Mickey Mouse strikes back: voucher wars heat up in Colorado.
Dunn, Joshua ; Derthick, Martha
In 2002, as the Supreme Court decided the constitutionality of
publicly funded voucher programs in Zelman v. Simmons-Harris, Robert
Chanin, then the general counsel for the National Education Association,
said that regardless of the Court's decision, voucher opponents
would have many options under state constitutions. They contained, he
said, a variety of "Mickey Mouse provisions" suitable for
legal assaults. Following Douglas County's adoption of a voucher
program in 2011, Colorado has begun its second round of cartoonish
constitutional conflict.
[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]
In the first round, the state supreme court in 2004 struck down a
statewide voucher program enacted by the legislature for the benefit of
students in low-performing districts. The plaintiffs alleged, and the
court narrowly concurred, that the program violated a provision of the
state constitution that school boards "shall have control of
instruction in the public schools of their respective districts."
The court held that to require school districts to turn over some
locally raised money to private schools, as the law did, offended that
provision.
This seemed to suggest that a program adopted by a local school
board might survive, and a test recently emerged. Suburban areas with
high-performing school districts have shown little support for vouchers,
so it was surprising to have the first locally enacted voucher program
come from Douglas County, a Denver suburb with one of the highest median
incomes in the country. School choice advocates, however, had targeted
the district in school board elections. As a result, the normally
nonpartisan elections turned partisan in 2009, when the Republican Party
endorsed a slate of four candidates and handily defeated candidates
endorsed by the teachers union.
Those efforts bore fruit in March 2011 when Douglas County's
school board unanimously approved the Pilot Choice Scholarship Program.
Through this plan, any student who had been enrolled in district schools
for at least one year could apply for a voucher of approximately $4,600,
equal to 75 percent of state per-pupil funding, to attend a
"partner" private school, with the school district keeping the
other 25 percent. Religious schools would not have to waive admission
requirements to participate, but would have to offer an exemption for
voucher students who wished to be excused from religious services. Of
the 19 initial partner schools, 14 were sectarian. The school board
capped the program at 500 students but expected it to expand. As the
third-largest district in the state, Douglas County serves more than
61,000 students.
The American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU), along with Americans
United for Separation of Church and State, sued, citing a host of
constitutional offenses, including violating the ban on support for
private schools and churches (the state's Blaine Amendment), the
ban on religious tests, the guarantee of religious freedom, the
uniformity requirement in the education clause, the prohibition on
support for private institutions, and, for good measure, the guarantee
of local control. After a three-day hearing in August, state district
court judge Michael Martinez granted the ACLU's request for a
permanent injunction. Clearly alarmed by the religious instruction that
would occur at religious schools--"not only is the risk of religion
intruding into the secular educational function great, that risk is
inevitable and unavoidable due to the very structure of the Scholarship
Program"--Judge Martinez accepted nearly all of the ACLU's
claims.
Voucher supporters lined up to assist Douglas County in defending
the program. The Daniels Fund, a well-regarded and influential
foundation in the Rocky Mountain region, pledged $530,000 for legal
expenses. In addition, the libertarian Institute for Justice filed an
appeal on behalf of several families whose children were granted
vouchers.
While the ACLU obviously has a grab bag of provisions at its
disposal going forward, one risk is its reliance on the state Blaine
Amendment. If state courts rule that the amendment requires that
religious students and institutions be treated differently than secular
ones, as Martinez's ruling seems to imply, it could potentially
raise a federal challenge under both the First and Fourteenth Amendments
as a violation of free exercise and equal protection. The most promising
outcome for Douglas County would be for Mickev Mouse to meet the U.S.
Constitution.
Following Douglas County's adoption of a voucher program in
2011r Colorado has begun its second round of cartoonish constitutional
conflict.
Joshua Dunn is associate professor of political science at the
University of Colorado-Colorado Springs. Martha Derthick is professor
emerita of government at the University of Virginia.