Tales From the School Choice Wars

Some people attack school voucher proponents for not being pro-education.

ByABC News
May 2, 2007, 11:04 AM

May 2, 2007 — -- I've been on the road lately, giving speeches at universities, think tanks and community groups to let people know about the release of the paperback edition of "Myths, Lies, and Downright Stupidity."

On the book tour I notice that the people who seem the most energized are school choice advocates.

Many of them are under attack.

When the Evergreen Freedom Foundation (EFF), a nonprofit dedicated to advancing individual liberty, criticized the Washington state teachers' union use of dues to politick against school choice, the union attacked the organization with full-page newspaper ads and prime-time, 30-second radio spots. The ads called EFF a "right wing extremist 'think tank'" that uses "bundles of cash" to promote its agenda. Union spokespeople also called its members "trolls," "lying dirt bags" and "evilzealots." According to one union supporter, "Those scum are lower than sewer water, and smell less pleasant."

EFF uses "bundles of cash"? That's some myth. Its budget is nothing compared to the state's teachers union, which spends eight times more money on politics than the state's Republican and Democratic parties combined. EFF gets its money from people who volunteer, rather than lifting it from paychecks of teachers who have no choice in the matter. EFF contributors include people like housekeeper Gussie Hoff. Gussie gave Evergreen $30 a month for 11 years, and even though she's now unable to work, she still sends money -- with an apology for not being able to do more.

Attacks from powerful unions haven't dimmed the passion of school choice advocates. It's as if they say to themselves, "You can call us names, but we know what we are doing is morally right."

In San Antonio, Texas, Jim and Cecilia Leininger have spent $10 million of their own money to give private school scholarships to 8,000 students who were struggling in government schools.

At a meeting of the Texas Public Policy Foundation, Jim said, "We hadn't had this program going for one month, and the principal of a school in San Antonio called us and said, 'I've got two black kids in my school that are identical twins. They've just entered the sixth grade. They're 11 years old. They're good kids. They're good students. They don't want to be in a gang. The gang is after them. And if you don't give them a scholarship on an emergency basis, they're going to get killed.'"