To provide a sense of the explosion of choice, in 2023 eight states adopted universal or nearly universal programs, “universal” meaning all students are eligible to receive choice dollars (though actual funding for all is not necessarily available). That occurred after 2021 saw 19 states create new or expanded choice. We’ve essentially seen a school choice revolution since the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic made clear that one size cannot fit all: Either schools are in‐person or not. Have mask mandates or not. Teach what parents find morally acceptable or not.
Amidst this, Nebraska passed the Opportunity Scholarship Act, providing a credit on state income taxes for taxpayers who donate to scholarship‐granting organizations. Compared to many other states the law is modest – capped at just $25 million in total credits, 50 percent of a donor’s state tax liability, and limiting student eligibility by income – but a tax credit is the best basic grounding for freedom.