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Utah Rejects Broad Voucher Program

By JOE DANBORN
The Associated Press
Wednesday, November 7, 2007; 2:40 AM

-- Utah voters on Tuesday killed the nation's first statewide school voucher program that promised tax dollars for private tuition, no matter how much a family earned or whether kids were in bad schools.

In another of the most closely watched questions on state ballots Tuesday, New Jersey voters rejected the state's plan to borrow $450 million over 10 years to finance stem cell research. In Oregon, residents decided against hiking the cigarette tax to pay for health care for kids who don't have it.


Jerre Petersen pulls up the the ballot box near the Multnomah County Elections office Tuesday, Nov. 6, 2007, in Portland, Ore. Election officials were preparing to tally mail ballots Tuesday in a special election that has drawn big spending by interest groups but a lackluster voter turnout on a cigarette tax hike and a rollback of a 2004 property rights law. (AP Photo/Rick Bowmer)
Jerre Petersen pulls up the the ballot box near the Multnomah County Elections office Tuesday, Nov. 6, 2007, in Portland, Ore. Election officials were preparing to tally mail ballots Tuesday in a special election that has drawn big spending by interest groups but a lackluster voter turnout on a cigarette tax hike and a rollback of a 2004 property rights law. (AP Photo/Rick Bowmer) (Rick Bowmer - AP)
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The Utah measure was the first voucher election in the U.S. since 2000, when voters in Michigan and California rejected efforts to subsidize private schools. There have been 10 state referendums on various voucher programs since 1972, all of them unsuccessful, according to the National School Boards Association.

Utah, with a conservative electorate, a Republican governor and GOP-controlled Legislature, was seen nationally as a key test of voter sentiment for vouchers. But opponents, with millions of dollars from a national teachers union, persuaded residents to say no. Experts had said a green light in Utah could have led to similar programs in Texas, Arizona, Louisiana and elsewhere.

The program would have granted $500 to $3,000, depending on family income, for each child sent to private school. The hotly disputed voucher law won approval by one vote in the Republican-controlled Legislature in February but was suspended before taking effect when opponents gathered more than 120,000 signatures to force a referendum.

The New Jersey measure had been one of the nation's most ambitious public efforts to fund stem cell research.

Multimillionaire Gov. Jon Corzine campaigned heavily for the measure and spent $200,000 of his own money on TV ads for it. He argued the funding would help find cures for conditions such as spinal cord injuries, Parkinson's disease, sickle cell anemia and multiple sclerosis while also luring leading scientists and research firms to the state.

But the measure was opposed by anti-abortion activists, conservatives and the Roman Catholic Church because it would pay for research that destroys human embryos and would increase state debt.

"It's a reinforcement of our values and a rebuke to the governor," said Steve Lonegan, a conservative Republican who led opposition to the question. "The taxpayers are saying enough is enough."

New Jersey already had approved spending $270 million to build stem cell research facilities.

Several states are competing in stem cell research. California approved spending $3 billion on stem cell research, Connecticut has a $100 million program, Illinois spent $10 million and Maryland awarded $15 million in grants.

Senate President Richard J. Codey, a Democrat and leading stem cell supporter, pinned the defeat on chronic state fiscal problems and mounting state debt.


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