School vouchers haven’t had any luck at all lately. Voters in Utah, expected to be rather conservative, overwhelmingly rejected a statewide ballot referendum on vouchers last November. The president touted a voucher plan in his State of the Union address, which was DOA in Congress. A study of the Milwaukee system found that students who receive vouchers to go to private schools don’t do any better academically than those “stuck” in public schools.
But it’s the voucher system in the District of Columbia — created by congressional Republicans to be the first-ever federally-funded voucher program — that’s been especially troubled. Last fall we learned that after Congress handed over tax dollars to unregulated private schools without conditions, lawmakers ended up financing unaccredited schools, “unsuitable learning environments,” schools with no operating permits, and schools where teachers didn’t even have bachelor’s degrees.
Complicating matters, a report from the administration released yesterday found that students in DC who received vouchers didn’t do any better academically, either.
Students in the D.C. school voucher program, the first federal initiative to spend taxpayer dollars on private school tuition, generally did no better on reading and math tests after two years than public school peers, a U.S. Education Department report said yesterday.
The findings mirror those in previous studies of the D.C. Opportunity Scholarship Program…. Students who previously attended struggling schools — a group the program is designed to help — showed no boost in test scores compared with their peers.
It was only natural, then, to see the Washington Post and the Wall Street Journal run opinion pieces today, urging Congress to — you guessed it — continue the program that isn’t working.
The WSJ ran this item from William McGurn, attacking Barack Obama for withholding his support for the DC voucher system that isn’t working, and the WaPo ran this editorial this morning.
Members of a House Appropriations subcommittee today will take up President Bush’s request for $18 million to continue the voucher program, along with new money for public and charter schools. Before they adopt language dismantling the program, they might want to take a good, hard look at who these children are: mostly African Americans from mainly single-parent households with incomes averaging around $22,700. As Sen. Joseph I. Lieberman (I-Conn.) wrote in an eloquent appeal to Del. Eleanor Holmes Norton, a voucher critic: “The program is offering these students an opportunity that would probably otherwise be closed to them, but open to the children of more affluent families.” Children, say, like the sons and daughters of those who get to vote on whether this program will continue.
So, the DC voucher program is already suffering from accountability problems, and like voucher programs in other parts of the country, hasn’t improved test scores.
The logical response, according to Lieberman, the White House, the WaPo editorial board, and conservatives at the WSJ, is for Congress to give the program more money, and wait for the encouraging results to come around. Eventually.
The timing of the latest report doesn’t help the right at all. Congressional Dems, including DC’s non-voting representative, want to phase out the program, while Bush wants it to continue. A House Appropriations subcommittee is expected to debate the policy today.
We’ll see what happens.