Voters in Nebraska voted against using public funds to pay for private schools.
LINCOLN — Voters on Tuesday resoundingly rejected Nebraska’s new school voucher or scholarship program, steering public dollars spent to public schools.
Supporters of using state tax dollars to offset the costs of a private K-12 education have argued that families unhappy with their public schools need more options.
But rural and urban supporters of public schools, the Nebraska State Education Association and private foundations supporting public schools won the day.
Tim Royers, president of the Nebraska State Education Association, said he was proud to see right- and left-leaning counties agree that vouchers were the wrong choice.
“It confirms what we knew, the majority of Nebraskans don’t want public dollars going to private schools,” Royers said. “What really stood out to me is the consistency.”
Royers hopes state senators move on
Royers said he is hopeful that state senators will follow the will of the voters and move onto other more pressing issues in education that teachers and parents can work on together.
Support Our Schools argued that diverting even small amounts of public money toward private K-12 schools with a scholarship program or vouchers risked long-term support for public education.
They pointed to the experiences in other states with voucher programs, including neighboring Iowa, which has seen the national rankings of its public schools slide since that program began.
They argued that school choice programs typically end up largely benefiting the people already making the choice to send their children to private schools.
And they said such programs risked creating greater concentrations of poverty in some schools by draining them of students who often act as stabilizing force