education
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Tennessee Expands School Choice with 30K ESA Vouchers
National Desk
May 3, 2026
NASHVILLE, Tenn. -- Tennessee lawmakers voted last week to expand the Education Savings Account (ESA) program, increasing available slots to 30,000 -- 5,000 fewer than requested by Gov. Bill Lee -- with a $150 million investment in public funds for private school tuition and other educational expenses[2]. The program, initially limited to students in Memphis-Shelby County Schools, Metro Nashville Public Schools, and Hamilton County, allows families meeting income requirements to access these accounts after a lottery system[1][2]. The House version raised income thresholds and permitted students rejected from Education Freedom Scholarships to apply for ESAs instead[2].
Separate efforts to further extend eligibility to Knox County Schools failed in a last-minute Senate vote, struck down by one vote as the legislative session wound down[1][2]. A pared-down Senate proposal focused solely on easing testing requirements for ESA participants, removing mandates for national norm-referenced tests to reduce burdens on voucher users[2][3]. Americans for Prosperity-Tennessee celebrated the reforms as a 'win for school choice,' emphasizing reduced testing as a key reform to broaden access[3].
The expansion reignites ongoing tensions over diverting taxpayer dollars from public schools, particularly in urban districts like Shelby County where enrollment pressures mount. While the bill awaits final reconciliation before potential gubernatorial approval, protests brewed outside West High School in Knoxville against the Knox exclusion, signaling persistent rural-urban divides in Tennessee's education battles[1]. Gov. Lee, a vocal school choice advocate, pushed for 35,000 slots to address what he calls failing public systems in priority zones.
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