A gaggle of public college college students’ mother and father and taxpayers has filed a lawsuit difficult Tennessee’s new statewide college voucher program, saying that allocating almost $150 million in state funding to assist mother and father ship their children to personal faculties is unconstitutional.
Of their lawsuit filed Thursday in Davidson County Chancery Court docket, the plaintiffs requested injunctions to dam the Republican-backed legislation whereas the case proceeds.
Related scholarship and voucher initiatives have proliferated in Republican-led states comparable to Texas, which handed a $1 billion program. States have more and more provided vouchers to households past solely the neediest ones, contributing to price range issues as bills quickly pile up.
Though voucher applications have been round for years, they’ve exploded in reputation in Republican-led states. Some conservatives are vital of how public faculties educate about race, sexuality and different topics, and assume they had been too gradual to reopen throughout the pandemic. Not like at personal faculties, most public college academics are unionized, and academics unions usually again Democrats.
Tennessee’s voucher initiative permits 20,000 schooling vouchers of about $7,300 every for the 2025-26 college 12 months. Half go to particular classes of scholars, such are those that are decrease earnings or disabled. Any pupil entitled to attend a public college can apply for one of many remaining 10,000. College students who had been already enrolled in personal faculties, together with non secular ones, are eligible.
Republican Gov. Invoice Lee, who pushed for the initiative, has indicated that he needs to hunt funding for extra vouchers throughout the coming legislative session. His workplace says greater than 40,000 households have utilized for this system.
The lawsuit argues that the Tennessee Structure contains an obligation to offer a system of free public faculties and doesn’t permit for the state to to take care of and help Okay-12 faculties exterior of the general public college system.
It says faculties that take part “may deny admission or otherwise discriminate based on race, disability, religion, English proficiency, LGBTQ+ status, academic ability, or other criteria.” They don’t seem to be required to offer companies that public faculties should provide, comparable to particular schooling, and aren’t free to attend, the lawsuit states.
Moreover, the personal faculties accepting vouchers aren’t required to manage the total Tennessee Complete Evaluation Program, which public faculties should, and might as a substitute go for a nationwide standardized check, the lawsuit says.
The initiative additionally reduces funding for public faculties beneath an already insufficient stage, additional violating the state structure’s assure of public faculties that provide all college students the chance to obtain an ample schooling, the plaintiffs contend.
The legislation has a “hold harmless” provision that provides extra money to highschool districts which have college students disenroll to attend personal college on a voucher. However the lawsuit says it “does not meaningfully compensate for the loss of funds from public schools.”
“Tennessee’s Constitution is clear: the state must maintain and support a system of free public schools,” mentioned Lucas Cameron-Vaughn, senior workers legal professional with the American Civil Liberties Union of Tennessee, one of many authorized teams representing the plaintiffs. “This voucher scheme does the opposite. It siphons desperately needed resources away from public schools that serve all students and hands that money to private schools with no accountability, no transparency, and no obligation to serve every child.”
The Legislature’s Republican supermajority handed the statewide voucher program earlier this 12 months at Lee’s request.
Lee’s workplace mentioned it’s assured the court docket will uphold the legislation and appears ahead to serving extra college students when functions open for the 2026-27 college 12 months.
“Every child deserves an opportunity to succeed, and the Education Freedom Act empowers Tennessee parents to choose the school that best fits their child’s needs while further investing in public schools,” Lee’s spokesperson, Elizabeth Lane Johnson, mentioned in an announcement.
Beforehand, the state had a two-county college voucher program for lower-income college students in Nashville and Shelby County, which incorporates Memphis. That initiative was handed in 2019 and delayed within the courts, however in the end allowed to proceed. It was expanded to Hamilton County, which incorporates Chattanooga, earlier than passage of the brand new statewide program.
