In the Public Interest is an excellent source of information about privatization in every sphere of life, wherever privatizers see a chance to turn a public service into private profit. Its latest post is about the citizens’ fight to overturn a new voucher plan in Nebraska.
Open the link to see the cost of vouchers in Arizona, New Hampshire, North Carolina, and Ohio. Count on costs to go up every year, as legislators expand eligibility and raise income limits.
In early 2023, the Nebraska legislature passed LB753, which created a new private school tax-credit voucher program. The bill allows a dollar-for-dollar tax credit to individuals and corporations that donate to a scholarship granting organization (SGO), which would issue the vouchers to families to pay for private school. Eligibility requirements are broad, allowing, for example, any child entering either kindergarten or 9th grade at a private school, or any student who has spent at least one semester in a public school to apply for a voucher. The bill would divert up to $25 million annually from the state, but that figure could go up to $100 million.
The bill includes a standard “hands off clause,” which prevents the state from exercising any authority over the school and how it operates. It’s basically a license to discriminate.
Shortly after the bill was passed, public school supporters launched a referendum petition drive to put repeal of the new law on the November 2024 ballot. In fewer than 90 days, the repeal campaign gathered nearly double the number of required signatures from across the state. The effort was led by Support Our Schools Nebraska, a coalition that includes, among others, the Nebraska State Education Association, OpenSky Policy Institute, Parent-Teacher Association of Nebraska, Stand for Schools, League of Women Voters of Nebraska, Omaha NAACP, ARC of Nebraska, Nebraska Farmers Union, and the Nebraska Civic Engagement Table.
In Nebraska, 84% of private schools are religiously affiliated. Many, if not most of these schools are legally permitted to discriminate against applicants based on their gender orientation, religious affiliation, or other characteristics. The Nebraska OpenSky Policy Institute has estimated that state aid distributed to public schools could decrease by almost $12 million in response to the new voucher program.
Forces aligned against the repeal include the usual suspects, like the American Federation for Children, founded by anti-public-education zealot Betsy DeVos, which donated $583,000 along with $103,000 of in-kind services to the pro-voucher effort, on top of money DeVos spent to influence Nebraska state senate races in the last cycle. The Nebraska Catholic Conference, whose coffers stand to gain from LB753, has also thrown its weight and reach behind the anti-public education side. Jeremy Ekeler left his job as associate director of education policy at the Conference in November to become the executive director of Opportunity Scholarships of Nebraska, a state-approved scholarship granting organization helping to implement LB753. They’re not only working to defeat the ballot measure, they’re trying to keep it off the ballot entirely, following a playbook the right has used to subvert a variety of citizen-led, petition-driven initiatives around the country.
As we have pointed out before and as the chart above illustrates, vouchers bleed public school districts of needed funds, allow for discrimination, lower educational standards (by not necessarily having many), and lead to resegregation.
As if that weren’t enough, they turn out to be budget busters for states.
In the Public Interest will keep an eye on this fight because it may be the clearest indication that, while conservative politicians have thrown their support to various schemes that divert public funds from public schools, the public opposes these efforts and will show up at the polls to make their feelings felt.

From the internet
Nebraska
For 2024 school year, 110 Catholic private schools – 30,632 students.
For 2024 school year, 15 Christian private schools, 2,616 students
IMO, the northeast media narrative that protestant evangelicals pose the singular threat to democracy from the religious, facilitated an opportunity for Charles Koch to change the flyover states from moderate to a polarized, political right wing. IMO, it is reflected in the current, right wing agenda issue, tax funding for Catholic schools. The Catholic sect has a centralized, authoritarian hierarchy, a feature that, I suspect, is appealing to wealthy “libertarians.”
In Aug., in Ohio, 3 dioceses spent $900,000 for a GOP anti-democracy ballot issue that the state’s bishops publicly stated had no moral content.
The dioceses were the only church in the top 5 spenders. Among the 5 top spenders was the American Principles Project which was co-founded by Catholic, Robert P George, co-author of the Manhattan Declaration.
The legal scholar credited as most influential in advancing religious charter schools is at Notre Dame in Indiana. She is a Koch Manhattan Institute Fellow. Father Virgil Blum, a prominent advocate for school choice at its inception has a Center at Marquette University (Wis.) named after him. It was funded by the Koch-linked Harry and Lynde Bradley Foundation. The executive director of the Colorado Catholic Conference (the political arm of the bishops) has a bio that lists former employment with EdChoice and the Koch network.
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Libertarians, by definition, are opposed to authoritarian hierarchies. But do go on.
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The 3 stikes law was a template from the Koch-funded ALEC.
ALEC was co-founded by Paul Weyrich who also co-founded the Heritage Foundation.
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strikes
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“license to discriminate”
The Biel v. St. James Catholic school SCOTUS decision, a couple of years ago, exempted religious schools from civil rights employment law- tax money to religious schools promotes tax-funded discrimination. Citizens who believe in civil rights should be outraged.
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Among excellent articles about the intersection of church and politics, there is Ramon Lazarraga’s “Does the Roman Catholic Church need PR firms,” published at the Political Theology site. Lazarraga is a theology professor at St. Martin’s in the state of Wash. When he wrote the article, he was at St. Benedictine in Kansas. One of the examples he cites is the 1990 hiring of a PR firm by the Church to advance its pro-life pr.
The Southern Baptist Conference’s switch to anti-abortion is relatively recent. I speculate the paid PR of the Catholic Church facilitated anti abortion messaging, for right wing protestant leaders. One of the protestant, prominent leaders of change in fundamentalist churches to anti-abortion, who has changed his mind on the issue, said the selling point was that evangelical protestant churches could raise money on the issue.
There are those who think the southern state’s segregation academies were the forerunner of the school choice campaign in states like Nebraska, Ohio, Indiana, Colorado, Kentucky, Pennsylvania, Michigan, etc. I seriously doubt the political arm of the bishops, the Catholic Conferences, like Nebraska’s, modeled their political efforts after Gov. Talmadge’s. However, if I’m wrong and that case is made, it could serve the desired history where public schools survive Charles Koch’s campaign.
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Vouchers haven’t even officially started in Utah yet and the legislature already wants to raise the voucher limit from $42 million to $100 million.
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Thanks for adding the comment. Do you think the origin of voucher motivation in Utah is for segregation academies like those in the south, the church desire for tax dollars, libertarian goals for privatization of all government services, or ?
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If the GOP wins the election, he or she would likely push for federal vouchers in the form of tax credits for wealthy individuals and corporations. It would also cripple public schools, which I am sure, is a goal as well. The GOP is anti-democratic and noxious.
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RT,
Voters have never approved vouchers in any statewide election. They usually lose by overwhelming numbers. Sometimes the legislature ignores
The will of the voters, as they did in Florida and Arizona.
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TOW, the increase from $42 million to $100 million is an opening offer. The cost will go up every year as the Nebraska legislature removes eligibility limits and raises the income limit.
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The Lincoln Catholic Church is unique in the U.S.
Southern Nebraska Register, 5-24-2019, “Why can’t girls be alter servers?” I suggest reading the answer to gain insight into the belief system of the members of the Church in Nebraska’s capitol. (Cleaning behind the alter may be o.k. for women.)
In Omaha, the archdiocese requires its 70 schools to confirm Catholic teachings on gender (reported 9-24-2022).
The Church is a regressive force in society. It is oppressive to liberty and equality.
Tax dollars should fund neither of the two by supporting the authoritarian Church’s schools.
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