Roper: Lawmakers seek ways to discriminate against Christians
June 29, 2023 | By Rob Roper
In the wake of the U.S. Supreme Court Case Carson v. Makin, which ruled states such as Vermont that have publicly funded school choice programs cannot discriminate against religious schools, the conglomeration of public school special interests made up of the teachers’ unions, superintendents, school boards, etc. – collectively known as The Blob – finally sees its chance to snuff out all its independent school choice competition. The Blob is banking on the idea that Vermonters would rather eliminate all school choice in Vermont than allow some – any – parents to choose to send their kids to a religious school with taxpayer dollars.
A June 15 report on WCAX on the issue noted that the Education Equity Alliance (what The Blob understandably prefers to call itself) “supported legislation that would have met the Supreme Court standard by eliminating private school choice, except at the four historic academies – St. Johnsbury, Lyndon, Burr and Burton, and Thetford – which operate as defacto public schools.” (That last point is not exactly accurate, but we’ll let it go for now.)
The WCAX piece stated in apparent support of The Blob’s position that, “Through a public records request, we learned that at least 53 students enrolled in these religious high schools [now] have their tuition paid with public dollars, at a total cost of almost $600,000,” adding here a rather snarky “cha-ching” sound effect over the video, presumably to underscore the notion that this is an expensive policy.
But let’s look at those numbers for just a second…$600,000 divided by 53 is $11,320 per kid. The average per-pupil spending in Vermont’s public schools is $25,053, according to the National Education Association’s calculations. So, by choosing to send a child to an independent religious school, parents are saving Vermont property taxpayers on average $13,733. That is, shall we say, quite a bit. Any and all “cha-chings” here fully accrue to the taxpayers’ benefit.
For a more specific example, the towns in Grand Isle County and Georgia of Franklin County in the northwest corner of the state are all tuitioning towns (meaning they enjoy school choice). Many parents choose to send their kids to the public South Burlington High School. The cost to do that for the 2023 school year is $17,378 per student. However, for the families who choose Rice Memorial High School, a Catholic school in Burlington, which is now an option following Carson v. Makin, the tuition cost to taxpayers is $12,900. Not as much savings as the averages, but still a lot. Certainly, worthy of a “cha-ching” for the property taxpayers of Grand Isle/Georgia.
Education, of course, is not just about money. It’s also about the quality of programs provided and student outcomes. So how do the religious schools stack up in the results column?
Sticking to the Rice example, according to its website, “Rice has 13 Honors classes and 15 AP classes accessible to all students. Rice is the only school in Chittenden County offering the prestigious Advanced Placement Capstone Diploma.” Rice students have average SAT scores that are more than twenty points higher than the state average, and 90 percent of graduates matriculate on to college.
More generally, writing in an Oct. 27, 2022 commentary in the Wall Street Journal (“Amid the Pandemic, Progress in Catholic Schools”) Kathleen Porter-Magee, superintendent of Partnership Schools, a network of seven urban Catholic schools in Harlem and the South Bronx, analyzed the most recently published National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP) scores and concluded: “Today, the divergence between Catholic schools and public ones is so great that if all U.S. Catholic schools were a state, their 1.6 million students would rank first in the nation across the NAEP reading and math tests for fourth and eighth graders.”
This is not a case of wealthy elites sending their children to exclusive private schools. Catholic schools are overwhelmingly lower cost than most private schools, and more economically diverse than public schools that restrict student access according to zip code (ie. segregated based on property value).
And let’s not forget that when COVID hit, it was the Catholic schools that were the first to pay attention to the accurate science and re-open for in-person learning – a decision that put the best interests of students and families first. As such, if you were a Catholic school kid during COVID, you didn’t suffer two years of learning loss as your public school counterparts did.
Catholic schools also tend to attract more racially diverse student bodies as a disproportionate number of immigrants from dominantly Catholic Latin American countries, and African countries such as Nigeria, Uganda, and Tanzania gravitate toward Catholic schools for their children. Therefore, it is more than a bit ironic that the opponents of school choice cite “anti-discrimination” as a primary motive behind their desire to discriminate against religious schools and the families that would attend them.
A Catholic education may not be for everybody, and the beauty of a school choice system is that it doesn’t have to be. If you prefer drag queen story hour to a prayer before meals for your child’s upbringing, you have your pick of institutions. After all, those folks in Grad Isle/Georgia can choose South Burlington High School, Milton, BFA, or anyplace else that makes the most sense for them. But when lawmakers move to take those choices away and make decisions for others’ children that rightly should be made by parents, they are doing damage to families, students, and, as shown above, taxpayers. They do this for the purpose of satisfying their own anti-Christian prejudices, and/or to pay off the politically powerful, special-interest public education Blob. Not the most noble of motivations, for sure.
Freelance writer Rob Roper of Stowe has worked for 20 years in Vermont politics including serving as chair of the Vermont Republican Party, president of the Ethan Allen Institute and as a host on the Common Sense Radio program. Roper is a partner in Water Cooler Communications, a political communications and consulting firm. Find his column, Behind the Lines, at RobertRoper.Substack.com.