Voucher Test in California

Christianity Today October 4, 1993

Lines are drawn, and the battle will be waged on a November statewide special-election ballot. On one side are a large number of California parents frustrated with the public-school system. In opposition are an equally large number of teachers, school administrators, and their unions. Somewhere, in the middle, are the children.

The Parent Choice in Education Initiative, Proposition 174, would amend the California Constitution to provide parents with a yearly voucher for each childโ€™s education. The vouchers, worth $2,600โ€”approximately half what is now spent by the state to educate public-school studentsโ€”could be used at any public, private, or religious school.

Ballot battles have been fought before, with Colorado and Oregon recently rejecting voucher initiatives. But the stakes are higher in California, with its 5.2 million public-school students and annual $25 billion kindergarten-through-twelfth grade budget. Odd alliances have formed in supporting the initiative, with the Religious Right joined by low-income minority advocates.

A question of choice

โ€œThe problem is that we have a public-school system that is not only low on quality, but offers very few options for families,โ€ says Yes On 174 spokesperson Alan Bonsteel. โ€œElementary fairness asks that everyone have the right to choose the best possible education for their children.โ€

Supporters believe the empowerment will result in public schools reducing class size, offering incentives Bonsteel to good teachers, and taking stronger action against on-site crime and drugs.

Some concerns of opponents are that Proposition 174 will undermine funding for public schools, that only the affluent who already have children in private schools will benefit, and that it will destroy the โ€œmelting potโ€ opportunity provided by public education.

Christian home schoolers, while not immediately affected, are caught in the barrage of campaign rhetoric. Roy Hanson, legislative consultant for the Private/Home Educators of California, says some initiative proponents are upset his group is raising only low-profile opposition. He finds it difficult to understand why โ€œone would attack choice in the name of promoting choice.โ€ He says the group is โ€œopposed in principle to any subsidy-type program,โ€ believing โ€œGod commands parents, not the government, to be responsible.โ€

Witch curriculum?

The whole affair is not without a flair for the dramatic. Two self-proclaimed witches of a coven located northeast of San Francisco have proclaimed their intention of starting a school should voters approve. The publicity is being used against initiative proponents.

โ€œWe presently have 2,700 private schools in California,โ€ responds Bonsteel, โ€œand it has been demonstrated that the current regulations for these schools are more than sufficient to prevent this type of fringe school.โ€

Bonsteel says, โ€œWe want spiritually based schools to keep their integrity and set their own high standards.โ€ He says one of the witches is a former public-school teacher and the other is a former employee of the California Teachers Association.

โ€œAnyone with 25 students can open up a school with no teacher credentials or key subjects required,โ€ says Rick Ruiz, press secretary for No on 174. โ€œBasically you have school choice, not parental choice.โ€

The National Education Association (NEA) has pledged $1 million to defeat the initiative. Past support totaling $1 million from the NEA-affiliated California Teachers Association helped voucher opponents collect three times the amount raised by proponents during the first six months of 1993.

Raymond Haynes, 66th District assemblyman, says teacher unions and administrators have a reason unrelated to education to oppose Proposition 174. โ€œTheir hysteria about this initiative has only one source and that is fear,โ€ Haynes says. โ€œThey fear the loss of money, political power, and influence.โ€

In an August poll, the voucher plan trailed by 10 points, 46 percent to 36 percent, with another 18 percent undecided. Sara DiVito Hardman, Christian Coalition of California director, says her group plans to distribute four million voter guides to churches, plus sponsor statewide radio ads on minority radio stations. โ€œIf California goes, it will start a ground swell throughout the country like we canโ€™t imagine.โ€

By Patricia C. Roberts in Sacramento.

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