
Unlike public schools, which are run by democratically
elected school board members, charter schools are usually run by an appointed or self-appointed board that
is accountable only to itself, or by a for-profit
company. In fact, the charter school/education management organization
(EMO)/charter management organization (CMO) sector is one of the fastest
growing cash cows in the investment industry.
It is no accident
that profit is at the center of the charter school industry. In an article tracing the roots of the school privatization movement, the Detroit Free Press explained, “The
charter school lobby is driven, not by research or data, but by an ideology
that says every government function would be improved by applying ‘free-market’ principles.” In 2015, the
Walton Foundation sponsored a symposium on investing in charter schools where
investors were told: “It [the charter school sector] is a very stable business, very recession resistant…the
industry is growing about 12-14% a year.” The speaker emphasized that the
investor cannot lose, because “…the state
is the payer on this category,” with tax breaks up to 39% for an added
incentive.
Here’s how it works:
·
Charter
schools run outright by for-profit company (EMO or CMO)
o
The
state pays on a per-pupil basis for the schooling. In some states, local public
school districts are forced to pay as well. The EMO/CMO supplies the
curriculum, administrative functions, textbooks, desks, computers, and
buildings.
o
With
little regulation of charter schools, the
EMO or CMO is free to charge whatever it wants in “administrative costs,” and
many charter operators get rich on this alone. A national study found that
charter schools spend on average $774 more per pupil per year on administration
and $1,141 less on instruction than traditional public schools. One charter
school owner in Washington, D.C., was paid $14 million over 10 years.
o
One
third of all charters close within 10 years. According to NCES data, 2,500
charter schools closed between 2000 and 2013.
When the charter school shuts
down, the materials, equipment, and buildings paid for with public money remain
the property of the charter owner.
·
Charter
schools run by appointed or self-appointed nonprofit board
o
The
state pays on a per-pupil basis for the schooling. In some states, local public
school districts are forced to pay as well. The state may make available extra
funds for building facilities and the federal government may kick in some
“planning grant” moneys. Then there are generous donations by school-choice
“philanthropists” (i.e., school privatization activists) such as the Walton
Family Foundation, the Eli Broad Foundation, the DeVos Foundation, the Gates
Foundation, and others.
o
These
charters often contract with EMO’s or CMO’s for administrative services,
curriculum, materials, and a variety of other services. They are free to pay
administrators more and teachers less and are unhindered by fair employment
practices. A quick internet search will reveal multiple instances of fraud and
abuse such as kickbacks, overcharging the state for equipment and materials,
claiming students who never enrolled or enrolled and never showed up, and
writing fraudulent grant proposals, to name a few.
·
Virtual,
or on-line, charter schools
o
The
on-line charter school receives the same support per pupil from the state as
the traditional brick-and-mortar public school but has none of the expense of
building and maintaining facilities, providing transportation or
extracurricular activities, or running high expense programs like special
education.
o
The
Arkansas Virtual Academy, for example, in 2016-17 received $10.7 million in
state funding and paid out $7.8 million to a national management company in
Herndon, Virginia, called K-12. K-12 paid
its top five executives more than $12 million in 2015 and spent more than $20
million in 2012 on ads to attract students and funding. Meanwhile, a
Stanford University study found that on average virtual school students lose 42
days of reading instruction and 180 days of math instruction per year. Only
profit could excuse this kind of ineffectiveness.
Charter schools may claim to be public schools, but the
only thing public about them is the way they are funded. They are not publicly
governed nor accountable to the public, their students and parents, or their
employees. They do, however, turn over a lot of money that goes into someone’s pockets.
Information for this article was taken
from Network for Public Education, Business Insider, Detroit Free Press, Huffington
Post, Center for the Media and Democracy, and Arkansas Times.