A Voucher Victory
By Andrew J. Coulson
Published 2/14/2007 12:03:31 AM
Three percent of Utah
students currently attend private schools. In the Netherlands, the
figure is 75 percent. The difference? The Dutch enacted their universal
school voucher program in 1917, and Utah's passed just last week.
In
a nail-biting 38-37 vote last week, Utah's heavily Republican House of
Representatives passed the nation's first universally available school
choice program. The Senate followed, by a vote of 19-10, and Governor
Jon Huntsman signed the bill into law on Monday. Under the program,
every family in Utah will receive a voucher worth between $3,000 per
child (for the lowest income families) and $500 (for those with the
highest incomes). Parents will be
able to redeem these vouchers at whatever private school they deem best for their kids.Without a doubt, this
is the most significant school choice legislation ever passed in the
United States. But before school choice leaders start retiring or
sending out their resumes, there are several important caveats to keep
in mind.
The maximum value of Utah's school vouchers is only
about half of what the state's public schools spend per pupil. This
puts the private sector at a considerable disadvantage, particularly in
its efforts to serve poorer families. In the Netherlands, all schools,
public and private, are equally funded by vouchers, producing a level
educational playing field.
One obvious effect of this financial
discrimination against parents who choose private schools is that fewer
new schools will be created. Fewer schools means less competition and
fewer choices for parents, consequently undermining the market forces
that school choice is meant to create.
The funding
discrimination inherent in Utah's voucher bill will also limit research
and development spending, and curtail the ability of successful schools
to pay for the expansion of their operations. This could end up
inhibiting innovation and the dissemination of best practices.
Perhaps
the biggest danger is that both supporters and critics of Utah's
voucher program may expect too much, too soon. In other nations that
have adopted universal school choice programs -- Chile and Sweden,
among others -- it has taken at least five or ten years for large
numbers of new private schools to enter the marketplace, and for the
bad entrants to be separated from the good.
Part of the reason
for that lag is that would-be school founders are reluctant to move
forward until they know that a new school choice program rests on firm
legal and political ground. And Utah's voucher bill is sure to be
challenged.
Some opponents of the law have already conceded
that it conforms to the U.S. Constitution, based on the Supreme Court's
2002 decision upholding Cleveland's school voucher program. But state
courts are the new front line for voucher battles, and they have, on
occasion, proven fatal. Almost exactly one year ago, Florida's Supreme
Court struck down that state's small Opportunity Scholarships voucher
program on state constitutional grounds.
Utah, however, lacks
the "uniformity clause" that formed the basis for the Florida ruling.
These clauses, which appear in the constitutions of 15 states,
stipulate that the public school system must be "uniform." Though
Wisconsin's supreme court did not find the uniformity requirement in
conflict with Milwaukee's voucher program, Florida's justices took the
view that it did. But Utah has no uniformity clause, and the broader
legal prospects for its bill seem promising.
The greatest government threat to Utah's voucher program is not a sudden coup-de-grace from the court, but death by a thousand regulatory cuts.
Historically,
state regulation of education has tended to follow state funding. The
U.S. has some of the least regulated private schools in the
industrialized world, largely because it has not offered those schools
the government subsidies that are extended to them in so many other
nations. Though Utah's voucher bill is relatively free of such
entanglements today, it will take eternal vigilance to keep it so.
When
the Dutch first enacted their national voucher program nearly a century
ago, it was minimally regulated. Today, the government sets a national
curriculum, controls teacher certification, sets teachers' salaries,
decides when and where new schools can open, forbids voucher-accepting
schools from charging tuition, and prohibits profit-making.
Because
of all these regulations, the Dutch voucher program now rates only 31
out of 100 on the Cato Education Market Index, which measures how
closely school systems resemble free markets. Utah's school voucher
program receives an almost identical score due to a combination of
opposing factors: it imposes much less regulation on voucher schools,
but handicaps them by funding government schools at twice the voucher
amount.
But while the Utah voucher program won't create a truly
free market, its score is still substantially higher than the state's
current education market rating, which is brought low by Utah's
miniscule private education sector and the lack of parental choice and
competition in its public school system.
In spite of these
limitations, it would be difficult to overestimate the significance of
Utah's school voucher program. Salt Lake City's legislation could very
well become the domino that tips all other states into the camp of
educational freedom. Let's hope so.
Comments