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Baltimore Scholarship Success

Low-income high school students in Baltimore, MD who received private school scholarships were more likely to graduate high school and enroll in college than their traditional public school peers, according to a new study from the Friedman Foundation for Educational Choice.

The Achievement Checkup: Tracking the Post-Elementary Outcomes of Baltimore Need-Based Scholarship Students,” examined the Children’s Scholarship Fund Baltimore (CSFB), which disburses need-based scholarships to low-income students in grades K-8 to attend the school of their choosing, with the ultimate goal of improving educational attainment and outcomes for these students.

Using survey and school data, researchers found a 97 percent high school graduation rate among students who accessed CSFB scholarships, compared to the 50 percent Baltimore public graduation rate among low-income students.

When it comes to higher education, 84 percent of CSFB recipients reported enrolling in college, compared a college enrollment rate that ranges between 44 and 61 percent for low-income Baltimore students.

Initiatives that allow parents greater freedoms in choosing the best educational environment for their children are getting results not just in Baltimore, but throughout the nation.

For more on this study, check out the blog Breaking Down “The Achievement Checkup”

Related Resources:
Maryland’s Parent Power Index

 

NEWSWIRE: April 21, 2015

Vol. 17, No. 16

NECESSARY VETO. Just last week, the Maryland General Assembly rammed through the last of 2015 legislation, including a badly maimed charter school bill that will only harm Maryland’s already suppressed charter sector. Maryland’s political obstacles are no secret to even the most casual observer, but that’s no reason to sign legislation for the sake of signing legislation, especially when it will deter, not encourage charter school expansion. Communities like those in Montgomery County face persistent achievement gaps, and this bill does nothing to help mitigate them. For all these reasons, Gov. Hogan must veto Senate Bill 595 and try again next session.     

Tell Governor Hogan to veto Senate Bill 595, which would make Maryland the first state to move backwards on charter schools.

MOBILE INTELLIGENCE. After reading the letters to the editor section of the Baltimore Sun, hopefully readers also saw a commentary on the relationship between the ability to learn and the education reform movement. Research demonstrates the capacity of humans to become smarter through learning and hard work, and that intelligence is not immovable from cradle to grave. However, the top-down system we have today doesn’t acknowledge this mindset, treating schools as a constant and teachers as expendable even though they are anything but. This is exactly why CER firmly believes we must accelerate the pace of reform so more kids have access to more opportunities that realize their capacity to learn.

COME TO THE LIGHT. Like moths to a bug zapper, union protests continue to move predictably and without reservation against school improvement. Clearly the litany of school choice legislation signed in recent weeks has not shaken their resolve in protecting the status quo. This time, legal complaints have been leveled against the plan in Camden, NJ to turn around five chronically failing schools using a ‘renaissance’ charter model. Still, Camden Superintendent Paymon Rouhanifard is moving ahead with the conversions, rightfully insisting that there has been significant public input, and the renaissance schools are intended to serve the Camden community. Across the country in California, legislative action is underway to undo Vergara momentum in the form of bills that reduce the probationary period before teachers receive tenure in small districts and loosen state requirements for evaluation systems. These efforts will be introduced to the zapper soon enough.

MYTHS REAPPEAR. Once again, inaccurate claims against charter schools are presented without a wider contextual knowledge of data, this time in North Carolina. Thankfully, reform advocates on the ground reacted quickly to dispel myths. What many media forget to report is the fact that the process for enrolling charter students in North Carolina and elsewhere requires random lotteries, not cherry-picking. And to the claim that charters aren’t accessible to disadvantaged kids because they don’t have to provide transportation, the media forgets that North Carolina charter schools receive on average 17 percent less per-pupil funding than traditional schools, making operational services related to facilities and transportation that much more difficult to provide. Meanwhile, a study shows that NC charters produce 14 additional NAEP points in reading and math than traditional schools, per $1,000 invested per-pupil. Bottom line: if charter schools are to operate at full strength and responsibly meet parent demand, they must be supported by strong laws at the state level.

LOOMING LEGACY. Legacy Charter School in Greenville, SC has a waitlist of over 650 students. In order to at the very least meet the demand of 20 more students to bring enrollment size on par with other campuses in the County, Legacy educators petitioned the local school board, but were denied. Bear in mind this is a charter school that recently had to apply for a Title I adjustment due to an increase in the number of students both with disabilities and who are English Language Learners. Although South Carolina’s charter law allows independent authorizers, only one university is in the process of opening a school, making charters largely subject to local school boards. This has turned out to be a disaster in Maryland, and shouldn’t be an example for other states to follow.     

AFC POLICY SUMMIT. The American Federation for Children’s National Policy Summit is setting up shop this year from May 18-19 in the Big Easy to bring together policymakers and advocates on educational choice. Check out the latest speakers, and click here to register.

Legislation only hurts charter schools

By Kara Kerwin
The Baltimore Sun
April 20, 2015

As one of “those charter advocates” mentioned in The Sun’s editorial regarding charter schools (“Better than nothing,” April 17), I strongly disagree with the conclusion that Gov. Larry Hogan should sign the horrendous charter school legislation passed by the General Assembly.

Senate Bill 595 is a giant step backward and actually decreases the likelihood that more innovative charter school opportunities will be able to open in Maryland. In addition to removing the State Board’s check and balance authority over charter applications, charter operators will be subject to an invasive funding study, requiring more time, money and red tape. Every single operational aspect of running a school will be subject to negotiation, often with a hostile school board, for a charter school that’s supposed to be autonomous.

I have no illusions about Maryland’s political roadblocks, but that’s no excuse to sign a bill that will only harm the state’s already suppressed charter sector. In fact, signing this legislation will make future improvements to the state charter law that much more difficult. Governor Hogan must veto this bill and renew good-faith efforts to bring about meaningful change for Maryland students.

Kara Kerwin, Washington
The writer is president of The Center for Education Reform.

Parents want choice in Montgomery County

By Kara Kerwin
Washington Post
April 17, 2015

While I’ve lived in this area for only five years, my family is rooted in almost every corner of this state — from the Eastern Shore to Hagerstown, from Baltimore to Bethesda. I’ve spent my career counseling thousands of parents and lawmakers across the country to bring about much-needed change in their communities, and now I’m desperate to bring change to my own back yard.

With about 150,000 students, Montgomery County is one of the largest school districts in the country, and it is only getting bigger — actually bursting at the seams. The solution always seems to be to remodel or add mobile classrooms. What we need are more schools — of choice.

We have a growing achievement gap, especially between poor and minority students and white and Asian students. This is uncomfortable for most in my community because Montgomery County Public Schools is not serving all its students well. Gov. Larry Hogan’s (R) original proposal to expand charter schools would have been a boost for my community and would have helped ensure that achievement is possible for all.

Charter schools started in Minnesota in 1991 because educators and parents believed there were more solutions, programs and ideas that even the best school districts could use. The early supporters of the charter school idea were especially concerned about the schools that were not working for most children and about which poverty had become the excuse for failure. Teachers wanted more autonomy to teach, parents wanted more options for their students, and most believed that status quo of the school district model of governance needed serious restructuring.

It was about empowerment then. It still is.

The data on student progress and achievement in charter schools demonstrate the power of autonomous schools that create personalized learning environments for students, are open by choice and are held accountable for results.

Before the Maryland Senate gutted it, Hogan’s proposal would have made three significant changes that, while modest, are important for improving opportunity for parents and creating school environments for teachers and communities to thrive.

First, the charter school governing board should be able to make decisions that matter most for student success. Our local school districts are not equipped for school-based budgeting, decision-making and personnel decisions that are critical to the charter school concept and seek to attract talent outside of traditional education.

Contrary to a campaign launched by the Maryland State Education Association that scared teachers at charter schools, Hogan’s proposal would empower teachers to make a choice. All teachers still would be a part of the state’s pension program.

Second, clarifying the state board of education as the authorizer on appeal is a minor but significant improvement for Maryland’s charter law. The state can act as a critical check and balance when districts and charter schools clash. This necessary route of appeal with a binding decision is missing from the existing law. Charter schools across Maryland have had to sue to receive a more equitable share of funding, have had to close because of conflicts with union-opposed extended-day instruction and have discouraged other applicants from opening.

Demand for charter schools far outstrips supply with more than 12,000 students on waiting lists in Maryland, and adding schools can be an effective strategy for dealing with the public system’s challenges. Providing the state board with the authority to issue a binding appeal decision will give voices to thousands of parents and educators across Maryland vying for alternatives.

Last but not least is the need for more equitable funding for Maryland’s public charter school students. The proposal would validate the importance of equity for every public school child and public school program, whether charter or traditional. Charter schools receive no facilities funding, thus making the inequitable funding even more dramatic.

Success is possible for every child, but the governor should veto the legislation the General Assembly passed and work with lawmakers to return to a plan that will create more effective public school options for Maryland children.

The writer is president of the Center for Education Reform, which advocates for the creation of charter schools.

Charter volleyball in North Carolina

By Eddie Goodall
EdNC
April 16th, 2015

As the head of the NC Public Charter Schools Association, I read charter news alerts daily from all over the country. Lately, I cannot help but see volleyball as a metaphor for the controversies surrounding charter schools in the press. I read about those I see as “digging” to save a point about our schools; those content to just ‘keep the ball in the air” or “set others up”, and always a contingent wanting to “spike” the ball down.

The “diggers” are generally those in the profession of running charters already, i.e. those “on the ground.” They easily know more about charters than the other groups combined. These are the charter principals, dedicated board members, teachers, and, too often overlooked, the parents. Also included is the charter-knowledgeable business community that has become an integral part of the schools’ success. The charter management or support groups like KIPP, Charter Schools USA, National Heritage Academies, and the Challenge Foundation have brought different combinations of synergy, substance, skill, and scale to our movement.

Let’s skip those who would spike charters altogether if given the chance.

Then we have those, generally supportive, in the middle who keep tossing the ball around. They often open their comments by, “I support charter schools, but…” From there you can choose from a myriad endings. One of the more common finishes is “but only quality charters.” To those of us in this business that is what we imply when we say the word “charter.” There is no record of anyone who publicly supports creating poorly performing charters.

Twenty years ago this past Sunday, a bill was filed in the North Carolina house that would pass a year later as the “Charter School Act of 1996.” In the first years following the 2011 removal of the charter ceiling of 100 schools, the arguments against charters centered on their re-segregating schools, underperforming academically, taking money from public schools, and an assortment of other complaints. That noise has muted as facts slowly assuaged much of the public’s concern about the expanding schools of choice. Today, expansion or growth of charters, for-profit charter management companies (EMOs), and charter financial accountability have taken center stage as the most chronicled and debated issues.

Growth

Let’s look at the first of these, the growth of the charter school movement. There has been tremendous institutional pressure on the State Board of Education (SBE) and the NC Charter Schools Advisory Board (CSAB) to slow the post cap growth of charters. That pressure began working before the Charlotte charter failures of 2014. After a fast track cohort of about a dozen charters that opened in 2012, approximately fifty were approved and opened in 2013 and 2014 amidst some closings, to bring us to about 148 today. So, percentage wise, a 48 percent increase is significant to the Office of Charter Schools (OCS), the state’s division of DPI responsible for the oversight of the schools. It was also an ominous sign to those unsupportive of charters.

The pressure to slow growth worked, with fewer schools now opening in 2015. Applicants have been hit with new fees, requirements to have all board members have criminal background checks (local school boards are not required), extensive notarized legal and financial reviews by professionals even before submission of the application, and an accelerated (by nearly three months) application filing deadline.  The Center for Education reform, in its 2015 State Rankings and Scorecard of Charter School Laws, said NC’s Advisory Board “has slowed down the growth of charter schools in the Tar Heel State, with only 15 percent of applications being approved recently, one of the lowest approval rates in the state’s history. The process of opening charters continues to remain restrictive and the state’s leadership has not been strong advocates for opening more charters.”

Let’s look at the facts. First, there has actually been no appreciable growth in charter schools in North Carolina when adjusted for the state’s population. Parents, the customers, see no change. Why? Because when the first charters opened in 1997 there were only 7.5 million people in our state and today we approach 10 million, a 33 percent increase. So, 100 charters in 1997 equates to 133 today. So with only 148 schools currently the real rate of growth has been under 1 percent!

What are the solutions to growth resistance?

First, let’s quit tossing the ball around. Those equipped to make a difference should go to the net. They include education policymakers, the SBE, the Advisory Board, as well as the state legislators. The charter sector has to grow to satisfy the demand for parents and to continue stimulating meaningful change within the district schools.

The SBE should explicitly advocate for charters and solicit charter founders using its influence and constitutional authority. The advisory board is already charter knowledgeable with its members positioned within the sector. It believes in what charters are accomplishing and members work many underappreciated hours. However, it can and should become a more vocal advocate for charter education also by valuing the substance of the applications over form, allowing more vocal applicant  participation in the interview process, and treating charter applicants as customers.

Legislators thought lifting the cap was the end. It was the beginning. Republican voices who championed charters when I was a state senator have quieted. Many may have less appetite now for the movement as evidenced by their burdening all charter boards with a new $50,000 escrow requirement, including the especially vulnerable new applicants, who typically have no money. The NC Constitution reads, “The General Assembly shall provide by taxation and otherwise for a general and uniform system of free public schools…” Is the $50,000 even constitutional? Public charters should be funded by public dollars.

Republican lawmakers need to go much further than just undoing the damage done. They need to redefine the funds that local school districts are supposed to more equitably share with charters as well as provide charters the chance to share in lottery capital funds, and much more.

The governor’s office now, with two positions open, has the opportunity to appoint a single member from the charter community to the 11 charter-less member State Board of Education.

The first two are covered. The real answer to where growth is going rests with that third leg.

Education Management Organizations (EMOs)

So, if halting charter growth is in the news every week, EMOs, the for-profit companies providing substantial education management services for nonprofit charters, make the pages daily. These companies manage seventeen charters in North Carolina, about 11 percent of the schools. EMOs have different models but basically provide differing layers of services and products, including staffing, for charter boards of directors, in exchange for fees.

They bring professional expertise, capital, and academic programs with proven track records. They use the strength of their leveraged buying power and installation of effective systems, including refined curricula and training. They are actually no different than all the other vendors of any school district or state. They do what school districts do. They have a Superintendent (CEO), hire teachers and administrators, buy buses, textbooks, curricula, classroom supplies, furniture, computers, etc. They then deliver these to students, packaged in an expected quality education experience for the student and parents.

Other for-profit vendors such as Pearson, Staples, HP, Microsoft, and Houghton-Mifflin only provide parts of the education delivered by districts. EMOs therefore are the largest threat to local school boards because they can do the job and in a scale that would reasonably frighten any competitor.

What are the solutions to EMO resistance?

First, policymakers should look at results of the schools managed by EMOs. Superior academic results are the objective. We know aggregate costs are controlled for the NC taxpayer because the EMO-contracted charter gets the same allocation of per-pupil finding as the other charters.

In the first five authorizing cycles of charters, the advisory council/board has internally struggled mightily with the very different looking governance models of small, “organic” or home grown charters, versus the larger corporate formation of EMO supported charter applicants. The boards were caught in the conundrum of, as Jim Collins would write, the tyranny of the “or” versus the genius of the “and.” The boards were battling a non-existent wall between the two, almost exclusively denying charter contracts to the EMO contracted applicants.

That page may have turned as the current advisory board, with several years of results to look at, can now see schools like Langtree Charter and Cabarrus Charter, both opened and served by Charter Schools USA in 2013, excelling. Thus, today we should realize that charters do not all have to be packaged in the same wrapper. There can be some large, some small, those EMO operated and those with no extensive corporate professional management services.

Policymakers and those in the General Assembly should keep the eye on the target, what is best for parents and children, and authorize and support EMOs if and when they deliver. It should be pointed out that EMOs, like charters, should not be pigeon-holed. Some EMOs may be good for our students and others may not.

So, for those who have tossed the ball around and deferred decision making regarding EMOs, please acknowledge that the “for-profit,” red-herring argument by the “spikers,” is the structure of almost all the local  school boards’ and NC Department of Public Instruction’s vendors. Amidst the call for more details of the EMOs’ internal records, it would be ridiculous for us to assail all the vendors and request all their records. Once obtained, what would we do with them anyway? The data could be used to compare operating costs between the EMOs and the local school districts. Local school boards, watch what you wish for!

Public Charter School Financial Accountability

Now, if growth is in the news every week and EMOs every day, then charter financial accountability, our final subject, is both in the news and in the legislature! There are bills filed by Democrats to require charter board members or employees who have authority to “maintain or expend funds” to be personally liable for all the debts of the charter. There is resistance by Republicans to remove a Democrat sponsored provision, mentioned earlier, that slipped into the budget bill last year, one that will cost our schools and applicants $50,000 each (almost $8 million) in cash or borrowing power.

But taxpayers are not liable for unpaid charter debts. The state pays the schools a per-pupil allotment and that’s it, the spigot shuts off. When StudentFirst closed and reported $600,000 in debt, the news reports failed to tell readers that that debt was borne by the school’s board of directors.

Let’s look at the genesis of the issue. StudentFirst, Concrete Roses, and Entrepreneur High, all of Charlotte, failed in their first year and closed in 2014, along with Kinston Charter, an older charter. Since then, but with less controversy, the State Board has or is in the process of closing more charters under rigorous policies initiated or applied after the cap was removed in 2011. The three Charlotte charters above had fatal commonalities: they were approved too close to the schools’ opening (StudentFirst in January preceding opening and the other two in March preceding opening, thereby missing all those applying to schools of choice in the first quarter of the year), they had boards of directors that appeared to be less involved with the creation of the schools, they received state money only a few weeks before opening, and they had difficulties finding facilities.

Kinston Charter’s closing will not be discussed here, other than pointing to its precipitous decline in enrollment, but solutions for the “next Kinston” will be offered below. After the Kinston debacle our Association’s Board of Advisors, wanting to take a position on the closing, adopted this statement:

So, when schools fail we all want to know why. And by the way, some will fail.

Then what are the solutions to balance the need for financial accountability with the charter’s ability to effectively function?

This advice is for those in policymaking who have the authority to make changes now. It is also for legislators who should seek out data, pay attention to those in DPI involved in protecting the public dollars, and heed the charter voices, the “diggers.” They should not succumb to the political pressure to do something for the sake of doing something, a legislative occurrence not unknown. It is in the interests of charters, more than any other group, to help create real and effective financial accountability. It has to work so that the public maintains confidence in the schools.

The most underreported news is what accountability already exists. Below I have listed some, not all of what oversight is in existence today:

  1. SBE policy TCS-U-006, Policy for charter schools on financial and governance noncompliance, including Cautionary, Probationary, and Disciplinary Noncompliance, applied when charters fail to report required information including any financial, personnel, or student information requests, show signs of financial insolvency or weakness, receive a non sufficient funds notification, have a material adverse audit finding, and fail to have staff attend mandatory financial training; with non-resolved accumulation of the above leading to sanctions up to immediate freezing of assets and referral to the SBE for revocation
    What do you think?
  2. Terms of the charter contract or agreement involving board and staffing relationships and noncompliance as referenced in 1 above
    What do you think?
  3. Required levels of fidelity bonding of officers of no less than $250,000
    What do you think?
  4. Provision that “No indebtedness of the charter shall constitute indebtedness of the state of North Carolina” and all contracts with vendors shall so state; debt of charters is not debt of the public
    What do you think?
  5. Criminal background checks for those charter board members and staff handling finances
    What do you think?
  6. Termination of charter upon the failure to meet generally accepted standards of fiscal management or violation of law
    What do you think?
  7. Unannounced site visits by the State Board of Education
    What do you think?
  8. Application of the DPI Charter School Financial Performance Framework
    What do you think?
  9. Open Meetings and Public Records laws
    What do you think?
  10. Conflict of Interest policies regarding finances approved by the SBE
    What do you think?
  11. Rigorous requirements for new charters including criminal background checks for all board members, financial reviews by a CPA firm for all board members and attested by notarization
    What do you think?
  12. Reporting requirements established by the State Board of Education in the Uniform Education Reporting System
    What do you think?
  13. Annual financial audits by a firm approved by the Local Government Commission
    What do you think?
  14. Civil and criminal sanctions upon employees or board members committing fraud or gross negligence, including personal liability to the schools for damages.
    What do you think?

Here are the next steps. There was a short time frame from approval to opening for the failed charters. Currently, the schools opening in 2016 will be approved by August 15 of this year. So that systemic weakness has been patched. Schools now opening next year will have a full year, including the longer enrollment application window, to attract students.

Next, all the aforementioned schools received their state funding in three large chunks in accordance with the State Board of Education’s “Allotment Policy.” A new charter, with 300 students approved in the charter contract, has access to 34% of that funding in its first month, even if actual enrollment is only 100. The school can draw down $408,000 when it was entitled to only $136,000! The adjustment to reduce the overpayment is not made until November, based upon the first month’s average daily membership, or ADM. Charters like those that failed were in too much trouble by the second apportionment of state dollars. Rather than get any funds back, they should have never been released in the first place.

A second issue is that the Integrated Solutions Information System or “ISIS” mandated accounting system only reports cash basis transactions. DPI has real time access to those transactions. However, the failed charters accumulated debt that was not visible to DPI. An analogy is that DPI was handed the school’s bank statement but never asked for the credit card statement. Even though the charter is funded with a defined and finite amount, and the debts do not belong to the taxpayer, we can react faster to mitigate charter losses and threatened closures if we know a charter is overspending, including its borrowing.

In summary, those in positions to impact public policy affecting charters should take bold steps to:

  1. Stimulate and implement charter growth,
    What do you think?
  2. Support all types of charters, including EMOs, that effectively improve the quality of the charter movement, and
    What do you think?
  3. Collaborate to help DPI get its oversight calibrated to better match tax dollars going out with real enrollment and to get more current access to the charter “credit cards.”
    What do you think?

So, it’s time to quit tossing the ball around. Let’s get it over the net, match!

Maryland’s Charter Bill No Laughing Matter

In the final minutes of the Maryland General Assembly’s 2015 legislative session, the State Senate received back from the House of Delegates Senate Bill 595, a charter school bill completely unrecognizable from its original form.

“Has everyone recorded the vote? Anyone who wish to change their vote? Anyone who wishes to explain the vote? If not it’s the same old gang, folks,” Senate President Thomas V. Mike Miller said cheerfully, prompting laughter in the chamber.

“46-1. Thank you so much. Senate Bill 595 has received a constitutional majority, is declared passed,” Miller said.

The bill that the Maryland House and Senate passed represents a giant step backwards for an F-graded charter school law. In its original form, Governor Hogan’s charter school legislation, the Public Charter School Improvement Act of 2015, while modest, contained many positive provisions to improve Maryland’s charter school environment before Senate members completely gutted it a few weeks ago.

SB 595 removes flexibility critical for charter educators and administrators, making charter schools’ operational decisions subject to agreement with the local districts. The “flexibility” touted by some just validates authority that already exists for districts and states to consider waivers from rules and regulations.

Not only that, the State Board’s check and balance authority to review charter applications is gone, removing the Governor’s ability to influence charter schools through State Board appointments.

Public charter schools in Maryland will continue to face funding inequities in comparison to their traditional public school counterparts.

Following passage, Senate members continued to pat themselves on the back for what they thought was a job well done. At this point, all their “hard work” on amending SB 595 must be met with a veto.

Dysfunction in Annapolis

Editorial Board
Washington Post
April 15, 2015

MARYLAND GOV. Larry Hogan, who never held elective office before voters chose him last fall, was true to his promise to govern from the center in the first legislative session of his term. As a Republican governor faced with Democratic majorities in both houses of the legislature, he presented modest initiatives: measured tax breaks for first-responders, military veterans and small businesses; a repeal of the so-called “rain tax” on stormwater runoff, his main campaign talking point; small budget cuts to public schools and state worker pay; a sensible bill to encourage creation of more charter schools.

Despite tactical blunders, Mr. Hogan did not try to force an ideologically ambitious right-wing agenda on Democrats; if he had, we’d have understood their reluctance to meet him halfway. Instead, he proceeded cautiously — and was still met with hostility and snubs from the Democrats in control.

To hear the Democratic lawmakers tell it, you’d think they had spent the session trying to rescue schools and public employees from the predations of an alien invader. In fact, in their budget impasse with the governor, they were mainly intent on protecting their party’s core constituents today and shifting the burden of paying state pensions to Maryland taxpayers in the future.

Despite Mr. Hogan’s pragmatic restraint, Democrats rejected most of his proposals; they also ignored his attempt to sustain catch-up contributions to the pension fund. They did repeal the “rain tax” but with the proviso that localities would have to devise other means to contain stormwater runoff.

On public charter schools, the legislature took a bad law and made it worse. Democrats ignored reforms sought by the governor that would have given such schools needed flexibility. Instead they weakened the chartering authority of the state board of education and created new ways for local boards to meddle in the operations of charter schools. Mr. Hogan should veto the bill.

As the session wound down, the governor at first seemed to declare victory, then wondered publicly what had become of his agenda. He warned he wouldn’t spend the tens of millions of additional dollars approved by lawmakers for schools and state worker raises, then suggested that he probably would. He said nothing for two weeks about the Democrats’ raid on pension fund contributions, then declared it a “line in the sand” he would not allow.

If Mr. Hogan was inconsistent, Democrats were unyielding and heedless of November’s election results. By slashing pension contributions, which were also halved by lawmakers last year, they simply postponed the burden of filling the pension fund and saddled future generations of taxpayers with a bill amounting to an additional $2.5 billion.

For all his rookie mistakes, Mr. Hogan was the one in Annapolis who seemed to grasp the exigencies of divided government. The Democrats, to all appearances, are still learning.

NEWSWIRE: April 14, 2015

Vol. 17, No. 15

KILL THE BILL. “Appalled. MD just became 1st state 2 roll back on #charterschools w/ F grade and celebrates it on floor. Time 4 @LarryHogan to Veto.” That’s the takeaway CER President @CERKaraKerwin tweeted late last night after the Maryland General Assembly passed a dramatically revised charter school bill that makes it less likely that parents and educators will be able to create and advance innovative public school opportunities for children. Its most harmful components include the removal of the State Board’s authority to review charter applications, an invasive study on charter school operations, and the placement of funding and charter operations in the hands of district officials. The Maryland General Assembly is now adjourned, meaning Governor Hogan must veto this bill and start fresh next session.

Tell Governor Hogan to veto Senate Bill 595, which would make Maryland the first state to move backwards on charter schools.

NO SEAT LEFT BEHIND. An important report from Democracy Builders highlights the extraordinarily high demand for charter schools in New York City, exhibited by 49,700 students on charter waitlists. True, there are simply not enough charter seats to adequately meet demand, but that’s not always the reason why kids aren’t able to attend a school of their choosing. An analysis from 2006-14 finds that charter schools lost an average of 6-11 percent of students per year, leaving more than 2,500 open seats alone in 2014. This means students who are patiently waiting for a spot at a charter school still aren’t able to get in even if there’s room for them. It’s up to charter leaders to overcome these challenges, change the discourse and do their best to serve as accessible options for families.

HELP ON STATES. The Senate HELP Committee is meeting today for a No Child Left Behind markup extravaganza, with amendments expected to fly every which direction amid cordial calls for ‘bipartisanship.’ The counterpart in the House does a lot to reduce the Washington footprint on our nation’s schools, appreciating that successful policies and Parent Power reside at the state level. There’s still a long way to go in the overdue reauthorization of NCLB, but it’s essential lawmakers remember throughout this process that states must be held accountable for federal dollars while not impinging on their ability to innovate.

DISTRICT DEMAND. NYC isn’t the only place with high charter school demand. In 2015, DC charter school waitlists saw an 18 percent annual increase, jumping up to over 8,500 students in a city where already 44 percent of the public school population are enrolled in charters. There was also demand for traditional schools through a common lottery process, epitomizing the positive charter ripple effect on the DC public system as a whole. Thanks to the strongest charter school law in the nation, DC charter schools will continue to be a viable part of improving education in our nation’s capital.           

TEACHER TENURE. A new poll from USC Dorsife College and the LA Times indicates high support for teachers as professionals, and longer probationary periods before a teacher is eligible for tenure. Nearly three-quarters of respondents would like to see an easier process for removing ineffective teachers from the classroom, and voters of all stripes overwhelmingly rejected laying off teachers based on seniority as opposed to merit. Eighty-six percent of Americans think schools should have the ability to remove ineffective teachers according to CER poll data, and evidently, support for this kind of accountability is not waning in the Golden State.

CHOICE MANDATE. Besides Maryland moving backwards on charter schools, other states have actually shown measurable progress in 2015 in expanding choices for students in need. In Arizona, Native American students living on reservations are now eligible for Education Savings Accounts (ESAs). Arkansas and Nevada both introduced school choice programs: A voucher program for students with special needs and a tax credit scholarship program for low-income students, respectively. All three of these states just happen to have reform-minded governors according to a CER analysis following the 2014 elections. It’s now time for other newly elected governors to act on their mandate to improve choice and accountability in education.

AFC POLICY SUMMIT. From May 18-19, the American Federation for Children will hold its National Policy Summit in New Orleans, to celebrate past successes and future challenges with some of the biggest names in the school choice movement. Click here to register.

Statement on Maryland General Assembly’s Passage of Charter School Bill

STATEMENT BY KARA KERWIN, PRESIDENT OF THE CENTER FOR EDUCATION REFORM, REGARDING THE MARYLAND GENERAL ASSEMBLY’S PASSAGE OF CHARTER SCHOOL LEGISLATION

CER Press Release
Washington, D.C.
April 14, 2015

“Late last night, The Maryland General Assembly took a step backwards in passing a dramatically revised charter school bill, making it less likely that parents and educators will be able to create and advance innovative public school opportunities for children.

“The bill removes the State Board’s check and balance authority to review school district actions on charter applications, which by extension removes a Governor’s authority to impact charter school decisions through his or her appointments to the board.

“The bill requires an invasive study by the State Department of Education of all charter school operations, compliance of which will require additional staff and resources. This was clearly an effort by opponents to tie up small, underfunded charter schools with more bureaucracy, not less.

“The bill further removes authority for charter schools by making every operational feature subject to agreement with school districts, which more often than not deny basic freedoms to charter operators to hire and train their own personnel. It also furthers funding inequality for public school students attending public charter schools.

“The bill makes changes in the ability of charter schools to make preferences on who they enroll, which is not a major accomplishment. Nor is the proclaimed victory of advocates over so-called flexibility, which validates authority that already exists for districts and the state to consider requested waivers from various rules and regulations.

“I’m appalled that this bill is considered progress when by definition it puts school districts and unions more fully in control of charter creation, operations and outcomes. Mr. Governor, I urge you to grab a cup of coffee – or a beer – and sit down to read this bill for yourself, and you too will be appalled at what the General Assembly has done to your well-intentioned proposal.

“While the Governor’s team has embraced this bill, I urge the Governor to veto this bill and start fresh with the next session.”

The School Choice Mandate

A quick glance at the @edreform Twitter feed in the last few weeks reveals a string of school choice programs that have successfully advanced through state legislatures, with little resistance expected from reform-minded governors.

In Arizona, Gov. Doug Ducey signed into law an expansion of the innovative Education Savings Account (ESA) program, granting eligibility to Native American students living on reservations. Now, Native American families, in addition to families with special needs students, foster care families and military families, can direct funds towards education services using ESAs.

Arkansas became the sixteenth state in the nation with a voucher program. In its first year, the Succeed Scholarship Program will provide up to 100 scholarships for students with special needs.

The Nevada Legislature passed a tax credit-scholarship program for income-eligible students, capped at $5 million for the first year with an automatic escalator clause for each subsequent year. The bill has received public support from Gov. Brian Sandoval.

Mississippi will join Arizona and Florida as the newest state with an ESA program for students with special needs, expected to receive Gov. Phil Bryant’s signature.

What do all of these recent school choice advances have in common?

All are in states where there is a pro-reform governor, according to a November 2014 analysis from Education50. With the exception of Mississippi, governors Arizona, Arkansas and Nevada all had gubernatorial elections in 2014, and each elected governor voiced their commitment to expanding school choice during campaigns.

The progress in these four states is commendable. However, more than half of the 36 gubernatorial elections in 2014 resulted in electing a pro-reform candidate to the governor’s mansion. It’s time for more reform-minded governors to lead with their mandate to increase choice and accountability in schools.