A
Long Road to the Court
From Education Week, June 27, 2002 Education Week
Given the ferocity of the debate over vouchers, it is often forgotten that early in the
history of the United States, religiously affiliated schools at times received generous
public funding from states and cities. By the mid-19th century, with the rise of the
common school and the increasing desire by Roman Catholic immigrants for their own
schools, government aid to private schools gradually declined. Such aid to religious
schools was generally not considered unconstitutional, however, until the 14th Amendment
was interpreted as applying to the states the First Amendment's prohibition on a
government establishment of religion. The specific policy debate on vouchers that led to
the U.S. Supreme Court's June 27 decision is a post-World War II phenomenon. Here's a look
at some mileposts on the way to that ruling:
1869
Vermont passes a law authorizing "tuitioning," in which the state and districts
pay for children to attend private schools in towns without their own public schools.
Today, in some 90 Vermont towns without high schools, districts pay tuition for some 6,500
children to attend secular private schools.
1873
Maine adopts a tuitioning law. Today, some 5,600 students from 55 towns without high
schools attend secular private schools at state and district expense.
1876
Congress falls short of passing the so-called Blaine Amendment. If state legislatures had
then ratified it, the measure would have amended the U.S. Constitution to prohibit any
religious sect from controlling public funds for schools. The amendment was named for Rep.
James G. Blaine of Maine, the 1884 Republican presidential nominee. Many states later
added similar language to their own constitutions.
1925
In Pierce v. Society of Sisters, the U.S. Supreme Court upholds the right of parents to
choose to send their children to private schools.
1947
In Everson v. Board of Education of Ewing, the Supreme Court upholds the use of public
school buses to transport private and parochial school students. But the decision also
establishes a principle that "no tax" should go to support religious activities
or institutions.
1955
Economist Milton Friedman writes an article that proposes a system of school vouchers to
introduce competition into the educational system.
1973
In Committee for Public Education and Religious Liberty v. Nyquist, the Supreme Court
rules against direct state subsidies to religious schools for repair and maintenance of
facilities, and strikes down tuition reimbursements and tax credits for parents of
children in religious schools.
1983
In Mueller v. Allen, Supreme Court upholds Minnesota's tax deduction for private school
tuition, including tuition at religious schools, the first in a series of rulings that
school voucher proponents view as favorable to their cause.
1990
Academics John E. Chubb and Terry M. Moe publish Politics, Markets, and America's Schools,
a highly influential book that calls for states to govern public schools more like private
schools and to create systems that foster greater competition for students between public
and private schools.
Wisconsin's legislature adopts a landmark urban voucher program authorizing 1,000
Milwaukee schoolchildren to attend secular private schools at state expense.
1995
Wisconsin expands the Milwaukee voucher program to allow the participation of religious
schools.
Ohio adopts a voucher program for the Cleveland district that includes religious schools.
1996
An Ohio state judge upholds the Cleveland voucher program; children begin using vouchers
to attend religious schools there for the first time on a wide scale.
1998
The Wisconsin Supreme Court rules that inclusion of religious schools in the Milwaukee
voucher program does not violate U.S. Consititution's prohibition against a government
establishment of religion. Despite widespread anticipation that it will take up the case,
the U.S. Supreme Court declines. The Wisconsin program spreads to religious schools and
now includes about 10,000 student participants.
1999
Florida adopts the first statewide voucher program, open to students in failing schools
that do not improve their performance. Such students may receive vouchers to attend other
public schools or private schools, including religious schools.
The Ohio Supreme Court rules that inclusion of religious schools in the Cleveland program
does not violate the U.S. Constitution, but it strikes down the program on state
procedural grounds. The legislature reauthorizes the program, and the new law is
challenged in federal court. A federal district judge in Cleveland strikes down the
program as "skewed toward religion."
2000
In Mitchell v. Helms, the U.S. Supreme Court upholds a federal program that lends
computers and other equipment to religious schools. Four justices sign an opinion
signaling that they would uphold the inclusion of religious schools in a voucher program
as long as the government aid was offered on a neutral basis.
A federal appeals court in Cincinnati rules against the Cleveland voucher program.
2001
The new Bush administration joins the state of Ohio and other voucher advocates in asking
the Supreme Court to hear the Cleveland case. The justices accept the case at the
beginning of their 2001-02 term.
2002
Feb. 20: The Supreme Court hears 80 minutes of oral arguments on the constitutionality of
the Cleveland program, which has some 4,200 participants.
June 27: The Supreme Court, 5-4, upholds the Cleveland voucher program.
SOURCES: Education Week, CQ Researcher
© 2002 Editorial Projects in Education Vol. 21,
number 42, page Web only |