As they prepare for a battle over school vouchers during the next legislative session, a liberal advocacy group is calling attention to a program that few thought was under immediate threat in Texas: high school football.
In a video called โWill Our Friday Night Lights Go Out,โ released today โย which features actors Aaron Spivey-Sorrells and Jonathan Palafox from the television show Friday Night Lights โย Progress Texas PAC urges Texans to fight school voucher programs.
School voucher programs, they argue in the video, could drain as much as $1 billion from local school district funding. With less funding, schools may be forced to end athletic programs or to demand that parents pay to keep them running. That, they say, all means less opportunity for students, particularly those from poor families.
“This is part of a larger campaign for public education,โ said Glenn Smith, a director of Progress Texas, โbut we found the danger to public sports is very real. It hadn’t been talked about much in the voucher and charter school debate.”

The video specifically targets state Sen. Dan Patrick, R-Houston, who has championed creating a system that allows families to use public money for private school tuition. Lt. Gov. David Dewhurst last week appointed Patrick to lead the Senate Education meeting.
At aย hearingย of that committee in August, national groups testified that similar programs in Florida and Indiana have improved accountability while saving the state money.ย
Matthew Ladner, a senior policy advisor at the Foundation for Excellence in Education, told lawmakers that with school choice,ย “parents can pick up and leave” if they feel their children aren’t being adequately served.ย
“This is the year to do it, in my view,”ย Patrick said regarding vouchers in an interview reported by theย Houston Chronicleย in August. “That issue will do more to impact the future of Texas and the quality of education than anything else we could do.”
The expense of public high school football programs has long been debated โ from the release of Buzz Bissingerโs book Friday Night Lights in 1990 to Allen High Schoolโs $60 million football stadium near Dallas, finished this year.
Football has already been halted at Premont Independent School District, where in January the districtย cut sports programsย to keep the district afloat.ย โI couldnโt let the district go down to save a particular program,โ superintendentย Ernest Singleton told the Tribune at the time.
Smith, director of the PAC, said the threat to sports programs, and football in particular, may sway conservative Texans who would otherwise support voucher and charter school programs during the upcoming session.
“What’s lost in this debate is just how integral public schools are to our social lives in Texas,โ he said. โThere’s nothing more symbolic than the love of the old Friday night lights.”
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