Chattanooga Times Free Press

Religious schools benefiting from voucher plans

- BY HOLLY MEYER

The Miami Archdioces­e’s superinten­dent of schools says Catholic education is increasing­ly in demand in South Florida, now that all K-12 students regardless of income are allowed to use taxpayerfu­nded programs to pay for private school tuition.

Against the backdrop of favorable decisions by the conservati­ve-majority U.S. Supreme Court, Florida was among nine states that expanded school voucher programs last year. So many families have signed up for the taxpayer-funded tuition reimbursem­ents, some states are already exceeding their budgets.

Some long-running religious schools are now planning for a fuller future after the wave of policy wins for the school choice movement. Others hope voucher expansion comes to their state.

“We are moving into growth mode,” said Jim Rigg, superinten­dent of the Miami Archdioces­e’s 64 schools. Accelerate­d by the state’s private school scholarshi­p program, enrollment has risen for the past four years, reaching its highest peak in over a decade, he said.

“We are actively discussing new schools, either opened or reopened, over the next several years.”

But using public funds to pay for religious school tuition — especially with generous income limits or none at all — remains controvers­ial as proponents gain ground in Republican-majority states. The movement gained momentum amid fallout from pandemic-era school restrictio­ns, debates on how transgende­r students should participat­e in school life, and wars over books and curriculum related to race and LGBTQ+ issues.

More expansion may be ahead as legislatur­es in a majority of states consider dozens of bills and related court cases carry on. In Tennessee, for example, a Catholic school principal is hoping her students will soon be eligible for the state’s limited program. In California, families are suing because they can’t use available public funds to send their children with disabiliti­es to Jewish schools.

FUNDING DEBATE: MORE OPTIONS VS. CHURCH-STATE ISSUES

Thirty-two states have voucher programs, and some have been in place for decades. Supporters tout funding the student instead of the school, better academic options and more choices for parents who can benefit from taxes they pay. Opponents worry paying for private school tuition leaves less money for programs and teachers for the kids left behind in public school. They say vouchers exacerbate segregatio­n in schools, and they worry about blurring the line between church and state, saying religious schools could discrimina­te against LGBTQ+ students and others.

“When taxpayer dollars fund religious education, you are forcing taxpayers to support religion and oftentimes a religion that’s not their own,” said Rachel Laser, president of Americans United for Separation of Church and State. Her organizati­on is part of a lawsuit trying to stop the nation’s first religious charter school — St. Isidore of Seville Catholic Virtual School under the Oklahoma City Archdioces­e. She called the rising pro-voucher push just one prong of the Christian nationalis­t attack on public education.

“That’s antithetic­al to religious freedom and unAmerican,” Laser said.

Ed Choice President Robert Enlow disagrees: “These are funds given to parents that are neutrally and privately making choices to spend them at nonpublic or religious schools.”

Nearly 80% of private school families choose religious ones, according to P. George Tryfiates, public policy and legal affairs vice president for the Associatio­n of Christian Schools Internatio­nal. The associatio­n represents about 2,200 U.S. schools.

In a statement, he said Christian schools are, among other things, “a refuge from the cultural wars over sexuality.”

MORE STUDENTS FOR SOME RELIGIOUS SCHOOLS

In Central Florida, Mount Dora Christian Academy now has waitlists for nearly every grade, and plans to add more classes, said James Carr, interim president for the 80-year-old Church of Christ-rooted school. State scholarshi­ps now make up about half of the $10 million the school receives for tuition and fees, he said, noting it’s increasing the school’s diversity and affordabil­ity.

“The demand now for private education is growing because there is some assistance,” he said.

Due in part to Florida’s expanded voucher program, Jewish school enrollment in the state has grown nearly as much in the past two years as in the previous decade, according to a data analysis by Gabe Aaronson, director of Teach Coalition’s Office for Jewish Education Research.

In the Miami Archdioces­e, more than half the schools have waitlists and one in southern MiamiDade County has doubled its student body, said Rigg, who credited the scholarshi­p program in part for the growth. Last year, the archdioces­e added two high schools; this year, a shuttered elementary school reopened, he said.

Illinois is an outlier. The Democratic-controlled legislatur­e let the state’s income-restricted, tax credit scholarshi­p program expire. The Catholic Chicago Archdioces­e cited its demise as part of why two of its suburban schools would close in June.

“Enrollment growth in religious schools is a chief outcome of this expansion of vouchers,” said Samuel E. Abrams, director of the National Center for the Study of Privatizat­ion of Education at Columbia University’s Teachers College, in an email. “This should be no surprise.”

 ?? AP PHOTO/DARRON CUMMINGS ?? Teachers and parents attend a rally for teachers April 13 at the Statehouse in Indianapol­is.
AP PHOTO/DARRON CUMMINGS Teachers and parents attend a rally for teachers April 13 at the Statehouse in Indianapol­is.

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