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David Pepper has some serious doubts about Ohio’s voucher system.

I continue to predict that the private school “voucher” system of Ohio will at some point turn into the biggest scandal in Ohio history.

For three reasons:

Add those three factors together, and you have a recipe for disaster. And it’s especially bad when the added costs of vouchers are one of the reasons property taxes are going up everywhere, and why public schools remain underfunded.

So given that backdrop, let me introduce some data I just reviewed from a treasure trove provided by Andrew Wilson—a former member of the Fairborn School Board and a member of the steering committee of Vouchers Hurt Ohio. Using data from the Ohio’s Department of Education and Workforce (DEW), he compiled a list of all the private schools receiving funding from the state through the two major “voucher” programs—called “EdChoice” and “EdChoice Expansion” (note: I use quotation marks because while the money is framed as vouchers for families, it goes directly from the state to the school).

I dug into this data in a few different ways, and discovered some eye-popping facts:

First, what this data shows is how the “EdChoice” and “Ed Choice Expansion” programs have created, essentially, a wholly separate system of schools—funded by the public, but with zero accountability to the public.

Read the rest of this eye-popping post here.