Scott Maxwell is my favorite opinion writer at The Orlando Sentinel. He always makes sense, in a state led by a Governor and Leguslature that make no sense at all.
In this column, he asks a straightforward question: Why is there no accountability for school vouchers? Why are taxpayers shelling out money for substandard schools? Why is money diverted from public schools to pay for schools where the curriculum is based on the Bible, not facts?
Maxwell writes:
Florida recently joined about a dozen states in passing new rules that say participants in the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, formerly known as food stamps, can’t use their vouchers on junk food.
I think that makes sense to most people. This program, after all, is supposed to provide “nutrition” to people in need, most of whom are children, elderly or people with disabilities.
Basically, if taxpayers are providing $330 a month for basic food needs, that money shouldn’t be used on Red Bull and Oreos.
So now let’s take that a step further.
Taxpayer money also shouldn’t be used to send students to the junk-food equivalent of school — places that hire “teachers” without degrees, use factually flawed curriculum or that hand out A’s to every kid, regardless of what they actually learn, just to make their parents feel better.
Just like with food stamps, taxpayers have a right to know that the money they’re providing for schools is actually funding a quality education.
Yet in Florida that is not the case. Here, the voucher-school system is the Wild West with a lack of accountability and scary things funded with your tax dollars.
The Orlando Sentinel has documented this mess for years through its “Schools without Rules” investigation that found taxpayer-funded voucher schools where:
• “Teachers” lacked degrees or any kind of basic teaching certification
• Finances were so disastrous that schools actually shut down in the middle of the school year, stranding families and students
• Science classes taught students that dinosaurs roamed the earth alongside man, and history lessons claimed slavery and segregation weren’t really all that bad
• Administrators refused to admit students with disabilities or who had gay parents
• Parents filed complaints that included “Cleaning lady substituting for teacher,” “They don’t provide lunch and they don’t even have a place to eat” and “I don’t see any evidence of academics”
I don’t care how pro-school choice you are, tax dollars shouldn’t fund that kind of nonsense.
Some of these fly-by-night schools set up in strip malls seem to thrive because they tell parents what they want to hear — that their kids who were struggling in public schools magically became straight-A students at voucher schools with little to no standards or legitimate measures of success.
Well, that’s the educational equivalent of junk food. And taxpayers wouldn’t fund that kind of nonsense if the state enacted basic accountability measures.
Namely, all voucher-eligible schools should be required to:
• Publish graduation rates and nationally accepted test scores
• Hire teachers who are certified or at least have a college degree
• Disclose all the curriculum being taught
• Ban discrimination
Most good schools already do this. Think about it: what kind of reputable school wouldn’t agree to hire qualified teachers? Or wouldn’t want the public to see what kind of test scores their students produce?
If you want to send your kid to a school that’s unwilling to clear those ground-level hurdles, you shouldn’t expect taxpayers to fund it.
Similarly, if you want to run a school that refuses to serve kids in wheelchairs or who are gay, you shouldn’t fund your discrimination with money that belongs to the people against whom you’re discriminating.
In Florida, some of the worst voucher schools are faith-based. But so are some of the best. Parents and taxpayers deserve to see the difference — the test scores that show whether students are actually learning.
Many faith-based schools embrace science and history. But some try to replace proven facts with their own beliefs or opinions, using “biology” books that claim evolution data is false and “history” books that try to put sunny spins on slavery and segregation.
The people who defend — and profit off — Florida’s unregulated voucher system usually cite “freedom” and “parental rights” as a justification for unfettered choice. But you know good and well that virtually every other taxpayer-funded system has sensible guardrails.
You can’t take Medicaid money to a witch doctor or a psychic “healer.” And just like we don’t give parents the “choice” to use SNAP vouchers to buy their kids Snicker bars, they don’t deserve the “freedom” to take money meant to provide a quality education to a school that can prove it’s providing one.
Basic transparency and accountability measures are needed for any program to be effective. So whenever you hear anyone protesting them, you have to wonder what it is they don’t want you to see.

The lack of oversight and accountability are features, not flukes, of this program. Florida is trying to offload as many students into private options so it can dismantle the public schools and eventually transfer the cost back to parents. Then, Florida would achieve libertarian nirvana, particularly if the corrupt legislature votes to eliminate property taxes.
ESAs are another wasteful conduit for unaccountable public education dollars in Florida. They are rife with waste and fraud. Some ESAs have been used for non-essential items, including theme park tickets, kayaks, televisions, horse back riding or surfing lessons, and home gym equipment. The system invites abuse. A loophole in the program may allow families to enroll a child part-time in public school and divert remaining ESA funds into a college savings plan, potentially diverting more funds from public schools.
Under Ron the Con Florida is like an onion where there are many layers of hypocrisy and fraud.
LikeLike
It’s a no brainer that the fascist klepto-kakistocracy in DC led by toxic-brain Trump may be extended to most red states, and it is clear that transparency and accountability in government is not important.
During both of his presidential terms, Donald Trump fired or replaced approximately 24 inspectors general (IGs). The removals, which drew widespread scrutiny, were seen by many as attacks on independent oversight.
Notable inspector general firings during Trump’s first term:
Mass firings in Trump’s second term (as of late 2025):
The Inspector General’s (IG) role in a federal department is to provide independent and objective oversight to detect and prevent waste, fraud, and abuse, and to promote economy, effectiveness, and efficiency in agency operations. IGs fulfill this responsibility by conducting audits, investigations, and inspections, having independent authority, and reporting their findings to both the agency head and Congress to ensure accountability and improve public confidence in the government.
LikeLike
We as educators know test scores do not have anything to do with accountability. I am fine with the other three point.
LikeLike
Speaking of EBT/SNAP (formerly food stamps), I think the healthy food requirements (recently adopted by mostly red states) are ridiculous for indigent seniors and homeless adults. When I first became homeless at age 63, I discovered that the existing food requirements failed to meet the needs of people like me. That’s because it was a hot summer and the A/C in my car (where I lived then) didn’t work. When I wanted to get a salad, I was not allowed to buy one from the salad bars at grocery stores because they also serve hot food at salad bars and you aren’t allowed to buy hot food with EBT (and they didn’t sell already prepared packaged salad bowls then.)
Since I had no way of keeping food fresh in my very hot car or trunk and I could not cook, that meant I had to shop for each meal and not store anything –except for stuff like crackers, cookies. candy. etc (aka snacks). With such limited choices, I ended up eating a whole lot of Lunchables for kids. Lunchables often come with deserts, like cookies, and juice (and other brands include candy) so even those would not be allowed under the new rules adopted by some states!
In the fall, when it got colder, it really upset me that I was not allowed to buy hot food, including soup. All of this meant that eating was a huge daily chore and not enjoyable for me. So I was very grateful to Walmart when I discovered they sold cold rotisserie chickens, because no one else did then (but I had to eat that all in one day!).
Healthy eating is an issue for children, but I don’t think the government should be telling seniors and homeless adults what they are allowed to eat!
LikeLike
BTW, I had boycotted Walmart for decades, due to the Walton business model, how they treated employees and their politics –until I became homeless and lived in their parking lots. See “Walmart: The High Cost of Low Price” https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RXmnBbUjsPs” (which came out around the same time, but I felt I had no other choice)
LikeLike
(That was because, since I have a digestive disorder, I need to always be close to a bathroom, so I taught online from home for the last 12 years of my career. But suddenly home was my car, and the Walmarts around here were open 24/7 then. So, I bought a hotspot and then I could plug in at the restaurant there to charge my batteries and work there, as well as in my car…)
LikeLike
Insightful Frontline from 2004, “Is Walmart Good for America?” https://www.pbs.org/video/frontline-wal-mart-good-america/
The bottom line is: No. Walmart is good for themselves (the billionaire Walton family members), and for American consumers seeking low prices, but it’s not good for workers, neither here nor abroad, nor for small towns, nor for businesses, whether mom and pop shops or other big box stores across America. (So I very rarely shop there.)
LikeLike
This is something Walmart did that’s particularly disconcerting, “Walmart’s Dark Secret Profiting from Employee Deaths (The “Dead Peasants” Insurance Scheme”) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oY0Yy3eZwP0
LikeLike
Indiana requires voucher private schools to take state tests, and publishes their pass rates. But increasingly private schools are opening or joining the voucher program that are so small and have so few students in a grade level that the state refuses to make their scores public. So even that level of basic accountability is being lost.
Might that be one of the reasons for the push to open private or charter microschools?
LikeLike