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Tennessee Governor Bill Lee, who never lets a chance to try to steer public funding to private schools pass him by, is having a good week. State Senate and House majority leaders filed identical bills to create โ€œEducation Freedom Scholarshipsโ€ that would give $7,075 in public funding for a private education to 20,000 Tennessee students, beginning in the fall of 2025. The plan would grow in scope in subsequent years.

The bill has been opposed by the stateโ€™s large city school systems and by legislators in many rural districts, where there are often no private school options, and where getting adequate funding for public schools is often difficult. The voucher bill is also opposed by the vast majority of the stateโ€™s public school teachers. 

Thatโ€™s bad enough, but later in the week, Voucher Bill (see what I did there?) got more good news. In case you havenโ€™t been paying attention, GOP luminaries of all stripes are now urging the abolishment of the federal Department of Education. See, that way, supporters say, the money from the feds would come directly into the stateโ€™s coffers, to be dispensed under the supervision of, well, Bill Lee. Shocker, right? It should come as no surprise that Lee is all for killing the education department.

โ€œWe know Tennessee. We know our children,โ€ Lee said. โ€œWe know the needs here much better than a bureaucracy in Washington, D.C., does.โ€

No you donโ€™t, Bill. What you know how to do โ€” and what you have tried to do for years โ€” is slide public tax dollars into the coffers of private education firms that will then grease the palms of pols such as yourself. If you cared about Tennesseeโ€™s children, you wouldnโ€™t want to funnel our tax dollars to well-off Tennesseans who will use it for tuition fees for little Bradleyโ€™s third-grade year at Hillbilly Bible Kollege. 

Lee and the GOP have been fighting for vouchers to become law for years, and this time around, given the upcoming change in the White House, they might have the juice to pull it off. If the last election proved anything, it is that the average American is anything but well-informed and well-educated. One of the most googled questions on Election Day was, โ€œDid Joe Biden drop out?โ€ Lawd, help us. 

Here are a few numbers to ponder (and weep over): 21 percent of adults in the U.S. are illiterate; 54 percent of adults have a literacy below 6th grade level; 45 million read below a 5th grade level; 44 percent of American adults do not read a book in a year. So yeah, letโ€™s fix that by cutting public school funding and giving people money to send their kids to private schools. 

My parents werenโ€™t rich, but I grew up privileged. Only we didnโ€™t call it privilege back then because it was so ordinary. In the small Midwestern town where we lived, everybody I knew โ€” Black, white, brown, poor, middle-class, or wealthy โ€” went to the same public schools and attended the townโ€™s single public high school. 

It was a great equalizer, and kids learned โ€” sometimes the hard way โ€” not to get too snooty. Iโ€™m not so naive as to think that my Black classmates didnโ€™t suffer negative experiences that were beyond the experiences I had, but we did all manage to get along. And we all had the same opportunity to learn with the same teachers, using the same facilities in the same classrooms, no matter a familyโ€™s income level. That is a great and powerful thing about public education โ€” itโ€™s an equalizer. But it needs to be funded and nourished. An investment in educating our youth is one of the best possible uses of our tax dollars. Instead of destroying the Department of Education, we should be funding it better and putting it in the hands of someone with creative ideas to support teachers and inspire students.

Iโ€™m not holding my breath, though. Iโ€™d put the odds at 50-50 that the Education Department survives the coming administration. And if it does, given the clown-car level of cabinet appointments thus far, I wouldnโ€™t be a bit surprised if Trump appointed the My Pillow guy to the job.