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2024 Colorado Amendment 80

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Proposed amendment to the Colorado Constitution
Amendment 80

November 5, 2024
Constitutional Right to School Choice
Results
Choice
Votes%
Yes1,507,23649.32%
No1,548,67950.68%
Total votes3,055,915100.00%

County results
Congressional district results

For

  60–70%
  50–60%

Against

  60–70%
  50–60%

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Colorado Amendment 80 was a proposed amendment to theColorado Constitution that appeared on the general election ballot on November 5, 2024, inColorado. If passed, the amendment would have added a provision to the state's Constitution guaranteeing the right toschool choice. The measure must have been approved by at least 55% of voters to pass.[1]

Background

[edit]

Currently,K-12 students in Colorado have the options of attending public, charter, private, online, or neighborhood schools as well as homeschooling. Students can also use the state's open enrollment process to attend public schools in school districts they do not live in for free. This has been the case since 1994, when open enrollment was implemented by state law.

Amendment 80 was referred to the ballot by a citizen initiated petition. Both petitioning for the measure and the campaign in favor were led by the conservative group Advance Colorado Action. The group is also behindProposition 128 andProposition 130. Some supporters claim this amendment would simply move the existing school options in Colorado from state statute to the state Constitution. Many opponents argued Amendment 80 would create aschool voucher system in Colorado and take funding away from public schools.[2]

Contents

[edit]

The amendment appeared on the ballot as follows:[3]

Shall there be an amendment to the Colorado constitution establishing the right to school choice for children in kindergarten through 12th grade, and, in connection therewith, declaring that school choice includes neighborhood, charter, and private schools; home schooling; open enrollment options; and future innovations in education?

Campaigns

[edit]

Support

[edit]

Support for Amendment 80 was led by the group School Choice For Every Child.[4] Colorado's official voter guide also offers the arguments for the measure that it should be a parent's right to choose whatever school they see fit for their child, whether public or private, and that Amendment 80 would protect parents and children by putting that right into the Colorado Constitution.

'Yes'
State senators
State representatives

Opposition

[edit]

Opposition to Amendment 80 was led by the group Public Schools Strong. The state's official voter guide offered the arguments against the amendment that Colorado already offers free public education, the language of the amendment is unclear, and it would lead to public funds being put into private schools.

'No'[7]
State officials
State senators
State representatives
Organizations

Results

[edit]

Amendment 80 required a 55% majority to pass. It failed, receiving just under 50% of the vote.[9]

Amendment 80
ChoiceVotes%
Referendum failedNo1,548,67950.68
Yes1,507,23649.32
Total votes3,055,915100.00

Results by county

[edit]
CountyForAgainstMarginTotal votes cast
#%#%#%
Adams118,42754.23%99,93245.77%18,4958.47%218,359
Alamosa3,73253.15%3,28946.85%4436.31%7,021
Arapahoe153,14349.00%159,41251.00%-6,269-2.01%312,555
Archuleta5,18158.46%3,68241.54%1,49916.91%8,863
Baca89846.84%1,01953.16%-121-6.31%1,917
Bent1,02048.14%1,09951.86%-79-3.73%2,119
Boulder66,86635.92%119,27364.08%-52,407-28.15%186,139
Broomfield19,90844.31%25,02355.69%-5,115-11.38%44,931
Chaffee6,52346.97%7,36453.03%-841-6.06%13,887
Cheyenne51650.34%50949.66%70.68%1,025
Clear Creek2,78848.12%3,00651.88%-218-3.76%5,794
Conejos1,94149.06%2,01550.94%-74-1.87%3,956
Costilla1,07055.30%86544.70%20510.59%1,935
Crowley89753.87%76846.13%1297.75%1,665
Custer2,25560.01%1,50339.99%75220.01%3,758
Delta11,48361.01%7,33838.99%4,14522.02%18,821
Denver137,10039.93%206,28560.07%-69,185-20.15%343,385
Dolores78258.49%55541.51%22716.98%1,337
Douglas113,11848.22%121,45451.78%-8,336-3.55%234,572
Eagle13,04649.85%13,12650.15%-80-0.31%26,172
El Paso207,20356.29%160,88443.71%46,31912.58%368,087
Elbert11,91360.16%7,88839.84%4,02520.33%19,801
Fremont13,97556.46%10,77543.54%3,20012.93%24,750
Garfield14,87650.98%14,30249.02%5741.97%29,178
Gilpin1,90848.02%2,06551.98%-157-3.95%3,973
Grand4,61648.12%4,97751.88%-361-3.76%9,593
Gunnison4,40742.49%5,96457.51%-1,557-15.01%10,371
Hinsdale32957.32%24542.68%8414.63%574
Huerfano2,32254.47%1,94145.53%3818.94%4,263
Jackson44655.68%35544.32%9111.36%801
Jefferson160,67645.83%189,91454.17%-29,238-8.34%350,590
Kiowa41749.70%42250.30%-5-0.60%839
Kit Carson2,10859.56%1,43140.44%67719.13%3,539
La Plata16,63549.19%17,18550.81%-550-1.63%33,820
Lake1,81848.77%1,91051.23%-92-2.47%3,728
Larimer102,17047.34%113,66152.66%-11,491-5.32%215,831
Las Animas4,04054.21%3,41245.79%6288.43%7,452
Lincoln1,22548.59%1,29651.41%-71-2.82%2,521
Logan5,02751.47%4,74048.53%2872.94%9,767
Mesa53,89661.14%34,26038.86%19,63622.27%88,156
Mineral35249.65%35750.35%-5-0.71%709
Moffat3,88561.06%2,47838.94%1,40722.11%6,363
Montezuma8,24957.13%6,19142.87%2,05814.25%14,440
Montrose15,55862.96%9,15437.04%6,40425.91%24,712
Morgan7,01554.16%5,93745.84%1,0788.32%12,952
Otero4,05746.68%4,63553.32%-578-6.65%8,692
Ouray1,82646.57%2,09553.43%-269-6.86%3,921
Park6,36654.33%5,35145.67%1,0158.66%11,717
Phillips1,15051.94%1,06448.06%863.88%2,214
Pitkin4,33741.88%6,01858.12%-1,681-16.23%10,355
Prowers2,52750.99%2,42949.01%981.98%4,956
Pueblo46,44656.65%35,54843.35%10,89813.29%81,994
Rio Blanco2,01456.65%1,54143.35%47313.31%3,555
Rio Grande3,25354.15%2,75445.85%4998.31%6,007
Routt6,64642.39%9,03157.61%-2,385-15.21%15,677
Saguache1,66551.84%1,54748.16%1183.67%3,212
San Juan23142.54%31257.46%-81-14.92%543
San Miguel1,94743.58%2,52156.42%-574-12.85%4,468
Sedgwick71855.96%56544.04%15311.93%1,283
Summit7,35444.78%9,06955.22%-1,715-10.44%16,423
Teller9,59060.46%6,27239.54%3,31820.92%15,862
Washington1,39251.03%1,33648.97%562.05%2,728
Weld97,96456.70%74,81043.30%23,15413.40%172,774
Yuma1,99344.16%2,52055.84%-527-11.68%4,513
Total1,507,23649.32%1,548,67950.68%-41,443-1.36%3,055,915


See also

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References

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  1. ^Jenny Brundin (October 8, 2024)."Amendment 80: Constitutional Right to School Choice, explained".Colorado Public Radio. RetrievedOctober 25, 2024.
  2. ^Erica Breunlin (October 9, 2024)."Amendment 80: Placing a right to school choice in Colorado's constitution".The Colorado Sun. RetrievedOctober 25, 2024.
  3. ^"2024 State Ballot Information Booklet"(PDF).Colorado General Assembly. September 11, 2024. RetrievedOctober 21, 2024.
  4. ^Jena Griswold."Amendments and Propositions on the 2024 Ballot".Colorado Secretary of State. RetrievedOctober 25, 2024.
  5. ^Mike DeGuire (September 20, 2024)."Why 'School Choice' is on the Colorado Ballot This Year — and What You Should Know About It". Colorado Times Recorder. RetrievedOctober 25, 2024.
  6. ^Erica Breunlin (August 5, 2024)."Could a potential school choice ballot measure lead to a voucher program in Colorado?".The Colorado Sun. RetrievedOctober 25, 2024.
  7. ^"Coalition".No On 80. RetrievedOctober 25, 2024.
  8. ^"November 2024 Ballot Initiatives and Referred Measures".Colorado Democratic Party. RetrievedOctober 25, 2024.
  9. ^"Results".Colorado Secretary of State. RetrievedDecember 3, 2024.
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