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Wednesday, October 31, 2007
Utahns Can Vote for School Choice Tuesday
By John Stossel
Poll
Will Hillary Clinton fight for the nomination past June 1st?


Next Tuesday, Utah voters go to the polls to decide if their state will become the first in the nation to offer school vouchers statewide. Referendum 1 would make all public-school kids eligible for vouchers worth from $500 to $3,000 a year, depending on family income. Parents could then use the vouchers to send their children to private schools.

What a great idea. Finally, parents will have choices that wealthy parents have always had. The resulting competition would create better private schools and even improve the government schools.

But wait. Arrayed against the vouchers are the usual opponents. They call themselves Utahns for Public Schools. They include, predictably, the Utah Education Association (the teachers union), Utah School Boards Association, Utah School Employees Union, Utah School Superintendents Association, the elementary and secondary school principals associations, and the PTA. No to vouchers! they protest. Trust us. We know what's best for your kids.

They say they're all for improving education but not by introducing choice. "When it comes to providing every Utah child with a quality education, we believe, as do most Americans, that our greatest hope for success is investing in research-proven reforms. These include the things parents and teachers know will make a difference in the classroom, such as smaller class sizes and investment in teacher development programs. Focusing on this type of reform will bring far greater success than diverting tax dollars to an alternative education system."

Please. I've heard that song for years. Government schools in America fail while spending on average more than $11,000 per student. Utah spends $7,500. Think what an innovative education entrepreneur would do with so much money. It's more than $150,000 per classroom!

The answer to mediocre public schooling isn't to give a government monopoly more "teacher development programs." The answer is competition.

Bureaucrats and unions tremble at the thought. On my "20/20" special on education, one teacher had the nerve to sneer, "Competition is not for children!" The opposite is true. Competition and choice mean parent power. It's parents whom the education lobby really fears. The last thing it wants is a system in which parents choose their children's schools. Parents might not choose the union-dominated establishment schools. Better not take that chance. Continued...

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About The Author

John Stossel is an award-winning news correspondent and author of Myths, Lies, and Downright Stupidity: Get Out the Shovel--Why Everything You Know is Wrong.

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Questions (Asked Seriously)
1) If every child in the state gets a voucher which can be used to pay the tuition at a private school, can the private schools accommodate all of those children? Wouldn't a lot of new private schools have to be formed? Would new private schools have to meet state credentialing standards as they do now? (I am thinking of pro-homeschooling people who on townhall have wanted no state-imposed curriculum or standardized testing or reporting requirements---if these are the same folks who want vouchers, presumably they won't want state standards at all.)

2) Would private schools have any say in what children they accept?

3) What is the relationship between statewide vouchers and school tax? In a vouchers world, would property taxes still fund public schools or would public schools just close? Is school tax money diverted to pay the vouchers, or, how does this work?

Another Question
The article says the average voucher would be worth $2000 and most would go to children whose parents would not otherwise be able to afford private school. I just googled a private school in my community and see that its tuition is $19,535 grades K-5 and $23,285 grades 6-12. Would a $2000 voucher really make that much difference?
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