Ohio’s education debate is widening beyond budgets and curriculum into a broader fight over who controls public schools, higher education and workplace rights. On today’s episode of the America’s Work Force Union Podcast, Ohio Federation of Teachers President Melissa Cropper outlined how proposed legislation could pressure school districts that challenge the state in court, impose new classroom mandates and intensify scrutiny on colleges. At the same time, union members in public libraries and charter schools are showing that organizing remains a central force in the fight for fair treatment and stable workplaces.
Ohio’s latest education fight is not only about dollars. It is about power.
During the conversation, Cropper described Ohio House Bill 671 as a direct challenge to school districts that have sued the state over the expansion of private school vouchers. More than 300 districts are involved in that legal fight, which centers on whether public tax dollars are being diverted away from public schools and redirected to private education.
The proposed bill would allow the state to withhold funding from districts that challenge laws passed by the legislature. For educators and labor advocates, that approach represents more than a budget dispute. It signals an effort to discourage school systems from using the courts to contest state policy.
That matters, Cropper said, because public education funding in Ohio has already been a long-running source of conflict. District leaders, teachers and union advocates have argued for years that the state should focus on fully and fairly funding public schools rather than layering new penalties and restrictions onto systems already under pressure.
Cropper described HB 671 as part of a broader pattern in which lawmakers use the threat of lost funding to force compliance. Even if the bill never becomes law, the proposal itself sends a message to school districts, colleges and educators that challenging state policy could come with financial consequences.
The Statehouse pressure is not limited to K-12 schools in Ohio.
Cropper pointed to a parallel proposal affecting higher education, where institutions could have state support withheld if they fail to meet new compliance standards. In practical terms, that means colleges and universities may be pushed to prove they have dismantled targeted programs and policies in order to protect their funding.
The fact that public schools and higher education campuses are facing a similar strategy creates a climate in which education leaders are forced to weigh legal rights, academic judgment and institutional independence against the risk of financial punishment, Cropper summarized.
The result is a more centralized model of control over education policy in Ohio. Instead of addressing long-standing concerns such as equitable funding, staffing shortages and student support systems, lawmakers are increasingly focused on directing what institutions must do to remain in good standing with the state.
Another flashpoint for the OFT, Cropper said, is Ohio Senate Bill 156, known as the so-called Success Sequence proposal.
The measure would require schools to teach a state-directed message built around a familiar formula: finish school, get a job, marry before having children, and poverty becomes less likely. Supporters present that framework as common sense. Critics argue it oversimplifies poverty and shifts responsibility away from policymakers.
Cropper’s opposition centered on what the bill leaves out. Poverty is shaped by housing instability, hunger, child care access, wages and the availability of real career pathways. A classroom mandate cannot solve those conditions on its own, she said.
That critique reflects a larger labor perspective. Working people know that economic security is not produced by slogans. It depends on whether jobs pay enough to support a family, whether benefits are available and whether workers have a voice on the job.
That is why Cropper connected the conversation back to union rights. If lawmakers are serious about helping students build stable futures, she argued, schools should also expose young people to collective bargaining, union membership, and the value of jobs that offer strong wages, health coverage and retirement security.
In that sense, the debate over curriculum is also about what kind of economic education students receive. One model emphasizes individual choices in isolation. The labor model emphasizes systems, standards and the role of worker power in creating middle-class opportunity.
Even as policy fights intensify at the Statehouse, union organizing continues to move forward in Ohio workplaces.
Cropper shared encouraging news from the Delaware Public Library, where workers are on the verge of securing a first contract. Union members have already ratified the agreement and are awaiting final approval from the library board. If completed, the deal will mark a major milestone for library workers who joined together to win formal protections and a stronger voice at work.
That progress matters because first contracts are often the hardest step in the organizing process, Cropper said. Winning an election establishes representation. Winning a contract turns that victory into enforceable wages, benefits and working conditions.
The update also highlights the growing role of library workers in the labor movement. Across the country, public-facing education and cultural institutions have become important organizing spaces as workers seek stability, respect and a meaningful say in how their workplaces operate.
The picture is more difficult in Ohio’s charter sector.
Cropper reported continued delays at KIPP and Menlo charter schools, where workers have spent years negotiating a first contract. At Menlo, turnover has been so severe that much of the original staff has changed, yet support for union representation has remained consistent.
That persistence tells its own story. Even as administrators stall, incoming workers continue to signal that they want union protection and a negotiated agreement. The continuity of that demand suggests that the underlying workplace issues have not gone away.
For labor advocates, these prolonged fights underscore a familiar truth: employers can accept the result of an election on paper while still delaying the substance of bargaining in practice. That makes first-contract campaigns a critical front in the broader struggle for labor rights.
Ohio’s education battles are unfolding simultaneously in classrooms, courtrooms and bargaining rooms. Taken together, they show a movement confronting state overreach while continuing to organize for durable gains on the job.
Every victory at the bargaining table starts with workers standing together. From the shop floor to the statehouse, hear how activists are fighting for better wages, safer conditions and a stronger future. Subscribe to the America’s Work Force Union Podcast to get the latest interviews with the leaders and organizers building worker power across America.