Judge Throws Out Vouchers in Florida
A Florida judge Tuesday (March 14, 2000) threw out the nation's first
statewide voucher program, ruling that it is unconstitutional.
Circuit Judge L. Ralph Smith said the 53 children participating in the
program in Pensacola can finish the school year, but the state can take
no further action to implement the law.
"Tax dollars may not be used to send the children of this state to a
private school," Smith said in his ruling.
Under the Florida voucher program, students in schools that are identified
as "failing" receive vouchers of up to $3,389 a year to pay for a private
or parochial school education at taxpayer expense. When the program was
launched in August, only two schools, both in Pensacola, were labeled
as failing.
This latest ruling constitutes the most far-reaching rejection of vouchers
to date, according to WEAC General Counsel Bruce Meredith.
Ironically, the court in striking down Floridas law relied
heavily on Wisconsin Chief Justice Shirley Abrahamsons dissenting
opinion in the original Milwaukee voucher case, Meredith said. Like
Chief Justice Abrahamson, the court concluded that the private voucher
schools were not public schools and therefore could not use public dollars.
In Washington, D.C., NEA President Bob Chase called the ruling "a tremendous
victory for families and children."
This ruling puts a stake in the heart of the voucher movement, Chase
said.
" It sends a strong signal to states across the nation that vouchers
are no substitute for a quality public education," he said.
The ruling is the sixth court decision in a row during the past year
that has struck down a private or religious school voucher plan: twice
in Maine, and once each in Vermont, Pennsylvania, and Ohio.
"The momentum is clearly on the side of public schools," Chase said.
"The court's ruling today reaffirms the bedrock principle that public
money should only be used for public education. The State of Florida must
take seriously its obligation to provide a free, quality public education
to all children, and stop diverting public dollars to establish a separate
system of private schools.
"American parents don't want vouchers. They want good schools in their
neighborhoods," Chase added.
He said voucher schemes are a diversion from the things that parents
and teachers know make a difference smaller classes, caring, competent
teachers, and high standards.
"By diverting public money to private schools, the Florida voucher plan
made those improvements more difficult to accomplish," Chase said.
Posted March 14, 2000