In 2011, the Indiana State Legislature, pushed by then-governor Mitch Daniels, enacted House Bill 1003, which established an education voucher system, where the state (through taxpayers) would front the costs for students of lower income families to receive a private school education. The vouchers are given to the qualifying families once they decide where to send their children, not paid directly to the school.
At
its inception, the voucher system was supposed to curb subpar education,
especially for poor children, by allowing students to enroll in private schools
to increase educational quality not just for the students, but for the schools
as well, using free-market competition theory (as competition increases,
quality must go up and price must go down). A great idea in theory, however,
studies show that the desired performance results were not obtained.
In
2011, eligible families had to have a net household income of 150% the Federal
Free or Reduced Price Lunch Program rate or less, and have been enrolled in an
Indiana public school for at least one year. There was also a cap on the number
of students that could receive this benefit, limiting its impact and amount of
tax dollars spent. When
Mike Pence won the gubernatorial race in 2013, the program saw a massive change.
Governor Pence lifted the restriction on the number of students who could
receive the voucher, increased the limit for qualifying family income, and
removed the stipulation that the student must first try public school. In
effect, Governor Pence was allowing for middle income families to send their
children to private school on the state’s dime, which amounted to $146
million in 2017.
Another
problem arose: taxpayers soon realized that the majority of private schools the
children enrolled in were religiously affiliated. A whopping 98%
of the schools that qualifying students enrolled in were religiously
affiliated. Nowhere in the law is there a prerequisite that says the schools
must be secular, nor are there any regulations on how the admissions process
for the private schools can function, aside from the obvious
anti-discrimination language presented in the 14th amendment. Religious
institutions can admit students based on academic and behavioral records along
with family lifestyle, all creating room for admissions bias on a religious
basis. Per
the Government Accountability Office, only four voucher programs in the
U.S. require private schools to accept all voucher students, space permitting.
Indiana does not have one of those four programs. In addition, the private
schools can compel students to participate in any and all religious activities.
Pence, a noted Evangelical Christian, has long been a proponent of this law.
As
I read articles about this law, the question I kept asking myself was can the
government pay for students to attend religiously affiliated schools? Answering
that questions requires analyses of several cases.
Lemon v. Kurtzman (1971) was
a landmark decision in the realm of Establishment Clause precedent. The case
involved two statutes, one in Pennsylvania and the other in Rhode Island. In
Pennsylvania, the statute allowed the state to partially reimburse non-public
secondary schools for teacher salaries, books, and other materials that were
used to teach non-religious topics. In Rhode Island, the statute allowed the
state to supplement 15% of non-public religiously affiliated elementary
schools’ teacher salaries. The Supreme Court ruled 8-0 and 8-1 respectively
that the laws were unconstitutional. In the majority opinion, Chief Justice
Burger established a three-pronged approach to determining a violation in the Establishment
Clause. Known now as the Lemon Test,
the precedent states that to comply with the Establishment clause, a law must
1. have a non-religious purpose, 2. Have a predominantly non-religious
consequence, and 3. It must not foster what the Justice called “excessive
entanglement.”
Applying
this test to the Indiana statute, the only conclusion that I can reach is that
the law is unconstitutional. The law certainly has a secular purpose, at least
in the eyes of the legislature that passed it. However, I believe that the law
does have a religious effect and causes “excessive entanglement.” By paying for
children to go to private religious schools, you subject them to not only compulsory
religious warship (which private schools can do), but also biased teaching
methods (see creationism), or even classes about religious warship (like bible
study). Furthermore, the state is paying for children to receive religious
education, regardless of whether they send the check directly to the school or
the family. It is hard to have a more blatant establishment of religion than
having the taxpayers fund student’s tuition at a religious school, regardless
of the religion.
However,
school voucher programs have been increasing in popularity since the 1990s.
With their establishment in other states, other citizens have had similar
concerns about where their tax dollars are going. One case, Zelman v. Simmons-Harris (2002),
reached the Supreme Court. This program in Cleveland provided for a limited
number of qualifying students, most of whom were below the poverty line, to
attend a private school paid for by the state. Parents were given funds based on
financial need and tuition costs, and had total control over school choice. Of
the participating private schools, 82% were religiously affiliated, and 96% of
students enrolled in religiously affiliated schools. The Supreme Court held, in
a 5-4 vote, that the program does not violate the Establishment Clause. In the
Majority opinion, Justice Rehnquist reasoned that it is within the states’
jurisdiction to give kids educational opportunities. Further, he stated that
the government was not directly paying the religious schools, the parents were,
as it was their prerogative to enroll their children. In addition, the justice
noted that this law is neutral and neither favors nor established any religion,
and benefits all families that qualify equally.
This
case is also similarities with Everson v. Board of Education (1947). The major
difference in the two cases is that the funding the state is giving to parents
of qualifying children does, in application, have a secular purpose. The court
held in that case that it was legal for Ewing Township to reimburse parents for
their children’s transportation costs.
Personally,
I disagreed with The Everson decision. Justice Jackson’s stated in his
dissenting opinion that, “[the state] cannot make public business of religious
worship or instruction, or of attendance at religious institutions of any
character.” In that same vein, Justice Rutledge remarked in his dissenting
opinion, “[state funding] not only helps the children to get to school and the
parents to send them. It aids them in a substantial way to get the very thing
which they are sent to the particular school to secure, namely, religious
training and teaching.”
Those
two quotes very accurately describe, in my mind, the nature of why this statute
is unconstitutional. The state, in giving parents the money to send children to
private schools, did not forbade them from sending children to religiously
affiliated institutions. While it might not have been an affirmative effort to
give kids religious education, the reality of the laws application gave many
students a religious education and made religious teaching public business.
Furthermore, regardless of the neutrality of the law as referenced in the
Zelman opinion, which I also disagree with, the state government of Indiana
actively enables parents to “secure” religious education for their children
which, to me, is a clear establishment of religion. I do not subscribe to the
idea that, because state sends checks to families and allows parents to choose
schools, the state has no culpability in the involvement of religion within
education thanks to this program. Indiana, in 2017, spent $146 million on
tuition through this program, and 98% of the children whose tuition was paid
attended religiously affiliated schools. This law not only violates the “Lemon
Test”, but it subjects citizens to paying huge volumes of money in the name of
obtaining non-secular education. Henceforth, I believe this law should be
unconstitutional.
2 comments:
I believe that the Indiana state statute is unconstitutional because it does not pass the Lemon Test established by Lemon v. Kurtzman (1971), and it clearly breaches the line between Church and State. Additionally, as Will said, it "causes 'excessive entanglement.'" However, I believe that the decision of the Everson v. Board of Education (1947) case has now created a slippery slope. One might ask that if parents sending their children to parochial schools can receive the same reimbursements from the state for transportation costs as parents sending their children to public schools, why couldn't poor parents of the state use the same voucher system to send their children to parochial schools as poor parents sending their children to public schools? Overall both of these cases use state taxes - money from all citizens - to aid the attendance of religious schools. Thereby, aiding the education and practice of religious beliefs and violating the First Amendment's Establishment Clause.
The goal is that by governmentally funding public education the education received at public schools is the most facially neutral and cultivates knowledge, neither fully religious or secular. I find it almost as a conflict of interest to allow the money of a government funded program to go to private schools, as it promotes that public schools clearly are not the pinnacle education of Indiana, which they should be. With that being said, a conflict of interest doesn’t violate the constitution. I do not see the program as unconstitutional, the secular purpose (sending kids to school) overrides the ‘so called’ establishment of religion. The program does not establish any given religion as the money can go to any type of private school (correct me if I’m wrong) just because this private school is of religious affiliation it still serves the purpose to ultimately educate children and must adhere to state curriculum obligations.
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