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Sunday, February 22, 2015

More charter school controls wanted by the left and by Auditor Yost on the right | cleveland.com

More charter school controls wanted by the left and by Auditor Yost on the right | cleveland.com:



More charter school controls wanted by the left and by Auditor Yost on the right



Yost-charter-schools.JPGState Auditor Dave Yost, also a Republican, said he plans to give the legislature his own suggested changes early next month. Those will include requiring more financial reporting by charter schools and the private companies that often run them, along with better definition of the role of those companies.
COLUMBUS, Ohio - Charter school reform proposals are gaining broad support in Columbus, but there are voices on both the left and the right who say the $1 billion charter school movement in Ohio needs even stronger controls than what has been proposed.
Both Gov. John Kasich and Republicans in the Ohio House have made separate proposals to change the oversight and management of charter schools - public schools open to anyone, but which are privately-run.
A third proposal is coming soon from the Ohio Senate.
Auditor Yost wants clearer rules
"I don't think that what needs to happen is on the table yet," Yost told The Plain Dealer.
Among Yost's concerns: that Ohio has no clear definition of when a charter school is acting as a private organization or when they take on a governmental role in educating children. That leaves private organizations receiving large amounts of tax money that don't have much accountability to the public.
The complaints from the left, coming this week from the Innovation Oho think tank and the Ohio Education Association, are mostly predictable. Both are groups that have been critics of charter schools.
But while they both want bad charter schools closed faster and want better financial reporting, they and most Democrats aren't fighting to shut down the charter movement, just the worst schools.
Charter critics want bad schools closed
OEA President Becky Higgins told the House Education Committee this week that House Bill 2, one of the two proposals, does not do enough to make bad schools improve or be closed.
"First, accelerate the process for closing failing charter schools," Higgins said. "Many charter schools have been persistently under-performing for years. We urge you to adopt provisions that would shut down failing charters more quickly." 
Innovation Ohio, which partners with OEA on a website calledKnowYourCharter.com, also joined that call. That left-leaning group urged the legislature to include three things in its reforms: close bad schools, make charter schools follow the same public records rules as any public entity and change charter funding so that it does not penalize school districts.
Their position, announced at a press conference this week, closely resembles early criticism, of the proposals by State Rep. Teresa Fedor. Fedor had dismissed the More charter school controls wanted by the left and by Auditor Yost on the right | cleveland.com: