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The law was struck down by the Kentucky Supreme Court in 2022 for violating provisions of the Constitution of Kentucky forbidding public funding of private education. [2] The General Assembly passed a separate law in 2022 which would have allowed for the public funding of charter schools and the creation of two pilot schools, which was also ...
Voting yes for Amendment 2 will NOT increase teacher pay or funding for public schools as stated in TV commercials and recent mailers to Kentucky families. In reality, it will do the exact opposite.
OpEd: Take it from a school board member: This amendment essentially cracks open the floodgates, allowing private and for-profit schools to siphon public funds away from public schools.
Kentucky voters weighed in on Amendment 2, which would allow "school choice" to come to the state if passed. Here's how people voted at the polls. Kentucky Amendment 2 fails in 2024 election
2) Vouchers and “school choice” do not automatically cause teacher pay to rise. 3) If Amendment 2 passes, funding will be diverted away from our public schools to private schools, which can ...
Subpart 2 (Sections 2111–2113) of Title II details how grants will be disbursed to the states. It explains specifically how the law determines the allotment of funds to each state, the conditions with which the state must comply in order to apply for and be approved for funding, and how the states may use the funds.
Amendment 2 asks voters to decide whether public money should be spent on nonpublic education. Amendment 2 in Kentucky explained: Your ballot issue questions answered Skip to main content
History of education in Kentucky covers education at all levels from the late 18th century to the early 21st century. The frontier state was slow to build an educational system. In K–12 and higher education, Kentucky consistently has ranked toward the bottom of national rankings in terms of funding, literacy levels, and student performance.