Oroville Mercury-Register

Pandemic, culture wars revive ‘school choice’ policy push

- By Sam Metz and Heather Hollingswo­rth

Nichole Mason first became concerned when she learned administra­tors at her children’s public school were allowing transgende­r students to use girls’ bathrooms. Her frustratio­ns mounted when she felt her children’s next school went too far with how they enforced COVID regulation­s during the pandemic.

Now, the mother of five is among a swelling number of parents around the United States funneling those frustratio­ns into a renewed push to get state lawmakers to create taxpayer-funded programs to help parents pay for other educationa­l options including private school, homeschool­ing or hybrid models. In Utah, a proposal would allow roughly 5,000 students to apply for $8,000 scholarshi­ps.

‘Moral obligation

“If right now my kid’s school is getting $10,000 a year to educate him, he’s not thriving and I could do a better job educating him with $8,000,” said Mason, who co-founded the Utah chapter of the group Parents United. “Then I feel a moral obligation to give him an outstandin­g education instead of a satisfacto­ry education.”

At least a dozen other states are considerin­g similar legislatio­n in what has emerged as a landmark year for school choice battles.

With memories fresh from pandemic-era school closures and curriculum battles — particular­ly over how matters of gender and race are taught — Mason and legions of parents like her are trekking to the marble floors of their state Capitols to fight to create education savings accounts, also known as ESAs. Though they vary, these vouchersty­le proposals have been introduced in states including Iowa, Illinois, Kansas, Missouri, Nebraska, Oregon, South Carolina, Texas and Utah.

No state has more legislatio­n pending than Virginia, where Republican Gov. Glenn Youngkin won his race for governor in 2021 in the liberal-leaning state after making education grievances a key tenet of his campaign.

Additional­ly, GOP governors in Oklahoma and Nevada have suggested plans to push for voucher-style policies and politician­s in Arkansas and Florida have said they plan to expand pre-existing programs that are currently limited to certain student population­s.

“School vouchers and education savings accounts were kind of in retreat for a while. They were sort of in vogue in the ‘90s and then charter schools kind of supplanted them,” said Rob Shand, an education policy professor at American University.

Seizing the moment

Now, he added, “school choice advocates are trying to capitalize on discontent with the public school system. They see a sort of a moment to try to push for push for some more choicefrie­ndly or alternativ­e policies.”

If enacted, education savings accounts could transform the nature of state government’s relationsh­ip with K-12 schools and deepen contrasts between how education looks in red versus blue states.

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