Defending School Choice in Tennessee
In May 2019, Tennessee enacted the Tennessee Education Savings Account Pilot Program Act, giving thousands of low- and middle-income families in Tennessee with greater school choice as early as the 2020-21 school year. The program provides scholarships worth up to approximately $8,100 to families for use on tuition, required books and technology, and other allowable educational expenses. When two lawsuits were filed in 2020 to challenge the program’s constitutionality the Institute for Justice (“IJ”) intervened to defend the program on behalf of parents Natu Bah, Builguissa Diallo, and Star Brumfield.
On May 18, 2022, the Tennessee Supreme Court sided with IJ and Tennessee parents and upheld the ESA program’s constitutionality, reversing the lower court decision that found the program unconstitutional. In August 2022 the case was sent to the lower court where plaintiffs made renewed attempts at blocking the ESA Program. A three-judge panel of the chancery court denied those motions and later dismissed all remaining claims brought in both cases. The plaintiffs in both cases appealed but only one appeal remains active (the other filed by Shelby County and Metro Nashville ended when they abandoned their claims).
The Tennessee General Assembly expanded the ESA program in 2023 and it now extends to families with students eligible to enroll in either the Shelby County, Hamilton County, or Metro Nashville school districts, or the state’s Achievement School District. To be eligible for an ESA, children must come from households earning less than 200 percent of the federal free lunch program, which means there’s an income cap of about $78,000 for a family of four (and about 60% of Nashville and Shelby County families are eligible). The program is capped at 15,000 students but may expand with future legislation.
The Institute for Justice, the nation’s leading legal advocate for school choice, continues to defend Tennessee’s ESA program on behalf of Tennessee parents.
Introduction
With the 2019 passage of the Tennessee Education Savings Account Pilot Program Act, Tennessee joined the growing list of states providing low- and middle-income families with greater educational choice. Today, the program provides scholarships worth up to $8,000 to families from Shelby County, Hamilton County and Metro Nashville school districts to use on a wide array of educational expenses, including private school tuition, textbooks, and tutoring services. To be eligible, children must come from households earning less than 200 percent of the federal free lunch program, which equates to an income cap of about $778,000 for a family of four. While the pilot program is capped at 15,000 students, it can be expanded by future legislation. In short, Tennessee is about to offer low- and middle-income families the same educational choice options that wealthier families already enjoy.
The governments of Metro Nashville and Shelby County, however, were threatened by the idea of giving more opportunities to parents with children in underperforming schools. By teaming up with the Metropolitan Nashville Board of Public Education to challenge the program in court, Shelby County and Metro Nashville attempted to deprive Tennessee families of the opportunity to send their kids to better performing public schools—opportunities that their wealthier peers currently enjoy.
The main claim against the law was that it violates Section 9 of the Tennessee State Constitution—its Home Rule provision—which prohibits the legislature from adopting “private or local” laws. This section was designed to prevent the legislature from singling out certain local governments for unfavorable treatment and reducing their power. In May 2022, however, the Tennessee Supreme Court held that the program did not violate the Home Rule provision, flatly rejecting the opponents’ main claim. The county plaintiffs attempted to press their remaining claims in the lower court after losing on their lead claim in the Tennessee Supreme Court, but later abandoned their legal claims and dismissed their lawsuit in October 2023.
Undeterred, a handful of opponents of the program continue to challenge it in a separate lawsuit, raising a handful of legal claims under the Tennessee Constitution and state law. Each of the challengers’ legal claims were dismissed by the lower court in November 2022 and their appeal remains pending.
IJ’s Parent Clients
Natu Bah
Natu Bah is a mother of two children and lives in Memphis, Tennessee, where she works as an African hair braider. Natu’s two sons, Mohammed and Mouctar, are enrolled in a public school in Shelby County and are eligible to participate in Tennessee’s ESA program.
Builguissa Diallo
Builguissa Diallo is the mother of a five-year-old daughter and lives in Shelby County, where she also works as an African hair braider. Builguissa’s daughter is eligible for the ESA program.
Case Details
Case Name
McEwen v. Lee
Location
Memphis, TN
Original Court
Chancery Court for Davidson County, Tennessee
Current Court
Tennessee Supreme Court
Date Filed
20200207