Wolf is part of a team of researchers that has studied the Milwaukee school choice program over five years. Their statistical analysis “confirmed that no measure of student disadvantage—not disability status, not test scores, not income, not race—was statistically associated with whether or not an 8th grade voucher student was or was not admitted to a 9th grade voucher-receiving private school.” This is exactly what the law requires. Wisconsin law forbids discrimination on the basis of disability and requires schools participating in the voucher program to accept students on a random basis.
Moreover, the DOJ is wrong on the law in treating private schools participating in the program as though they were government contractors. As Wolf explains:
Private organizations normally are exempt from Title II of ADA but the
DOJ argues that the law applies to private schools in the MPCP because
the government is contracting with them to provide a public service (the
education of K-12 students). This claim flies in the face of the facts
and case-law surrounding the program. The voucher program does not
involve any contracts, of any kind, between any government organization
and the participating private schools. Students need to meet certain
eligibility restrictions to participate in the program, as do interested
private schools. Once both are deemed eligible by the state, students
choose schools and government funds flow to the private schools based on
the choices families have made and consistent with the laws governing
the program, not based on any “contract.” In fact, the Wisconsin State
Statute that governs the MPCP, §119.23, is entirely separate from
Wisconsin State Statute §119.235 entitled “Contracts with Private
Schools and Agencies.” Nothing could make the point clearer that the
MPCP is not a case of government contracting for education services.
The DOJ’s overreach may be unsurprising in light of other recent scandals, but it also sets a terrible precedent. Parents choosing to use their vouchers at private educational institutions do not render those institutions “government contractors” any more than grocery stores become “government contractors” when citizens use their EBT cards to purchase food there. The Obama administration’s unlawful and misguided attempt to hamper school choice programs with additional red tape should be vigorously resisted.
Another Great Article From: THE CATO INSTITUTE