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Judge blocks Colorado school voucher program

School Voucher

By KRISTEN WYATT   08/12/11 09:17 PM ET   AP

DENVER -- A Denver judge blocked Colorado's first school voucher program Friday, calling the program to give parents in the state's wealthiest county checks for tuition at religious schools a "substantial disservice to the public interest."

Denver District Judge Michael Martinez sided with a group of parents, the American Civil Liberties Union of Colorado and the group Americans United for Separation of Church and State. They asked for an injunction blocking the "Choice Scholarship Pilot Program" in Douglas County.

The voucher opponents argued the program violates the separation of church and state because it gives taxpayer money to parents for use at approved private schools, including some religious schools.

The judge noted that some of the schools authorized for Douglas vouchers require students to attend religious services. Martinez said the voucher program "violates both financial and religious provisions set forth in the Colorado constitution."

School-choice advocates vowed to appeal. More than 200 students have already gotten voucher money from the county to use this fall. One of the private schools in the program starts Monday, and it wasn't immediately clear whether any of the checks had been cashed. A message for the school district spokesman was not immediately returned Friday afternoon.

The U.S. Supreme Court has given its backing to voucher programs, ruling they don't violate the U.S. Constitution. But courts in several states have overturned voucher laws because they went further toward supporting religious institutions than their state constitutions allowed.

A new voucher program covering the entire state of Indiana is similar to the one in Colorado and is under legal challenge that state. An Indianapolis judge has said he'll decide next week whether to issue an injunction in that state.

A spokeswoman for the ACLU of Colorado said the plaintiffs in the Douglas case don't oppose religious schools, but objected to taxpayer money being used.

Douglas County officials argued that because the scholarship checks went to parents, who would then choose their child's school, the county wasn't improperly sponsoring religion. Plaintiffs insisted the parent pass-through was a ploy to get around the constitution.

"The court correctly recognized that it's unconstitutional for the state to subsidize the religious education of a child," ACLU spokeswoman Rosemary Harris Lytle said.

A lawyer for parents expecting vouchers said they were distraught by the ruling but hoping for a quick reversal.

"We'll be moving as quickly as possible to try to get this program back in place for this school year," said Michael Bindas of the school-choice group Institute For Justice.

Douglas school officials approved the voucher program last spring, and some parents have already gotten scholarship checks. Hundreds more are on a waiting list.

One of the parents testified near tears last week at the injunction hearing that her son has a form of autism and she wouldn't be able to send her son to the proper school without the voucher money.

Highlands Ranch mom Diana Oakley said her son can't get the necessary education at the county schools.

"Inside those four walls, he doesn't fit," Oakley said.

Martinez conceded that voucher recipients would be hurt by the injunction, which he said "will undoubtedly result in significant hardships for the families already selected." But Martinez concluded that constitutional concerns outweigh the hardships and that it was "clear and certain" plaintiffs would prevail in their legal challenge.

"The threatened constitutional injuries to plaintiffs, and the other residents of Douglas County they represent, outweighs the threatened harm" to families expecting vouchers, Martinez wrote.

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DENVER -- A Denver judge blocked Colorado's first school voucher program Friday, calling the program to give parents in the state's wealthiest county checks for tuition at religious schools a "substan...
DENVER -- A Denver judge blocked Colorado's first school voucher program Friday, calling the program to give parents in the state's wealthiest county checks for tuition at religious schools a "substan...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ironicisntit
08:29 PM on 08/15/2011
I talked to a woman running a booth at the Douglas County fair last week.
It was for a K-12 online school. She could not stop telling me how I could use taxpayer money to have my child "attend" her school. Now mind you this school has no actual classrooms, no place for children to actually go.
Each parent is given a laptop and ALL classwork and ALL testing is done online, under the "supervision" of a teacher. Not directly supervised, but just checking to make sure assignments and tests are turned in.
The teachers never have to meet face to face with their students. When I asked her about special ed and students who need special help she said they did not provide that help so could not take those students. She also said that basically each student would be supervised by the parent and it would be up to the parent to make sure the student did the work and did not cheat.
Sound like where you want your tax dollars to go?
Online classes can be very difficult for college age students, but K-6?
Can you imagine?
This lady told me over and over how I could use tax money to attend her school. It was a sales pitch worthy of the Veg-o-matic man.
02:49 PM on 08/15/2011
Simple fix. Have an "optional" monitored quiet study period. Like church service in Boot Camp many will attend who otherwise wouldn't because of the alternative demands.

The U.S. Supreme Court has given its backing to voucher programs, ruling they don't violate the U.S. Constitution. But courts in several states have overturned voucher laws because they went further toward supporting religious institutions than their state constitutions allowed.
been2there
Facts have a liberal bias.
01:59 PM on 08/15/2011
Voucher money used at private schools is not government money, but money used to by insurance that includes abortion care is. Hypocrisy alert!
More to the point, voucher programs across the country, while yeilding some very good individual results, have not lived up to their promise; if anything, voucher students seem to be testing a bit worse. Ther program is not working.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
CMB1969
raging moderate
12:43 PM on 08/15/2011
Strange--in most contexts, people understand that consumer choice is a good thing. It brings direct accountability, empowers ordinary people, and guarantees that folks will not be stuck with a one-size-fits-all approach. Would anyone, for example, want to see telephone service in this country stuck in the era of the old "Ma Bell" monoply or to go back to days when buying coffee meant a choice limited to Folgers or Maxwell House?
been2there
Facts have a liberal bias.
02:01 PM on 08/15/2011
There is a difference between which flavor one prefers and which facts a child needs to learn. I have worked with children from religious schools who do not know that condoms help to prevent STDs, or that there is no evidence for the "young earth creationism." These same students show a staggering lack of critical thinking skills.
03:38 AM on 08/15/2011
Why do we not simply legislatively ban private schools and be done with it?
03:30 AM on 08/15/2011
"substanti­al disservice to the public interest."

Perhaps he should have said that vouchers would be a substantia­l disservice to poor performing and poorly run public schools.

Why again should tax payers who choose to send their kids to private schools not get at least of portion of the tax dollars they contribute­d to public schools refunded? In Rhode Island they refund 75% of the $6,100 received per student to those who choose private schools. Since the public schools keep 25% of the money from those students who do not attend public schools, the end result is there is more money per student in public schools.
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ironicisntit
08:18 PM on 08/15/2011
Why stop there...If you do not drive on every road in your town or use every public park...why not demand some of your tax money refunded?
If you never call the police or fire dept...why not demand you get your money back? Or maybe you should only pay as you go? Why not privatize everything? Roads, hospitals, schools, police, fire, courts, medical insurance, retirement ( no more social security)
We all put aside what we can afford for these things and then we buy what we can afford. Then you only get the services you pay for. Obviously the richer you are, the more plentiful and higher quality services, and poor people get none, but Darn it! That's what America's all about!!!
You know the answer. Public monies are used for EVERYONE. If you CHOSE to send your child to a private school, then you CHOSE to pay that school privately.
12:09 AM on 08/16/2011
Good idea. Hey I want my money back for all that too!

If we privatized everything you mentioned including schools, police, fireman we would greatly improve the quality and cost of those services. Just think, no more overpaid lazy union public employees running cities, states and municipalities into sure bankruptcy. We could greatly reduce taxes.

I sent my kids to private school for 13 years on my dime and I am not rich. I simply did not like the education they were dishing out at the local private school.
08:59 PM on 08/16/2011
Your tax money is for the education of the citizens as a whole; not for the education of your child. It is an advantage if the citizens are educated before they vote. If you hire a private security company to guar your property you do not get part of your "police" tax dollar back. All the voucher arguments still boil down to part of my tax dollar going to a church school.

I will admit that public education has failed completely to teach critical thinking. For evidence I offer the large following over at Fox News and the large number of citizens willing to vote against their own economic interest while supporting the party line of big business and the wealthy.
09:21 PM on 08/16/2011
Apparently the good folks in Rhode Island and other states do not agree with your assessment of the school voucher program. Rhode Island is as liberal as they get. You may want to write them a letter and straighten them out.

The bottom line is private schools in general do a better job educating our kids while preparing them for college and for less money than do public schools. Too are far too many unionized teachers with tenure entrenched in public schools that cannot be gotten rid of.

Apparently you are an MS-NBC fan? Probably voted for Obama too. Figures!
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stape45
Spin this!
10:10 PM on 08/14/2011
Guess who wants to have it both ways, as always. Looks like it's not going to fly, this time, though.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
tjconkster
Occupy the Voting Booth 2012!
09:16 PM on 08/14/2011
Way to go Judge....
08:29 PM on 08/14/2011
School vouchers are the most dishonest attempt to thwart the public school system by the religious right in this country. Fund all schools at the same level and we would have better schools for all the kids. The way schools are funded now is a disservice to the students. Keep religion out of schools.
03:36 AM on 08/15/2011
Why should a tax payer who does not utilize public schools for their children have to subsidize the same public schools?

So how again is the manner in which schools are now funded a disservice to students?

Not all private schools are religiously affiliated. Unfortunately when religion was tossed from public schools, morality went with it.....and schools and society has been on a downhill slide ever since.
10:03 AM on 08/15/2011
What a typical answer from the party of me. I got mine forget you. We all pay taxes on programs we don't directly use but its for the good of all. I know you wingers don't have that concept but its part of being good citizens again nothing you wingers want any part of. The way schools are funded is determined by their tax base,ie richer schools get more money then poorer schools. When you give vouchers you draw money from public schools to serve private( rich) and religious schools. That is a disservice. I live in Az and in my life time we never had religion in school. Never said prayers only the pledge of allegiance.Religion has no place in public school ever. Vouchers have no place in a public school system ever. Again keep your religion out of our schools.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ironicisntit
08:21 PM on 08/15/2011
Please answer this....
Why not just make the US a pay-as-you-go system. You put aside what you can afford, no more taxes! Then you fund your own schools, firemen, police, hospitals, medical care, retirement, etc?
Why stop with schools? Apply your logic across the board with every taxpayer funded service now available.
That way, you'll only get what you can pay for, and if its not what you want you only have yourself to blame.......
07:36 PM on 08/14/2011
Another liberal slam against the Church. You'd thing a judge would know the intent behind separation of Church and state means no state developed religion like the church of England.
08:08 PM on 08/14/2011
Ah, just gotta love how the religionists rely on revisionist history...
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collettethehedgehog
My micro-bio is So running on empty
04:12 AM on 08/15/2011
Good, I'm glad you are advocating revoking the tax-free status for church's. It's about time these mega churches and politically active evangelical churches paid their own way.
03:40 PM on 08/14/2011
Did a judge actually rule in favor of common sense?
03:37 AM on 08/15/2011
Nope!
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02:39 PM on 08/14/2011
It is time to END welfare for the wealthy! Voucher programs are just concrete proof that the system is far from equal and needs reform, NOT VOUCHERS. No religious school that requires students to follow their ideology should get one dime of taxpayer money. Let them pay taxes first.
07:41 PM on 08/14/2011
Well, Danny Boy, the homeowners pay DOUBLE. You should know that.
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Olderandwiser55
getting older and wiser....
12:03 AM on 08/15/2011
Pay double for what? I pay for police I don't use, fire protection I've never used...should I get a voucher?
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01:35 AM on 08/15/2011
However, that's the homeowner's CHOICE.  They have a free alternative yet they choose not to use it.
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Olderandwiser55
getting older and wiser....
12:01 AM on 08/15/2011
Yes, churches should pay taxes if they want to be involved.
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Mikeeee
conservatism = "low-effort" thinking.
02:33 PM on 08/14/2011
"Douglas County officials argued that because the scholarship checks went to parents, who would then choose their child's school, the county wasn't improperly sponsoring religion."
Is there anyone honest in this group of people? Is there any gambit off limits to them to try and game the system?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
iisguy
04:04 PM on 08/14/2011
the system was designd by republicans so it is intended to be used exactly that way - take taxpayer money and fund religious education. That was the entire point of it.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
woody7
Always a Dem, but..............
01:51 PM on 08/14/2011
This is one of those pesky states rights issues that the Repubs love. There is no proof the $$ equals a good education. DC schools if not mistaken the highest per capita spending per student, and at the bottom of the heap, Utah one of the lowest per capita, and usually at the top.................
what I am saying is that it takes more than money for a good education. Good teachers, good parenting and involvement in their homework, studies, etc.Students actually wanting to learn. All the vouchers do is remove even more funding for severely underfunded schools..............JMT
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12:10 PM on 08/14/2011
Vouchers! It’s time that the Democrats stop their opposition and support a voucher program that will guarantee improvemen­t in our public schools. Just give vouchers to the following groups of students to go to private schools and public schools would prosper.
Students whose mothers smoked, drank, or used drugs while pregnant …….give them a voucher.

Students who have not been read books before kindergart­en…… give them a voucher.
Students whose parents continue to miss parent/ teacher conference­s….give them a voucher.
Students who are sent to the principal’­s office more than once….give them a voucher.
Students whose behavior makes it difficult for a teacher to teach,……gi­ve them a voucher.
Students who are at Walmart with their parents instead of being a school …give them a voucher.
Students whose parents make excuses for their child’s behavior and lack of responsibi­lity…..giv­e them a voucher.
Students who stay up late, sleep at school…… give them a voucher…

Now that we "vouchered out" some of the major reasons why it is difficult to learn in some public schools, what do we have left? Succ­essful public schools where students come to school prepared to learn. Where parents and students understand and are willing to handle the responsibi­lities that come with educating a child. A public school where teachers can actually teach!!

Columnists and presidents who think our educationa­l problems are all about the teachers……give them a voucher...­....... and one week standing in front of a classroom.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
iisguy
04:05 PM on 08/14/2011
Sorry, thanks for playing.
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07:25 PM on 08/14/2011
Did you actually read my post beyond the first sentence? Not sure what you're point was.