Education savings accounts are dead in South Carolina鈥攆or now鈥攁fter the state Supreme Court ruled Wednesday that the state鈥檚 newest private school choice program violates the state鈥檚 constitution.
The Education Trust Fund Scholarship Program, which Republican Gov. Henry McMaster signed into law in the spring of 2023, offers parents up to $6,000 in state funds for a wide range of private education expenses, including private school tuition, fees, transportation, and supplies. The legislature allocated funding for up to 5,000 students , and whose families earn up to 200 percent of the federal poverty level, to receive ESA funds this school year.
Eligibility was set to expand over the next two years to ultimately reach 15,000 students from families earning up to 400 percent of the federal poverty level by the 2026-27 school year.
In a , however, judges ruled that the state constitution prohibits state lawmakers from directing 鈥減ublic funds to the benefit of private schools.鈥
鈥淭his is what our constitution forbids,鈥 Justice D. Garrison Hill wrote in the majority opinion.
The ruling came in response to a legal challenge of the program by the South Carolina NAACP, the South Carolina Education Association, and six public school parents. The plaintiffs alleged that the ESA program violated constitutional restrictions on public spending for private institutions.
Ellen Weaver, the elected state superintendent of education and a Republican, said in a statement that the ruling 鈥渨reaks havoc on participating students and their families.鈥
鈥淔amilies cried tears of joy when the scholarship funds became available for their children, and today鈥檚 Supreme Court ruling brings those same families tears of devastation,鈥 she said.
The department didn鈥檛 respond to follow-up questions about the nature of that havoc. Step Up for 69传媒, an advocacy group for private school choice, that families would start receiving funds later that month. Under the South Carolina law, this fall was the first in which families would receive money to enroll their children in private school.
Advocates knew ahead of time that this outcome was a possibility, said Chris Lubienski, a private school choice critic who is a professor of education policy at Indiana University.
鈥淭hey went ahead with this knowing there were serious questions about legality,鈥 Lubienski said. 鈥淭hat did set those families up for chaotic disruption.鈥
Lawmakers in the South Carolina House passed legislation in March to . But Senate leaders signaled they were reluctant to take up the legislation as this case was pending in state courts.
The families of slightly fewer than 2,900 students received ESA funds this school year. The state rejected another 5,000 students鈥 applications, according to .
Legal wrangling over ESAs is far from over
The ruling has immediate implications for participating families in South Carolina, as the court ordered the state to stop spending funds on ESAs. It also raises broader questions about the viability of private school choice programs currently in place in numerous other states.
Critics of private school choice are pursuing similar lawsuits in Ohio, Utah, and Wisconsin. The South Carolina case offers private school choice critics a potential roadmap.
The South Carolina verdict, however, may not be a 鈥渟ingular precedent in and of itself,鈥 Lubienski said. State courts鈥 reactions to private school choice have been mixed, and is different.
Still, South Carolina isn鈥檛 the first state to see its private school choice program overturned. The Nevada Supreme Court in 2016 . Kentucky鈥檚 Supreme Court in 2022 on constitutional grounds. West Virginia鈥檚 ESA was before the state Supreme Court permitted it to proceed.
Seventeen states offer educational savings accounts to some or all families, according to Education Week鈥檚 tracker of private school choice legislation. Alabama, , and earlier this year became the latest states to offer them. Lawmakers in Texas and Tennessee are likely to consider new or expanded ESA offerings in their upcoming legislative sessions.
The South Carolina Policy Center, a right-leaning think tank that helped craft the ESA legislation, is pushing for Weaver and the state treasurer, Curtis Loftis, to appeal this week鈥檚 decision to the U.S. Supreme Court, which would then have to decide whether to take it up.
鈥淯ltimately, we are severely disappointed for all the students in need who will no longer have an opportunity to pursue a higher-quality education that meets their needs,鈥 said Sam Aaron, research director for the organization.
Advocates for ESAs in South Carolina could also try to restore the shuttered program by asking voters to approve a constitutional amendment that explicitly allows state funds to flow to private schools. The majority verdict itself raises that possibility: 鈥淥ur General Assembly knew how to draft an amendment to present to the people that would allow public funding for private schools, but it did not,鈥 Hill wrote.
But based on history, such a proposal could face an uphill battle. Of the 16 times states in the last half-century have asked voters to weigh in on school choice, school choice has only won out on two occasions, according to a brief by . In both cases鈥 and 鈥攙oters were throwing support behind charter schools, not private schools.
More ballot items on private school choice are on the horizon. This November, voters in Colorado, Kentucky, and Nebraska will weigh in.