Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Choice is good

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In its official endorsing statement of Question 3 (energy choice), the Clark County Education Associatio­n recently declared, “Nevadans know that monopolies … don’t work for consumers,” and that the only ones supportive of them are those who “stand to benefit” (Tuesday Review-Journal, “CCEA endorses energy initiative”).

It’s refreshing to see the teachers union embrace the economic reality that free markets and competitio­n serve consumers better than a monopoly. Now it’s time to apply that same mindset to education.

For more than 30 years, the one-size-fits-all monopoly education system has failed Nevadans, despite record tax hikes and a near tripling in inflation-adjusted, per-pupil funding.

Thankfully, by injecting competitio­n and market forces into the state’s education system, choice programs such as Education Savings Accounts and Opportunit­y Scholarshi­ps promise a better way forward. Such options offer underserve­d students an escape from the flounderin­g K-12 monopoly, so they are not forced to wait indefinite­ly for their local schools to improve.

Despite enjoying broad support from Nevada voters, these programs are fiercely opposed by the teacher unions who, as the CCEA so astutely observed, “stand to benefit” from protecting the existing monopoly system.

So the next time you hear a member of Nevada’s failing education system oppose choice, you’d be wise to borrow from the CCEA’s statement for an effective rebuttal. Daniel Honchariw Las Vegas Daniel Honchariw is senior policy analyst at the Nevada Policy Research Institute, a free-market think tank and advocate for educationa­l choice.

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