What’s on state ballots for education in the 2024 elections
Voters cast their ballots on June 5, 2018 in Los Angeles, California. · K-12 Dive · Mario Tama via Getty Images

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As voters make their way to the polls on Nov. 5 to cast their ballots in the U.S. presidential election, many around the country will also be voting on state or local education issues. 

"This election cycle features a range of ballot measures across fourteen states, with trends focusing on education funding, school choice, and governance," said Ben Zumbahlen, state relations associate for the Education Commission of the States, a non-partisan nonprofit that tracks education policy issues. 

States are proposing measures to allocate funding for education in various ways, such as through bonds or reallocating lottery funds. Constitutional amendments related to school choice are also top ballot issues, as are education leadership changes, he said in an email to K-12 Dive. 

Here are three of the education-related issues facing voters on Election Day: 

School choice

Colorado, Kentucky and Nebraska are among the states with school choice on the ballot. In Colorado, Initiative 138 would "create the right for parents to direct the education of their children" by adding that wording to the state constitution. The initiative defines school choice as including "neighborhood, charter, private, and home schools, open enrollment options, and future innovations in education." 

Meanwhile, Amendment 2 in Kentucky would give the General Assemblythe power to fund school choice programs. The issue has been particularly partisan in the state, with Democratic Kentucky Gov. Andy Beshear and Republican U.S. Sen. Rand Paul divided starkly on either side of school choice. Beshear has resisted the measure, and the state's teachers union is also opposed, saying it would "funnel" dollars to "unaccountable, private schools" and "attack public education."

However, Paul has called school choice a "civil rights issue," and supporters of the measure say parents should have the right to choose their children's education.

In Nebraska, voters will decide whether to keep or kick to the curb a legislature-passed scholarship program totaling $10 million yearly for grants for families to send their children to private elementary and secondary schools.

School finance

K-12's financial landscape has been shifting drastically as of late, with both federal and state dollars fluctuating in response to COVID-19. This election cycle, voters in Missouri will be deciding Amendment 5, which would expand the state's riverboat casinos and use the new revenue generated to fund early childhood literacy programs. If passed, the measure is expected to bring in an annual gaming tax revenue of $14.3 million, according to Missouri Secretary of State John Ashcroft's office.