A NC Wisconsin News analysis of Wisconsin Department of Instruction data found 95 students receive scholarships for private schools. These vouchers could be on the chopping block if candidate Janet Protasiewicz wins the April 4 Wisconsin Supreme Court election.
Protasiewicz is supported by the Wisconsin Education Association Council, whose President Peggy Wirtz-Olsen has gone on record saying “private school vouchers…are bleeding our public schools dry” and that removing them would be a priority in a liberal-majority Wisconsin Supreme Court.
Clint Bolick, an Arizona State Supreme Court Justice who has represented Wisconsin school choice advocates, commented to the MacIver Institute that there will be "renewed attacks in court" to declare the school choice program unconstitutional if Protasiewicz is elected.
"If Left-wing extremists succeed in taking over the Wisconsin Supreme County, hundreds of thousands of vulnerable students will be at risk of losing access to the school of their choice," Brian Burch, CEO of Catholic Vote, told NC Wisconsin News. "We cannot afford to turn back the clock to the days when only wealthy families had the option of sending their children to schools they choose."
Wisconsin taxpayers fund $260,896 in vouchers for 95 Taylor County students attending private schools.
Taylor County has the 40th highest number of students receiving vouchers in Wisconsin.
Across the state, private school students received slightly more than $444 million in vouchers in 2022-23, compared to the $17.9 billion spent on the public K-12 school system in 2021-22.
School | Type | City | County | # Students | Funding |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Holy Rosary Catholic School | Catholic | Medford | Taylor | 95 | $260,896 |