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Voucher Program is 'a Costly Mistake,' Johnson Says

The decision by the U.S. Supreme Court to uphold the constitutionality of Cleveland's private school voucher program will prove to be a costly mistake, WEAC President Stan Johnson said Thursday (June 27, 2002).

What about the Milwaukee voucher program?

The U.S. Supreme Court's court's ruling in the Cleveland private school voucher cases did not remove the constitutional cloud over the Milwaukee voucher program, according to WEAC General Counsel Bruce Meredith.

"The majority decision in today's Cleveland case relied heavily on the amount of the tuition subsidy," Meredith said. "The court noted the tuition subsidy in the Cleveland program is substantially less than the cost of tuition at the religious schools. This leaves open the question of whether the Milwaukee voucher program, which provides schools with substantially more than the cost of tuition, is constitutional."

"Voucher schools are not accountable to the taxpayers who have paid more than $140 million for this unproven experiment," Johnson said. "There is no evidence showing how students in voucher schools are faring academically. Voucher schools do not administer the tests that public school children take, so there is no way to assess voucher student progress."

Johnson said voucher school teachers are not required to be college graduates or to have teaching licenses.

"Voucher schools do not have the great teachers and staff that public schools enjoy," Johnson said. "Voucher schools cannot guarantee classrooms that work."

Johnson said taxpayer dollars should be used to enhance goals and programs that have a proven track record of success.

"The answer is right in front of us: Invest in programs that are proven successes," Johnson said. "We know that smaller class sizes; early childhood and after-school programs; and recruiting and retaining talented, trained, and caring teachers work. Wisconsin doesn't need to spend any more tax money on questionable experiments."

Wisconsin's great public schools are among the best in the nation, according to Johnson, and the state should focus on maintaining and improving them, because they benefit everyone.

Johnson said history will prove that vouchers did not help students or society.

"We are confident that, in the long run, vouchers will be viewed as a failed experiment that cost many students a quality education," Johnson said. "Vouchers are just one more passing fad… the educational equivalent of the eight-track tape player."

Chase says vouchers are divisive
Resource page on private school vouchers

Posted June 27, 2002

Education News