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OHIO WEATHER

What are the benefits of the EdChoice program in Ohio?


Jaeaun Payne is an eighth-grader at Clintonville Academy, for which his mother Donita Brittman uses a voucher to keep him in the private school.

Note: This guest column was penned by David Hodges who is defending the Educational Choice Scholarship (EdChoice) Program from a lawsuit.

For the past two decades, Ohio has made a simple promise to its parents: If your child is zoned to attend a poorly performing school or if your family meets certain income guidelines, your child can receive a scholarship to attend a private school that better meets your child’s needs.

This promise has enabled hundreds of thousands of Ohio students to have brighter futures by attending schools that would otherwise be unavailable to them.  

More:Letters: Equity, education is right way to elevate those in need

But if a group of educational choice opponents has their way, that promise may be snuffed out. Recently, they filed a lawsuit alleging that this alternative to the traditional public school system is unconstitutional. Although the Ohio Supreme Court has already held that educational choice is constitutional, choice opponents have not gotten the message.

More:100 public schools are suing Ohio, saying EdChoice voucher programs are unconstitutional

If the lawsuit succeeds, it will be devastating for the tens of thousands of Ohio students who rely on scholarship programs to get an education that works for them.

David Hodges is an educational choice attorney at the Institute for Justice.

To thwart this cynical lawsuit from throwing these students out of school, five Ohio families receiving scholarships moved to intervene in the case to defend the programs with help from my law firm, the Institute for Justice

Take Christopher Boggs. A father of three, he and his wife live in Columbus, where they rely on scholarships to send their children to local private schools whose academics and curricula they prize.



Read More: What are the benefits of the EdChoice program in Ohio?

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