THE DEATH AND LIFE OF THE GREAT ARIZONA PUBLIC SCHOOL SYSTEM
A Infuriated and Occasionally Despairing Love Letter to the Kids Getting Left Behind
(With Deepest Apologies — and Profound Gratitude — to Diane Ravitch)
"Public schools are the backbone of democracy. When you defund them, you don't just close classrooms — you close futures." — Diane Ravitch, historian, education policy scholar, and the woman who saw all of this coming before most people knew what a voucher was.
PART ONE: Welcome to Arizona, Where Your Tax Dollars Buy Disneyland Tickets
Let's set the scene.
It's a scorching Tuesday in Phoenix — because in Arizona, it's always a scorching Tuesday. A child sits in a crumbling public school classroom. The ceiling has a water stain shaped vaguely like the state of Texas (which feels thematically appropriate). The textbooks were printed when flip phones were aspirational. The teacher — brilliant, exhausted, and working a second job on weekends — is doing her absolute best with $7,200 per pupil per year, one of the lowest per-pupil funding rates in the entire United States.
Across town, a family that has always sent their children to a private academy is opening a reimbursement check from the state of Arizona for $7,500. They used it for ski passes, a Lego set, and — this is not a joke, this is in the auditor's report — a diamond ring.
Welcome to the Arizona Empowerment Scholarship Account program. Where "empowerment" means your tax dollars, and "scholarship" means their vacation.
This is the story of how one state became the national laboratory for dismantling public education — who's doing it, who's fighting back, what it's costing you, and why the ghost of every underfunded classroom in America is haunting Phoenix right now.
PART TWO: How You Kill a Public School System (A Step-by-Step Guide, Apparently)
To be clear: nobody in the privatization movement says they want to kill public schools. They say they want choice. They say they want freedom. They say they want parents to decide.
What they don't say — but what the data screams — is that the mechanism they've built to deliver that "choice" functions, with remarkable precision, like a slow-motion defunding machine aimed directly at the schools serving Arizona's most vulnerable children.
Here's how the trick works:
Step 1: Create the Universal Voucher
In 2022, Arizona became the first state in the nation to offer universal private school vouchers to every single student, regardless of income, need, or whether they ever attended a public school. The program is called the Empowerment Scholarship Account, or ESA. Each family receives roughly $7,500 per child in state funds, deposited into an account they can spend on private school tuition, homeschooling materials, tutors, or — as we've established — ski trips.
The architects of this masterpiece? The Goldwater Institute, a libertarian Phoenix think tank with historical funding ties to Charles Koch and the Bradley Foundation. They didn't just lobby for this bill. They wrote the legal framework, defended it in court, and have spent years suing to block any attempt at oversight or accountability. They are, in the most literal sense, the intellectual authors of Arizona's current $1 billion budget crater.
Step 2: Blow Past Every Projection
When the universal expansion passed, the state estimated it would cost roughly $65 million. Cute.
Enrollment exploded from 12,000 students to over 100,000. The annual cost has now crossed $1 billion — drawn directly from the state's General Fund, competing dollar-for-dollar with public school funding, road repairs, and every other public service Arizona provides.
To put that in perspective: Arizona ranks near the absolute bottom nationally for per-pupil public school funding. The state is simultaneously spending a billion dollars on a voucher program while leaving public school kids with crumbling infrastructure and outdated textbooks. This is not a coincidence. This is the design.
Step 3: Subsidize People Who Don't Need It
Here's the part that should make every Arizona taxpayer's blood pressure spike: 70% to 80% of universal voucher recipients never attended an Arizona public school. They were already in private schools. Their families were already paying tuition out of pocket.
The state is not redirecting money that was following a child. The state is writing brand new checks to families who were already funding their own private education. The Grand Canyon Institute and multiple state audits have confirmed this. Arizona is not saving money. Arizona is handing subsidies to wealthy families who needed no subsidy.
And there's a particularly elegant loophole for the affluent: some wealthy school districts are funded entirely by local property taxes and receive zero state operational funding. When a student from one of those districts takes a voucher, the state can't claw back local tax money — it simply writes a new $7,500 check from the general fund. This single loophole has added an estimated $65 million to $85 million in unexpected costs. Alone. Just from that one gap.
Step 4: Approve Everything Automatically and Hope Nobody Notices
Processing 12,000 voucher transactions per day is, admittedly, a logistical challenge. The Arizona Department of Education's solution? Auto-approve everything under $2,000. No review. No questions. Just: approved.
The result? Nearly 2.3 million transactions totaling over $654 million were waved through with minimal oversight. The Arizona Auditor General found that 34% of a reviewed sample had compliance issues or lacked documentation. Over $100 million in pre-approved transactions completely bypassed risk assessments.
What slipped through this regulatory black hole? Buckle up:
PART THREE: The World's Most Expensive Field Trip — A Taxpayer-Funded Shopping List
The following items have been reimbursed with Arizona public education dollars. These are not allegations. These are confirmed findings from state audits, investigative reporting, and internal ADE reviews.
| Category | What Your Tax Dollars Bought |
|---|---|
| 🎡 Entertainment | Disneyland tickets, Disney World tickets, family cruise bookings |
| ✈️ Travel & Resorts | Out-of-state luxury resort stays, international flights, trips to castles in England, ruins in the Middle East, museums across Europe |
| 💎 Luxury Goods | Diamond rings, high-end jewelry (flagged in internal ADE audits) |
| 📱 Consumer Electronics | Late-model iPhones, high-end TVs, gaming consoles, advanced graphics cards |
| 🏠 Home Goods | Major kitchen appliances, home improvement materials, lingerie |
| ⛷️ Recreation | Ski passes, snowboarding trips, horseback riding, golf simulator equipment, trampoline parks |
| 🏋️ Personal Services | Private fitness trainers, personal athletic coaches |
| 🧱 "STEM Tools" | Over $1 million collectively spent on Lego sets |
To be scrupulously fair: voucher defenders note these represent a small percentage of the overall billion-dollar budget. This is technically true. It is also true that a small percentage of a billion dollars is still tens of millions of dollars — money that could have hired teachers, repaired roofs, or bought textbooks that were printed after the Obama administration.
The Goldwater Institute, for its part, has fought vigorously against any spending restrictions. Because apparently, the free market demands the right to buy a diamond ring with public education funds, and any attempt to stop that is government overreach.
PART FOUR: The Armies — Who Is Fighting for Arizona's Children, and Who Is Fighting for the Voucher Industry
The Defenders of Public Education
These are the people standing in the gap between Arizona's public school system and the abyss.
Save Our Schools Arizona (SOSAZ) is the grassroots heart of the resistance — a parent-and-educator-led organization that has been organizing, petitioning, and fighting since the universal voucher expansion passed. They are currently leading the signature drive for the "Protect Education Now" ballot initiative, which would impose a $150,000 household income cap on voucher eligibility and mandate strict spending audits. They are racing a July 2026 deadline to get enough signatures to place the measure on the November ballot. If you live in Arizona and haven't signed yet, this is your cue.
The Arizona Education Association (AEA), led by President Marisol Garcia, represents nearly 23,000 public school educators. They lobby, they organize, they fight budget proposals that treat public school funding as a discretionary line item. They are also the target of a particularly vicious counter-offensive from the legislature — more on that in a moment.
Governor Katie Hobbs has consistently called for accountability, income caps, and structural reform of the ESA program. She has used her platform to highlight the budget damage and advocate for the children whose schools are being drained. She is, however, governing in a state where the legislature has been enthusiastically hostile to any such reforms.
Attorney General Kris Mayes has deployed legal tools to defend public education funding, joining multi-state lawsuits to challenge federal attempts to freeze education grants and pushing for strict scrutiny over how voucher dollars are managed.
U.S. Senator Mark Kelly has taken the fight federal, introducing the Keep Public Funds in Public Schools Act to counter the national spread of the Arizona model — because what happens in Arizona does not stay in Arizona. The privatization playbook is being exported to every state in the union.
The Privatization Machine
The Goldwater Institute is the intellectual engine of Arizona's voucher experiment. Backed by national conservative dark money networks, they designed the universal ESA program, defended it in court, and have spent years suing to block any oversight, accountability, or spending restrictions. They frame every audit as government overreach and every income cap as an assault on parental freedom. They are very good at what they do.
The American Federation for Children (AFC) was founded and heavily funded by former U.S. Education Secretary Betsy DeVos — a woman who spent four years as the nation's top education official while having never attended a public school, never sent her children to a public school, and never met a voucher program she didn't love. The AFC spends millions lobbying Arizona lawmakers, recruiting families into the ESA pipeline, and campaigning against pro-public-education candidates. They are not a grassroots organization. They are a well-funded national privatization lobby wearing the costume of a parent group.
Republican State Legislative Leadership — including Senate President Warren Petersen and Senator Jake Hoffman — has protected the universal voucher program from every reform attempt with the ferocity of a dragon guarding its gold. In June 2026, legislative Republicans blocked compromise reform bills and instead advanced HCR 2040, a counter-ballot measure designed to restrict public school districts from supporting labor unions, block teachers from distributing union communications, and penalize educators who participate in rolling strikes. The message is clear: the legislature isn't just protecting vouchers. It's trying to kneecap the organizations fighting for public schools.
Superintendent of Public Instruction Tom Horne has championed the voucher system from within the state's own education department and has overseen proposals to relax teaching standards — a move that public school advocates argue deepens the teacher shortage and further degrades the profession. It is a peculiar thing to be the superintendent of public instruction while systematically undermining public instruction, but here we are.
PART FIVE: Let's Talk About Race — Because Someone Has To
Here is the uncomfortable question that hovers over every "school choice" debate like a storm cloud nobody wants to acknowledge: Is racism a factor in the effort to defund public education?
The honest answer is: the history is damning, the demographics are revealing, and the pattern is not subtle.
The modern school voucher movement has roots that trace directly to the post-Brown v. Board of Education era, when Southern states — faced with federal desegregation orders — began creating private "segregation academies" and publicly funded voucher systems to allow white families to exit newly integrated public schools. This is not a fringe historical footnote. It is documented history, and Diane Ravitch has written about it extensively.
In Arizona specifically, the data on who benefits from universal vouchers and who gets left behind follows a pattern that should prompt serious reflection:
- The families most likely to use ESA vouchers are wealthier, whiter, and suburban — families with the resources, information, and flexibility to navigate a complex reimbursement system.
- The students left behind in underfunded public schools are disproportionately Black, Latino, Indigenous, and low-income — the children of Arizona's most vulnerable communities.
- Arizona's Indigenous students, many attending schools on reservations with some of the most severe resource deficits in the nation, receive almost no benefit from a voucher system that requires access to private schools that simply don't exist in their communities.
- The public schools being drained of funding are disproportionately located in communities of color — Phoenix's south side, Tucson's Southside, rural border communities.
Proponents of school choice will argue — and some sincerely believe — that vouchers help minority families escape failing schools. And it is true that some families of color use ESA vouchers. But the structural reality of universal vouchers is that they function as a wealth transfer — moving public education dollars from the schools serving the most vulnerable children to subsidize the private choices of families who already had choices.
When 70-80% of voucher recipients were never in public schools, and those public schools serve predominantly low-income communities of color, the question isn't whether racism is intentional. The question is whether the outcome is racially inequitable. And the answer, by the data, is yes.
PART SIX: What You Can Actually Do Right Now
Arizona's public schools are not dead yet. They are battered, underfunded, and fighting on multiple fronts — but the people defending them are organized, energized, and running toward a November 2026 ballot that could change everything. Here is what you can do:
Sign the Petition
Save Our Schools Arizona is gathering signatures for the "Protect Education Now" ballot initiative. The deadline is July 2026. If you are a registered Arizona voter, find a signature-gathering event and sign. Then bring five friends. The initiative would cap voucher eligibility at $150,000 household income, ban luxury and non-educational reimbursements, and mandate strict spending audits. It is the most direct tool available to Arizona voters right now.
Vote in November 2026
The November ballot will be a direct referendum on the future of Arizona public education. Know what you're voting on. The legislature has counter-filed ballot measures specifically designed to neutralize the public school advocates' initiatives and further restrict teachers' rights. Read every education measure carefully. Vote accordingly.
Talk About It
The privatization machine wins when the public doesn't know what's happening. Share the auditor's findings. Talk about the diamond rings and the Disneyland tickets. Talk about the $1 billion. Talk about the 70-80% of voucher recipients who were never in public schools. Sunlight is the best disinfectant, and this program has been operating in remarkable darkness.
Support Public School Teachers
Arizona teachers are among the lowest-paid and most under-resourced in the nation. Support the AEA. Attend school board meetings. Show up for teachers. They are doing the most important work in the state with the fewest resources, and they deserve to know that the public sees them.
Read Diane Ravitch
Seriously. The Death and Life of the Great American School System (2010) and Slaying Goliath (2020) are essential reading for understanding how we got here and what the national privatization movement actually looks like up close. Ravitch was once a supporter of school choice and charter schools. She changed her mind when she looked at the evidence. That kind of intellectual honesty is rare and worth honoring.
EPILOGUE: The Schools Worth Fighting For
Here is what gets lost in the policy debates, the budget spreadsheets, and the ballot initiative language:
Public schools are not just buildings. They are the places where a kid from a poor family sits next to a kid from a rich family and they both learn that the world is bigger than their neighborhood. They are the places where a teacher — underpaid, overworked, and stubbornly committed — looks at a struggling child and decides that child is worth every extra hour. They are, at their best, the living proof that a democracy believes all of its children deserve an equal shot.
Arizona's public schools are imperfect. Some are struggling. Some need serious reform. None of that is an argument for defunding them, privatizing them, or routing their resources into a billion-dollar subsidy program for ski trips and diamond rings.
The people fighting to save Arizona's public schools are not fighting for an institution. They are fighting for the children inside it — the ones who don't have a voucher, don't have a private school option, and are counting on the state to keep its promise.
That promise is worth keeping.
Now go sign the petition.
This article was written in the spirit of Diane Ravitch, who has spent decades telling the truth about public education when the truth was inconvenient, unpopular, and desperately needed. The children of Arizona are lucky to have people fighting in that same tradition.
Sources referenced: Arizona Auditor General reports, Grand Canyon Institute analyses, Arizona Department of Education data, Save Our Schools Arizona, Arizona Education Association, reporting from Arizona Republic, AZCentral, and Phoenix New Times, and the foundational scholarship of Diane Ravitch.
Sources & Citations for The Death and Life of the Great Arizona Public School System
🏫 Section 1: The Defenders of Public Education
| # | Source | Description | Link |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Save Our Schools Arizona (SOSAZ) | Official homepage of the primary grassroots organization fighting voucher expansion | sosarizona.org |
| 2 | SOSAZ — The Truth About ESA Vouchers | Detailed breakdown of ESA costs, funding impact, and budget strain | sosarizona.org/the-truth-about-esa-vouchers |
| 3 | Ballotpedia — Protect Education Initiative 2026 | Full text and status of the "Restrict ESA Funds" ballot initiative | ballotpedia.org |
| 4 | Arizona Education Association (AEA) | Official site of the union representing 23,000 Arizona educators | arizonaea.org |
💣 Section 2: The Privatization Machine
| # | Source | Description | Link |
|---|---|---|---|
| 5 | Goldwater Institute | Official site of the libertarian think tank that architected Arizona's universal voucher program | goldwaterinstitute.org |
| 6 | American Federation for Children (AFC) | National school privatization advocacy group founded by Betsy DeVos | federationforchildren.org |
| 7 | EdChoice — "Arizona's Universal ESA Doesn't Need Saving" | Pro-voucher counter-argument to the 2026 ballot initiatives; useful for understanding the opposing position | edchoice.org |
💰 Section 3: The $1 Billion Price Tag
| # | Source | Description | Link |
|---|---|---|---|
| 8 | Fountain Hills Times — "$1 Billion in Voucher Spending" | Reports FY2026 ESA costs exceeding $1.03 billion, avg. award $10,349/student | fhtimes.com |
| 9 | 12News I-Team — "How Much Do Arizona ESAs Really Cost?" | Investigative breakdown of ESA program costs covering roughly 10% of school-age children | 12news.com |
| 10 | AZ Capitol Times — "ESA Moms Demand Voucher Reforms" | Reports program growth from 12,000 to 100,000+ students and escalating costs | azcapitoltimes.com |
🎢 Section 4: The Taxpayer-Funded Shopping Spree
| # | Source | Description | Link |
|---|---|---|---|
| 11 | 12News I-Team — Diamond Rings, Lingerie & Kenmore Appliances | Primary investigative report confirming luxury purchases reimbursed with ESA public funds | 12news.com |
| 12 | AZ Capitol Times — "Education Dept. Under Fire for Improper ESA Purchases" | Reports $124M in flagged improper purchases; covers ADE auto-approval policy and Auditor General findings | azcapitoltimes.com |
| 13 | ABC15 Arizona — ESA Audit Flags Millions in Questionable Purchases | TV news investigation into the state audit findings on non-educational ESA spending | abc15.com |
📖 Section 5: Essential Background Reading
| # | Source | Description | Link |
|---|---|---|---|
| 14 | Diane Ravitch — The Death and Life of the Great American School System | The foundational book on how testing and choice are undermining public education | Amazon |
| 15 | Diane Ravitch — Slaying Goliath | Ravitch's follow-up documenting the grassroots resistance to privatization | Amazon |
| 16 | Diane Ravitch's Blog | Daily commentary on education policy, vouchers, and public school advocacy nationwide | dianeravitch.net |
| 17 | Grand Canyon Institute | Arizona-based nonpartisan think tank whose analyses document voucher fiscal impact | grandcanyoninstitute.org |
🗳️ Section 6: Take Action
| # | Source | Description | Link |
|---|---|---|---|
| 18 | SOSAZ — Sign the Petition | Direct link to get involved with the Protect Education Now signature drive | sosarizona.org |
| 19 | Arizona Secretary of State — Ballot Measures | Official tracking of all 2026 ballot initiatives including education measures | azsos.gov |
| 20 | Senator Mark Kelly — Keep Public Funds in Public Schools Act | Federal legislation introduced to counter national voucher expansion | kelly.senate.gov |

