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Vouchers Hurt Ohio

When we let vouchers drain our schools, it hurts us all.

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Aug 19 2025

Stay Connected to Our Historic Lawsuit

Good Tuesday morning,

We hope you enjoy our weekly email where we try to keep you up-to-date on our historic lawsuit.

Did you know you can read any weekly emails you may have missed on our website by clicking here?

And if you want your colleagues, friends, family members or others who support public education open to all children to sign up for our weekly emails, you can share this link with them.

We post regularly on our social media platforms about our lawsuit in Ohio, but we also provide a lot of information about how other states are dealing with the push for universal vouchers at the expense of public schools.

You can follow us on Facebook here, Instagram here and Twitter here.

Our website is full of information as well.

You can learn about our coalition, find a list of frequently asked questions about our lawsuit with answers, learn how Vouchers Hurt Ohio, and read about our mission.

You can also see the llist of the school districts that have joined our lawsuit here.

Armed with all this information, would you like to be more involved?

First, check to see if your local public schools are part of our lawsuit here.

If not, you can download and print out this .pdf, sign and send a copy to each of your local school board members, your local superintendent and treasurer.

If your district is part of our lawsuit, then thank them for supporting you and the children, families and taxpayers in your community with a quick hand-written note.

Your local education leaders need to hear from you either way: to thank them or to urge them to stand up for the future of public schools.

Sincerely,

Vouchers Hurt Ohio

Written by pnmadmin · Categorized: Uncategorized

Aug 12 2025

Wyoming Latest State to Rule Vouchers Unconstitutional

Good Tuesday morning,

In state after state, where anti-public school zealots, backed by billionaires, have pushed to expand private school vouchers, grass roots coalitions like Vouchers Hurt Ohio have formed to fight back.

Wyoming is the latest state where vouchers have been ruled unconstitutional.

A Laramie County District Court Judge stopped the new Wyoming private school voucher scheme that planned to spend $30 million to provide $7,000 for each student to attend a private school or home school.

Like Ohio, Wyoming’s voucher program has no income limits for the recipients so millionaires are eligible for a voucher.

Wyoming’s program is a pittance compared to Ohio where our lawmakers have approved spending $1.5 billion in the next two school years on vouchers with zero financial or academic oversight.

The cases in Ohio and Wyoming are similar.

In Ohio, Franklin County Judge Jaiza Page ruled on June 24 the EdChoice private school voucher program is unconstitutional on three counts, including that the state is not funding our public schools at a constitutional level while siphoning away billions of dollars to private schools.

Also in Wyoming, the judge noted the voucher program allows public funding of private schools that have discriminatory admission policies.

In Ohio, Judge Page made the same legal point in her ruling and said school choice is “semantics,” because all the power is in the hands of the private school operators.

Private school operators use discriminatory admission policies to determine who gets in and who is left out, including race, religion, family income (millionaires please apply), disabilities and any other reason they may want to use to slam their doors shut.

Wyoming is the latest in a series of states ruling vouchers unconstitutional.

This is an historic time for public schools as we face a truly existential threat from the rise of private school vouchers.

Is your district part of our historic lawsuit? Check here.

If not, why not. Learn how to join here.

Sincerely,

Vouchers Hurt Ohio

Written by pnmadmin · Categorized: Uncategorized

Aug 05 2025

What We Learned at the Ohio State Fair

For the third year in a row, Vouchers Hurt Ohio operated an information booth at the Ohio State Fair.

We learned a lot during the 12 days our volunteers worked the booth as we talked to hundreds and hundreds of people.

Students and adults alike took time to write the name of their favorite teacher on a sticky note to place on our wall of heroes. We had so many that we needed a second poster board and we took hundreds of photos of these Ohioans from districts all across the state in front of the heroes’ wall.

We were cool inside the Bricker Building, but outside was hot and humid so more than 1,000 fairgoers took one of our “I’m A Fan of Public Schools” hand signs to help them keep cool in the intense heat.

Many of the Ohioans visiting our booth already knew that private school vouchers were taking hundreds of millions of dollars from our underfunded public schools and giving them to private schools with zero financial or academic accountability.

They were excited to learn we won round one of our lawsuit when Franklin County Judge Jaiza Page ruled on June 24 that the EdChoice voucher program is unconstitutional on three counts.

They also saw our poster board, quoting the Ohio Constitution, Article VI, section 2: School Funds that states “no religious or other sect, or sects, shall ever have any exclusive right to, or control of, any part of the school funds of this State.”

There it is in black and white.

We gave them information about what public school districts in Ohio had joined our coalition suing the state, and let them check to see if their district was a member or not by simply scanning a QR Code.

We had hundreds of Ohio citizens sign letters to their local education leaders – superintendents, treasurers and board members – either thanking them for standing up for public schools and taxpayers by joining our lawsuit or asking them to join for the same reasons.

It was not an official poll, but it was crystal clear that Ohioans don’t like an EdChoice program that is primarily a refund and rebate boondoggle for wealthy families and a taxpayer-paid cash cow for private, primarily, religious schools.

And they are angry. They have good reason to be.

Is your district part of our historic lawsuit? Check here.

If not, why not. Learn how to join here.

Sincerely,

Vouchers Hurt Ohio

Written by pnmadmin · Categorized: Uncategorized

Jul 29 2025

Visit Our Booth at the Ohio State Fair

Good Tuesday morning,

It’s Ohio State Fair time again and we are having a great experience talking to hundreds and hundreds of people about why Vouchers Hurt Ohio.

Our booth is in the same place it was last year in the John Bricker building so please visit us.

We are asking visitors to write the name of their favorite public school teacher to post on our wall of heroes board.

We are also talking to people about the recent ruling by Franklin County Judge Jaiza Page that found the EdChoice voucher program unconstitutional on three counts.

When people hear that $1.5 billion in tax dollars are being taken from public schools and given to private, mostly religious schools, they get angry.

And when they learn that these vouchers are mostly going to wealthy families whose children were already enrolled in these private schools, they get even madder.

Finally, when we tell them these private schools can and do discriminate against students based on race, religion, family income, academic or athletic ability, or if the child is disabled, they immediately want to get involved and ask: how can I help?

We ask them to sign a letter to their local public school education leaders that ask those leaders to get on the right side of history and join our lawsuit because we still have a lot of work to do.

The state is appealing Judge Page’s ruling. No surprise there.

Their case is as weak as ever, but we have to continue and we need to get as many school districts on board as possible as the case heads to the Ohio Supreme Court.

You can help too.

Is your district part of our historic lawsuit? Check here.

If not, why not. Learn how to join here.

See you at the State Fair. It runs through Sunday.

Sincerely,

Vouchers Hurt Ohio

Written by pnmadmin · Categorized: Uncategorized

Jul 22 2025

Huffman Earns “F” on Constitutional Law: Wrongly Says Lawmakers Compelled to Fund Religious Schools

At a press conference on Monday announcing the state will appeal a recent ruling that Ohio’s EdChoice private school voucher program is unconstitutional on three counts, House Speaker Matt Huffman said lawmakers are compelled by the Ohio Constitution to fund private, religious schools.

Compelled!

Our attorneys proved within a matter of minutes that Huffman was wrong. In fact, the passage Huffman misquoted from the Ohio Constitution had already been clarified by the Ohio Supreme Court in two cases: one in 1872 and the other in 1945.

Here is what Bill Phillis, the Coalition for Equity & Adequacy of School Funding’s Executive Director, had to say about Matt Huffman’s error.

“To put it politely, Mr. Huffman was mistaken in stating that the Ohio Constitution “compels” the legislature to fund religious schools and education. He shortchanged the public in his statement today by not citing the first part of the passage he referenced.”

“Mr. Huffman failed to read the part in this same section that states…”No person shall be compelled to attend, erect, or support any place of worship, or maintain any form of worship, against his consent; and no preference shall be given, by law, to any religious society.”

Dan Heintz, a Vouchers Hurt Ohio steering committee member, Cleveland Heights-University Heights school board member and teacher at Chardon City Schools, said:

“Mr. Huffman is wrong and if he was a student in my high school history class, I would be compelled to give him an “F” for a partial and misleading answer. If lawmakers were compelled to fund religious schools for the past 150 years, why did it take them more than 110 years to get started?”

Huffman appeared at a press conference with Ohio Attorney General Dave Yost, Yitz Frank, School Choice Ohio, Aaron Baer, Center for Christian Virtue, state Rep. Jamie Callender, and Tom Fischer with Indiana’s EdChoice Legal Advocates. Fischer was there because an attorney for the Institute for Justice couldn’t make it. Yikes!

The stated reason was to announce the state would file an appeal. Yost gave zero details on the appeal.

The real reason they held the press conference? They are sweating bullets that all these stories that the EdChoice voucher scheme has been ruled unconstitutional may lead to parents not seeking vouchers.

They looked nervous, scared and once again they have not come up with one legal argument to justify spending $1.5 billion in tax dollars for private, primarily religious schools.

History and the Ohio Constitution is on our side.

Is your district part of our historic lawsuit? Check here.

If not, why not. Learn how to join here.

Sincerely,

Vouchers Hurt Ohio

Written by pnmadmin · Categorized: Uncategorized

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