Jeanne Melvin is a public education activist in Ohio. She urges Ohio voters to vote YES on issue 1. This would put a bipartisan commission in charge of redistricting instead of the Legislature. It would block the Legislature from designing their own districts to assure a supermajority. Ohio’s Republican supermajority has passed numerous bills to privatize school funding, including a universal voucher bill that enables all parents to get public funding to subsidize their private school tuition. Vouchers. Most students who use vouchers were already enrolled in private schools. Like all universal vouchers programs, Ohio’s is welfare for the wealthy.
Melvin writes:
Public Education is on the ballot across our nation.
Americans must choose between two presidential candidates whose policies, strategies, and experience relating to issues in public education are at opposite ends of the spectrum.
Voters in 10 states will decide 11 statewide education-related ballot measures– the most since 2018.
Ohio voters have the opportunity to elect state school board candidates and pro-public education candidates, along with approving or renewing tax levies or bond issues from over 100 school districts in the Buckeye State.
This November, Ohio voters will also decide if politicians should be left in charge of drawing our voting maps, or if the politicians should be removed from the process in favor of a citizens commission.
According to Dr. Christina Collins, former State School Board member and current director of Honesty for Ohio Education, the lack of competitive districts brings “extreme” education policies like attempting to regulate curriculums to avoid what legislators call “critical race theory” from getting into schools, the anti-LGBTQ law keeping transgender students from playing sports in the teams that align with their gender identity, and active bills that would threaten funding and dictate the kind of materials allowed in school libraries.
As previously stated, Ohio’s gerrymandered GOP majority has brought forward some extreme education bills designed to benefit private schools and to defund and diminish public school districts. Public education advocates have responded with facts, logic, and common sense, but lawmakers and lobbyists have chosen not to listen.
Why would they listen? Gerrymandering has guaranteed a GOP supermajority, and Senate President Matt Huffman said the quiet part out loud: “We can kind of do what we want.”
Ohioans can VOTE YES on Issue 1 on or before November 5, a bipartisan effort to remove the politicians from legislative redistricting in favor of a 15-member citizens commission made up of five Republicans, five Democrats, and five independents.
For education, this would mean that instead of Ohio lawmakers focusing on culture wars and EdChoice school voucher expansion, they could focus on more important issues, such as fair school funding to help our local public school districts.
If you don’t like legislative-district maps that have been deliberately drawn to ensure that one political party has a veto-proof supermajority, VOTE YES on Issue 1.
If you don’t like unreasonable education policies, VOTE YES on Issue 1.
If you don’t like paying for other peoples’ private school choices, VOTE YES on Issue 1.
If you want to keep public tax dollars in public schools, VOTE YES on Issue 1.
That’s why I voted YES on Issue 1!

Ohio has long been one of the most gerrymandered states in the country say several sources. That’s hard to verify, just comparing party affiliation of voters vs US Senators and House reps– because in Ohio, the # of “unaffiliated” grossly outnumbers those affiliated with R or D party– by roughly 5 to 1. [Rep-registered vs Dem- registered is almost 2:1]. In Senate presently: 1 D [Sherrod Brown, long an outlier], 1 R. In House, 4 Reps, 2 Dems.
Regardless, a non-partisan commission for redistricting is the way to go. RE: ed, what’s really needed in that state is a way to curb the overweening $$influence of Thomas B Fordham Institute on OH education policy.
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