The Commercial Appeal

Gov. Lee’s plan threatens to resegregat­e schools

- Your Turn Jimmie Garland Guest columnist

On Nov. 28, Tennessee Gov. Bill Lee announced his plan to support vouchers for students wishing to attend private, religious and home schools.

These vouchers will affect students for the school year of 2024-2025 and will be available to 20,000 low income and special needs students residing in Davidson, Hamilton and Shelby counties in Tennessee.

There are about 1 million students attending public school across Tennessee!

As advocates for constituti­onally demanded free public education, the National Associatio­n for the Advancemen­t of Colored People (NAACP) questions the timing and ultimate goal of a political process doomed for failure and designed to exclude the very children Governor Lee and conservati­ve legislator­s are saying that will help.

Eight reasons NAACP of Tennessee opposes school vouchers

For the record, please note: h The NAACP has a long history of supporting access to free public, high quality education for all students.

h We reaffirm our opposition to school voucher programs because they reduce financial support from the already limited public school resources public schools now receive.

h Governor Lee’s announceme­nt promotes siphoning public resources from public school system students and providing that funding to private schools, and parents who are home schooling their children.

h Governor Lee says that voucher is going to help low-income students achieve more academical­ly, but in 2025 will open up the voucher program to all families regardless of their financial situation.

h These funds, totaling $140 million will only serve a small percentage of students, if the same amount of funding and efforts were put into the public schools, progress could be made.

h The NAACP stands firm in opposition to any school mechanisms that threaten and deplete resources for public schools. Realizing the importance of the NAACP’S advocacy of giving voice to the voiceless. We serve as the voice for the masses of disenfranc­hised students.

h With that voice, we reaffirm that any alternativ­e format, such as vouchers, that remove dollars from publicly accountabl­e systems is wrong and should not be allowed.

h We continue to be committed to protect each student’s right to free and high-quality education.

Students' families face potential financial hardships with private school options

The voices of every parent and guardian are needed to be heard on this proposal.

The dollars that will be diverted from our public-school systems will need to be replenishe­d by the local funding bodies who currently fund our public-school systems.

While the operators of private, religious and home schools have the option to refuse students who are not able to adjust to their new environmen­t, the local public school system does not have that luxury.

The public school system must take and educate all students. Replanting students into the public school system would create a financial hardship and staffing issues for local school systems.

Governor Lee and the conservati­ve leaders are saying that parents should be allowed to use their tax dollars to send their children to the schools of their choice.

For the record, I do not disagree with the thought, but if you do the math correctly, you will find that children attending private, religious or homeschool­s are being subsidized with your tax dollars to attend those facilities.

At the same time, we are being subjected to tax increases to help fund their lifestyles and to house and transport those children to their private destinatio­ns.

Vouchers are not designed to provide a better education for students or to make the educationa­l playing fields level.

They are simply a way of resegregat­ing schools. Thereby, allowing a sector of our society to become more bias. Be careful when they approach you with the phrase, “we the people”. Know that that phrase does not include all of us.

Jimmie Garland is president of the Clarksvill­e Branch NAACP and vice president (Middle TN) of Tennessee state NAACP.

 ?? STEPHANIE AMADOR/THE TENNESSEAN FILE PHOTO ?? A group from Americans United silently protest Gov. Bill Lee’s Education freedom proposal with signs “No Vouchers” at the Tennessee State Museum on Nov. 28 in Nashville.
STEPHANIE AMADOR/THE TENNESSEAN FILE PHOTO A group from Americans United silently protest Gov. Bill Lee’s Education freedom proposal with signs “No Vouchers” at the Tennessee State Museum on Nov. 28 in Nashville.
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