deliver on my block, I decided to wait until he was finished. Then, to my surprise, the mailman (who I think may be Hispanic) came and, before making his additional deliveries on my block, he pulled up his truck up enough so that I could move my car and park there –as I did several times in the past, so tho I said nothing to him then, he anticipated and accommodated my need on his own!
Today, I am feeling eternally grateful for the kindness of strangers and very accepting of our differences. Not that I wasn’t before. but after thinking about it, I realized I already knew how challenging it can be for religious familes to keep their kids in the fold when they’re constantly competing with secular influences. For example, I’ve spent some time with ultra Orthodox kids who were very curious and wanted to know all about the fast food they are not allowed to eat. I automatically downplayed it and told them they weren’t missing that much. So I can readily imagine now why the school might have had problems dealing with the influences of secular music, too. I still don’t think our tax dollars should be used to blur the much needed line between religion and state, though, nor do I condone the discrimination against differing people that many private schools get away with today.
Sorry this is so lengthy.
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My lord, what an ordeal!!! Glad some folks helped you out!
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Thanks so much, Bob! Yes, it really was something. I attribute the fall to both my being 71 years old and that poorly kept city curb. (I forgot I injured my elbow, too, but like with my knee, I feel lucky my clothing didn’t tear there.)
As when I broke my ankle a few years ago, after stepping off a curb at night into a pothole that couldn’t be seen due to being under a burnt out street light, I will not sue the city. That’s because this is MY city, where I was born & lived most my life, so to me that would be like suing family. I need the money now though and have been trying to save up my poverty level SSRI (which is low from working for decades in minimum wage child care center jobs). But it’s needed because my 25 year old car is on it’s last leg, and that is necessary to me since I fractured 3 bones on the bottom of my feet, due to osteoporosis & renting a basement condo with no padding over concrete floors. So standing and walking are challenging, while driving is easy for me.
I mostly feel fortunate to still be alive though, so I’m trying to hang in there (while praying for miracles).
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What an ordeal for you! I’m so sorry. We all from time to time must rely on the kindness of strangers.
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Thank you, Diane! Yes, despite the “stranger danger” warnings we get (as well as really need) when we are children, which can stick with us & make us leery about people we don’t know throughout our lifetimes, there are occasions when we have no choice but to get help from strangers. We are very fortunate when that turns out well, and we really need to count or blessings then –as I have been doing all weekend. As the stranger who helped me get up would probably say, Baruch HaShem, and the mailman, Praise the Lord!
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The line belongs to Tennessee Williams’ “Streetcar Named Desire.” Blanche DuBois says, “I have always depended on the kindness of strangers.” It’s wonderful when it happens.
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I forgot to mention that when I broke my ankle, I was offered assistance from a very kind couple that was Asian (Oriental), who helped me out of the pothole and walked me home. We have a lot of wonderful peoplehere from many cultures and religions who have lived peacefully side by side for decades. In fact, this is the most diverse neighborhood in my city, and that’s why I worked here for many years and have loved living here, too.
I asked for help from an Ultra Orthodox Jew this time because, although I’m not Orthodox myself and was raised as a Reform Jew, so our lives are very different, I’ve learned a lot about them, from living in Israel as well as this area, so I feel a natural kinship with them.
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Thanks! I appreciate being reminded of the origin of “the kindness of strangers,” because it slipped my mind and Tennessee Williams was an American treasure who should never be forgotten.
I also think it’s really important to be aware of what of value came from the South/red/purple states –like you, Diane! That list has seemed too short these days and I believe in making a concerted effort to always try to find the good in life…
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Sorry, my replies keep going to the wrong place.
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