I know what you meant and don't disagree with some things. But public roads take you to private schools where cops have jurisdiction and fire depts too and then there are municipal services (sewerage, for instance). I get that kids with traechs and special needs require a different education. But you can get a student loan and go to a college of your choice, you can get TOPS in LA and go to a college of your choice, some of which have different entrance requirements. Let parents choose. I paid a lot in taxes for public schools we didn't use.
Public roads are procured and maintained in compliance with established tax spending laws.
Police and Fire equipment and staffing are procured and maintained in compliance with established tax spending laws.
Municipal services are procured and maintained in compliance with established tax spending laws.
Again- I support open enrollment and my kids open enroll. If open enrollment expands to include funding private education though, then those private schools need to spend tax dollars in compliance with established tax spending laws. And those private schools need to comply with Federal and State education laws- Title9, harassment and bullying, IEPs, etc etc etc.
I have yet to hear of a single good and logical reason for why private education should receive public dollars and not have to comply with Federal and State education laws. I have heard and read many 'well why should they have to report since they are private?' comments, but those are lazy excuses and and at best they are emotion based reasons.
Public education is a societal gain and those who lazily ask- 'well if I dont use it then why should I pay for it?' either dont understand what 'public good' and 'societal gain' mean, or they are just emtionally lashing out in frustration and should be patted on the head and fed a Snickers to calm down.
Reducing public education funding has a direct relationship to a reduction in overall student test results, a reduction in overall student emotional growth and maturity, and a reduction in student outcomes over the span of K12. Like other things I have posted in this thread, that last sentence is not an opinion of mine, it is established reality and rooted in collected and analyzed data.
Its funny that you acknowledge the IEP/SPED issues I mention, but you dont actually fully address it or offer up a solution. You just say 'I get it, but...' and go onto another point. Meanwhile, IEP/SPED funding concerns remain unresolved without even attempting to address the issue.
One of the hardest hit areas when public education funds go to private schools is small rural school districts. For years in my state, even the extreme MAGA Republicans and Christian Nationalist Conservatives in the State Legislature wouldnt support the Far Right Conservative Governor's demand for private school vouchers. They all knew what would happen to the public schools in their districts that perpetually barely hang on due to declining enrollment and declining funding. But they can only hold out for so long. It was 5 years, but inevitable. And this school year, multiple Superintendents have confirmed what the Legislators feared.