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From ESA Expansion to School Safety Bonds: The 12 Education Ballot Questions Voters Will Consider on Nov. 6

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Update, Oct. 24: The Hawaii Supreme Court 听on raising taxes on investment properties to fund education, saying it wasn’t worded clearly.听

EDlection 2018: From coast to coast, 蜜桃影视 is profiling a new education-oriented campaign each week. See all our recent profiles, previews, and reactions at The74Million.org/Election (and watch for our Election Night live blog Nov. 6)

Beyond the races for governor, superintendent, and legislatures that will help direct state school policy for the next four years, voters in 12 states will decide on education-related issues ranging from funding to rights for transgender people.

Ballot initiatives in recent elections have had big impacts on K-12 education.

In 2016, California voters overturned a decades-old ban on bilingual education and Oregon opted to boost spending to turn around dismal high school graduation rates. Voters in Massachusetts, meanwhile, decided not to lift a cap on charter schools, and those in Georgia didn鈥檛 authorize a state takeover of failing schools.

Such initiatives are frequently used to increase taxes or float bonds for school spending.

In 2016, voters took opposing stances on a range of education funding questions on the ballot. Voters in California and Maine agreed to raise income taxes to fund education, and citizens of New Mexico and California voted to float bonds for school facilities. But Oregon, Oklahoma, Colorado, and Missouri residents rejected new taxes on sales, tobacco, and corporate income to raise funds for different education programs.

Historically, ballot initiatives to raise taxes haven鈥檛 been any more successful than legislative efforts to do so, said Matt Richmond, chief program officer at EdBuild, a group focused on reforming school funding systems.

鈥淚t鈥檚 not like people enjoy increasing their taxes just because they鈥檙e the ones who got to make that decision,鈥 he said.

Local initiatives to raise property taxes or float bonds for school construction, though, are usually more successful, because voters find them to be less technical and can more easily see how the money will be used, he added.

Here are the 12 education-related ballot questions voters will decide on Nov. 6:

The Big Questions

Arizona Education Savings Accounts: Voters will consider whether to strike down a law that would expand the state鈥檚 already-robust education savings account program to all students. It would be the first universal ESA program in the country to go into effect. (Nevada鈥檚, which passed first, is on hold following a court challenge.)

Education savings accounts, which families can use to pay for private school tuition, tutoring, homeschool curriculum, or other services, are the school choice program du jour, as proponents tout their wide variety of uses. ESA bills are often written in ways that make them less susceptible to legal challenges on the basis of illegal state support for religious instruction, because parents make the ultimate call on how the money is used, and funds can go to other constitutionally appropriate expenses.

A in early October found that 41 percent of respondents supported the universal ESA program, with 32 percent opposed and 27 percent undecided. But many voters contacted after taking the poll said the language of the question was confusing; in the poll, more Democrats than Republicans supported the expansion, the exact opposite of traditional party positions and the legislature鈥檚 vote when it approved the measure in 2017.

South Carolina Superintendent: Voters will consider whether to make the state superintendent of education a position appointed by the governor, rather than elected, as it is now.

Advocates say the change will make the governor more directly responsible for education, reduce possible friction between leaders of different ideologies, and open the pool to qualified candidates unwilling to mount a statewide campaign.

Opponents, primarily the state鈥檚 teachers union, say South Carolina needs an independent voice on education who is accountable to the public.

Making the change would put South Carolina in line with more than three dozen states where superintendents are appointed, either by governors or state boards of education.

Other Key Initiatives

Massachusetts: Lawmakers in 2016 passed a law banning discrimination against transgender people, including guaranteeing access to restrooms and locker rooms that match their gender identity. Voters will consider whether to uphold that law. A separate law guarantees protections for transgender students at school, but transgender children would lose protections in other public accommodations if the law were overturned.

鈥淚t鈥檚 about me having the right to go to a restaurant, go shopping, get a coffee, the day-to-day things. I am nervous that the laws will be taken away and my protections will be taken away,鈥 16-year-old Nicole Talbot , an LGBT rights group.

The opponents who petitioned to place the question on the ballot argue that it puts women and girls at risk, because anyone 鈥渞egardless of intention or anatomy鈥 can be there at any time, according to the group . ( has found no link in Massachusetts between crimes committed in bathrooms and the state鈥檚 transgender protections.)

A yes vote upholds the 2016 law. More than 70 percent of voters in 听 surveys said they鈥檇 vote to uphold the law.

Oregon: Voters will consider whether to overturn the state鈥檚 30-year-old 鈥渟anctuary state鈥 law that prohibits the use of state resources for 鈥渄etecting or apprehending鈥 people whose only suspected crime is violation of federal immigration laws.

Supporters of overturning the sanctuary state provision say it would allow cooperation with federal law enforcement to better keep Oregonians safe and follow the rule of law, arguments the Trump administration has pursued in its efforts to end sanctuary cities as part of a broader immigration crackdown. Opponents of the change say it could lead to racial profiling and make immigrants less likely to report crimes and testify in court.

A decades-old Supreme Court decision guarantees all children in the U.S. a right to a public K-12 education regardless of immigration status. Civil rights groups have urged Education Secretary Betsy DeVos to clarify her comments at a hearing earlier this year that reporting undocumented students to law enforcement was a 鈥local decision.鈥

Undocumented students have been arrested after allegedly being reported by school authorities in New York and at least, as have undocumented parents outside schools in California.

Funding Questions in Brief

Most of the education questions voters will face focus on funding, from general income tax hikes to bonds for specific projects.

Colorado: Whether to raise income taxes on corporations and people making over $150,000 a year, with an estimated $1.6 billion a year going to pre-K鈥12 education.

Georgia: Whether the largest school district in a county with multiple districts may without the agreement of the other districts in the county.

Maryland: Whether to prohibit lawmakers from using tax revenue from casinos for anything other than K-12 education expenses. Gambling brings in about $517 million annually, and that money would have to be exclusively devoted to education by July 1, 2022, .

New Mexico: Whether to float several bonds, including one of just over $6 million, to buy school buses and equip them with air conditioning, and a larger one mostly for improvements at colleges. The larger bond also includes $2.7 million for repairs at the Santa Fe Indian School and New Mexico School for the Deaf.

New Jersey: Whether to float a to pay for school safety, expanded vocational education, and upgrades to school water systems to protect from lead.

Oklahoma: Whether school districts may to pay for classroom expenses, in addition to school facilities, as it is typically used now.

Rhode Island: Whether to float a $250 million bond to .

Utah: Non-binding poll of whether to . The results will guide legislators as they consider whether to allow that revenue, roughly $180 million, to be used for transportation projects. An equivalent amount that currently comes from general fund revenues would be used for education instead.

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