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Initiative aims to rein in Arizona’s $1 billion school voucher program

Key Points:
  • Two education groups propose restraints on school vouchers in Arizona
  • The initiative would bar families making over $150,000 from receiving vouchers
  • Backers need over 255,000 valid signatures by July 2 to qualify for the ballot

Two education groups are asking voters to do what the Republican-controlled Legislature has so far been unwilling to do: impose restraints on Arizona’s universal school voucher program.

The initiative being proposed by the Arizona Education Association and Save Our Schools Arizona would put into law that families making more than $150,000 a year — adjusted annually for inflation — are ineligible for what are formally known as Empowerment Scholarship Accounts. These are vouchers for taxpayer dollars that parents can use to send their children to private or parochial schools, or to homeschool them and hire tutors.

The plan is similar to what Gov. Katie Hobbs proposed last year but could not get heard, in an effort to curb the cost of the now $1 billion program. 

But there is more in what proponents have dubbed the Protect Education, Accountability Now Act.

The measure would also require private schools that receive voucher funds to meet some of the same standards that apply to traditional public schools. That includes background checks for educators, a requirement to investigate allegations of staff misconduct, and a mandate that students at these schools take assessments similar to those required in public schools.

And then there is a specific provision barring parents — mostly those who home school and can use vouchers for educational materials — from spending their cash on “non-educational items or luxury goods.”

There already are some constraints in existing law that are designed to prohibit using voucher dollars for products and services that are not primarily educational. There is even a specific ban on the purchase of entertainment and other primarily noneducational items, such as televisions, video game consoles, and home theater and audio equipment.

But investigative reporting by Craig Harris at KPNX, the Phoenix NBC affiliate, showed that it has not stopped parents from using their voucher funds to purchase diamond rings and necklaces, appliances, lingerie, trips to theme parks and recreational equipment.

Part of the issue is that state schools chief Tom Horne, citing limited staff, has set up a risk-based auditing system, automatically approving expenses up to $2,000 and then seeking to claw back the money if there has been misuse.

The initiative, however, makes clear up front what isn’t allowed, with a very specific list that includes appliances, home improvements, admission to water or amusement parks, water slides, hot tubs, international travel, restaurant dining, and any type of motor-operated vehicle or watercraft.

It also would divide up $2 million among the Department of Education, the state Board of Education, the Department of Public Safety, and the Attorney General’s Office to enforce the provisions of the measure.

Backers need 255,949 valid signatures by July 2 to put the initiative on the November ballot.

The proposal drew a sharp response from House Speaker Steve Montenegro.

“The effort is not about accountability or improvement,” said the Goodyear Republican.

“It is a direct attack on parents — working families, military families, rural families, and families of children with special needs — who finally have options and refuse to give them up,” he said in a prepared statement. “ESA opponents are willing to sacrifice students’ futures to protect an education bureaucracy that puts its own power ahead of kids.”

But Beth Lewis, executive director of Save Our Schools, said that misses the point. She said nothing in the initiative eliminates vouchers.

The vouchers were first approved in 2011, providing state funds to parents whose children have special needs that could not be met in public schools.

Over the years,, it has expanded to include foster children, children living on reservations, children of active-duty military, and students attending public schools rated D or F.

But the big change came in 2022 when then-Gov. Doug Ducey signed legislation creating “universal vouchers,” allowing any student — including those whose parents already were paying to send them to private schools — to get a voucher.

Enrollment has ballooned from about 12,000 to around 100,000, with the typical voucher now worth $7,400. 

Lewis said the initiative would not eliminate vouchers — even the universal ones — though there would be those income caps for parents. And she said there are special exemptions from some of the provisions for children with disabilities, the students for whom the original program was designed.

Montenegro, however, said if the initiative were to become law it would “force tens of thousands of students out of schools that work for them and back into district systems that have already failed too many families.”

“House Republicans built the strongest school choice program in the nation because parents, not government or union bosses, know what their children need,” he said.

Lewis, however, said there would be no need to take the case directly to voters if lawmakers had made some changes on their own.

“We’ve got a $1 billion voucher program that has next to zero guardrails for transparency, accountability or safety,” she said. And Lewis said these issues should have been addressed when the universal voucher program was approved in 2022.

“Arizona lawmakers have refused now for three sessions in a row — we’re in the fourth — with this program being universal, and they have just stubbornly refused to make any headway,” she said. “This is the time to make sure that these things are getting corrected.”

One key issue is how much state oversight and standards there should be, particularly in academics, and whether students in private schools funded by state vouchers are getting the education they need.

Proponents have argued that parents are in the best position to choose the best educational options for their children and don’t need things like test results. But Lewis said there needs to be ways to determine achievement.

“With the universal expansion, we’ve seen tons of schools pop up in strip malls,” she said. “They’re there overnight, they’ve got a vinyl banner, they hand the kid a Chromebook.”

Lewis said that might work for some kids.

“But parents need to make sure that these choices are actually worth their salt and that somebody isn’t selling them a song, because a kid only gets one chance at fourth grade,” she said.

Anyway, Lewis said, the initiative is structured so that accountability can be met either by testing students or by the school being accredited by a regional or national organization.

Geneva Fuentes, communications director of the Arizona Education Association, said she had no figures to share on how much it would take not just to earn signatures but also to wage what could be an expensive campaign to convince voters to support it.

“But we also know what it takes to win, and we’re going to be doing that,” she said.

Fuentes declined to say how much of the funding might come from the National Education Association. But that group put $7.75 million into a 2020 campaign to raise taxes on the state’s wealthiest residents to help fund K-12 education. The measure would have raised $880 million if it had passed, but it was declared illegal by a judge.

Justice faces ethics complaint over pledge to ‘fight for conservative principles’

A complaint submitted to the state’s judicial conduct commission alleges Arizona Supreme Court Justice Clint Bolick violated judicial ethics for vowing to continue “fighting for conservative principles”  at a Republican club meeting

In a formal complaint to the Arizona Commission on Judicial Conduct, Save Our Schools Arizona, a public education advocacy group, cited an article from Politico in which Bolick is quoted as saying he and Justice Kathryn King “check our politics at the door” but said he would continue “fighting for conservative principles.” 

The group claimed the statements violated “several provisions” of the judicial ethics canon.

“The judicial codes of conduct clearly state that judges should aspire at all times to conduct that ensures the greatest possible public confidence in their independence and impartiality,” Beth Lewis, director of Save Our Schools, said. “I think that both independence and impartiality are in question.” 

A committee working to retain Bolick and King dismissed the complaint as merely last-ditch campaign fodder. 

Daniel Scarpinato, spokesperson for Judicial Independence PAC, said it was a “frivolous complaint to try to create more political acrimony in advance of the election.” 

Per the Arizona Code of Judicial Conduct, the general campaign and political rules prohibit judges from engaging in political or campaign activity inconsistent with the “independence, integrity and impartiality of the judiciary.”  

Judges are not prohibited from making their personal views on legal or political issues known, so long as they differentiate them from a promise, pledge or commitment to rule a certain way and acknowledge “the overarching judicial obligation to apply and uphold the law, without regard to his or her personal view.” 

“The making of a pledge, promise, or commitment is not dependent upon, or limited to, the use of any specific words or phrases; instead, the totality of the statement must be examined to determine if a reasonable person would believe that the candidate for judicial office has specifically undertaken to reach a particular result,” the rules hold. 

An Oct. 12 Politico article detailing the intersection of judicial races and abortion noted Bolick’s appearance at a Sun City West Republicans Club meeting on Oct. 5. Per the club’s meeting minutes, King was also in attendance. 

“Standing between a fully decorated Christmas tree and a cardboard cutout of Trump giving a double thumbs up, Bolick said he and King know how to “check our politics at the door of the court.’”  

Per the article, Bolick said the abortion ruling was “a convenient excuse to try to get people on the left riled up and replace us with judges who will rubber stamp their ideological agenda.” 

He further stressed his own fairness and independence but “assured the assembled Republicans that he would continue ‘fighting for conservative principles.’” 

According to Politico and meeting minutes from the Republican club, Bolick further noted his advocacy for constitutional principles, making mention of his time clerking for U.S. Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas and working for the Goldwater Institute. But he generally stressed judges cannot be political. 

Complaints submitted to the Commission on Judicial Conduct remain confidential, but Save Our Schools alleged Bolick’s appearance and comments violated “several” provisions of judicial conduct. 

As part of the investigation of judicial conduct complaints, the commission may review relevant materials, interview witnesses and seek a response from the judge, with a standard allowance of about three to four weeks to respond to the complaint. 

Alberto Rodriguez, spokesperson for the court, noted the commission currently has approximately 160 open complaints, and given the standard timeline for a complaint, any resolution would not come before the election.

The complaint falls into the larger fight around judicial retention this cycle, with Bolick and King at the nucleus, and with both pro- and anti-retention groups claiming the other is aiding and abetting the politicization of the courts. 

Lewis acknowledged as much but said the goal was to bring the issue to the attention of voters. 

Save Our Schools Arizona is advocating against the retention of Bolick and King, with Lewis noting the justices’ past rulings striking down two education funding proposals. 

“It’s personal for us,” Lewis said. 

Save Our Schools Arizona called out Judicial Independence Defense PAC, a committee aimed at keeping Bolick and King on the bench. Lewis said the committee’s vow to “protect our independent judiciary” and “keep politics out of the court,” was undercut by Bolick. 

“The court should not be politicized,” Lewis said. “But I do think that Bolick and King have politicized the court.” 

Lewis further noted funding from conservative donors like Jeffrey Yass and Randy Kendrick.

Scrpinato said he thought Save Our Schools “did not have much credibility to be talking about anything related to independence, or taking the temperature down, or keeping politics out of anything. They’ve been obsessed with injecting politics into everything.” 

As for the aim of Judicial Independence Defense PAC, Scarpinato said the goal was to retain all justices and judges in the upcoming election. 

“There is no credible reason to remove them. There are no substantive, ethical complaints. The legal community is not suggesting they be removed,” Scarpinato said. “The reasons for removing them are all partisan and political.”

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