Missouri scholarship program could be paused after school year started – KCTV

JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. (KCTV) – A Missouri judge is weighing whether to pause a scholarship program that a state teacher’s union says is unconstitutional.
The Missouri National Educators Association filed a lawsuit after the governor signed a budget that puts $51 million toward private school vouchers. The governor, attorney general and treasurer are all named in the lawsuit.
The teachers suing asked the judge to pause this scholarship program while the legal battle plays out; the problem is that the scholarships have already been given out. If the judge pauses this program, it would put 4,000 students in limbo, and the school year has already started for most. The Cole County judge said he’ll make a decision Friday afternoon based on the arguments heard Thursday.
Three Missouri families lawyered up to defend the voucher program; the families are from Springfield, Kansas City and St. Louis. The attorney representing the families, Bryan Cleveland, is with a national school choice firm called EdChoice.
“It’s made a difference in getting the right placement for their kids and things that match the kind of education they’re looking for, whether that be their values or classical education model.”
The Missouri National Educators Association did not want to comment Thursday, but Gray Media’s Missouri Capitol Bureau spoke with their president-elect when the lawsuit was filed. Rebeka McIntosh, one of the educators who filed the lawsuit, told me this voucher program could be taking money away from public schools that serve all students without prejudice.
“The private schools that will receive these funds get to pick and choose their students, and that is not ok,” McIntosh said.
The lawsuit claims the funding is unconstitutional because it tries to change the law through the state budget, which is not allowed.
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