A quarter-century after the launch of vouchers in Milwaukee, we now know a lot that we didn’t know then. The sales pitch was always humanitarian: vouchers, said its rightwing advocates, would “save poor kids from failing schools.” Except they didn’t. We now know, writes Peter Greene, that vouchers do not save poor kids from failing schools. They are a subsidy for students who were already in private and religious schools. Maybe that was their purpose all along.
One other thing we have learned about vouchers: the first voucher program is for low-income kids, but it is the camel’s nose under the tent. The income restrictions will be raised again and again, and more groups of eligible students will be eligible for vouchers. And one day, there will be vouchers for everyone, without regard to income or need.
He writes:
Voucher program after voucher program is launched with the same promise–this program will rescue disadvantaged students from public schools that can’t get the job done. But now that they’ve been around for a few years, we can see pretty clearly what they actually do.
They expand.
They subsidize private school costs for families that were already in private schools.
Arizona’s program is growing into a state budget buster. New Hampshire’s state subsidy for private school tuition is mushrooming in just three years, and roughly 90% of the students using vouchers are still students who were already in private school. Iowa’s program cost looks to be tremendous, with 19,000 students approved for vouchers.
Arkansas is joining the crowd, and provides a fine example of how these programs grow and who they actually benefit.
Arkansas’s voucher program was set up to start with disabled and low-income students. One immediate effect has been a boom in the Fake Your Way To Disability industry in Arkansas, where options to “prove” your eligibility include “a note from your doctor.” And the Arkansas Times has learned that many students qualifying for vouchers didn’t not even clear that low bar. It’s a bit of a Catch-22, as students often have difficulty getting admitted to a private school if they have an IEP, 504 plan, or disability. Still, almost half of Arkansas’s voucher students were approved based on some sort of claim of disability.
That may contribute to Arkansas’s numbers– of its voucher users, 95% did not attend a public school last year.
And the program is only slated to expand as the bars for qualifying are lowered even further.
Proponents of vouchers, like Governor Reynolds of Iowa, point at the expansion and huge cost runs as signs that families were “hungry for educational freedom.” Well, no. What it shows is that families like free money from the state to help pay for the expenses they have already freely chosen for their children.
Please open the link to finish the article.

Vouchers are horrible public policy that hurt kids, defund public schools and prop-up church budgets. They are a form of socialism for the affluent since 80% to over 90% of vouchers are used to subsidize tuition at expensive private schools. Josh Cowen has written an article that is a great companion piece to Peter Greene’s article. Billionaires led by The Heritage Foundation and Betsy DeVos are using dark money to entice more states to adopt universal vouchers to further undermine public schools and teacher union membership. https://washingtonspectator.org/the-year-in-review-dark-money-vouchers-are-having-a-moment/
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So far as numbers are available, the experience in New Hapmshire (Education FREEDOM Accounts, if you can believe it) is similar.
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William, my understanding is that more than 80% of the vouchers in New Hampshire were used to subsidize students who were already in private schools.
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In private schools or home schooled.
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“They are a subsidy for students who were already in private and religious schools. Maybe that was their purpose all along.” Don’t even need to speculate about that “maybe”. The purpose of vouchers is absolutely to subsidize private religious schooling, and more to the point, the end game is the elimination of public schools altogether. Nothing more than an entitlement for the wealthy, who are always finding ways to blame the ills of society on entitlements…to the poor. WWJD?
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The purpose behind this war to destroy the public education system in the US, and why they hijacked the charter school concept, perverting it, and launched the voucher movement to support opaque private and religious schools, has its roots starting after the racist, slave owning south lost the Civil War and gained growth after LBJ signed the Civil Rights Act in 1964.
Still, greed eventually joined that racist movement, too. Traitor Trump isn’t the only wealthy racist who is also a greedy, lying fraud.
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Of course charters and others won’t save failing students for many reasons. In addition to your comments. The system, as it was “functioning” in the 1700s was never designed to serve all students. And that same system exists today. ALL EDUCATORS MUST DO THEIR HOMEWORK.
Thomas Jefferson referred to the purpose of education was to rake a few geniuses from the rubbish. The geniuses went to college, while the “rubbish “ did the jobs of their parents back then. Now many take menial jobs, no jobs or the school to prison pipeline. Some beat the odds but no thanks to the school SYSTEM.
The system, as evidenced by the pandemic/ education fiasco. Just a couple questions: For the many students still lagging behind 1. What grade will they be in? Will they be passed without learning using grade inflation, will be retained until they drop out or sent to tutoring. If tutoring doesn’t do the job, they will just lie and say it did.
The standardized test is useless as it gets back to teachers as much as 4 months later. It’s only used to blame schools who serve those who need us the most and they in turn blame the teachers.
THE TIDE IS TURNING AS PER LETTERS TO THE EDITOR NYT
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