Colorado Supreme Court Rules Against School Vouchers
NewsMax.com Wires
Monday, June 28, 2004
DENVER The Colorado Supreme Court ruled Monday that the
state's school voucher program was unconstitutional because it
stripped local school boards of control over education.
Colorado's voucher law, the first in the nation since the U.S.
Supreme Court said in 2002 that voucher programs were acceptable,
was never put into effect because of legal challenges.
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The high court's 4-3 decision upheld a lower court's ruling.
The law would have offered vouchers of $4,500 a year to public
school pupils to help cover their tuition at private or parochial
schools. The program was supposed to start next fall.
But the high court said the program requires school districts to
turn over a portion of locally raised funds to private schools,
over which local school boards have no control. That violates the
local-control provisions of the Colorado Constitution, the court
said.
Voucher supporters are likely to introduce a new version in the
2005 Legislature to conform to the ruling.
"I think it would be fairly easy to draft legislation that
didn't use local dollars," Rep. Nancy Spence said.
The court challenge was brought by teachers, education groups
and religious organizations. They said the program could direct tax
money to private schools motivated by religious ideology.
Voucher programs have withstood legal challenges in Cleveland
and Milwaukee. Washington, D.C., is scheduled to begin using
vouchers this fall, and Florida's program is operating while a
state appeals court considers a challenge.
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