Tuesday, May 5, 2015

Mike Klonsky's SmallTalk Blog: Charter School Love #CharterSchoolsWeek

Mike Klonsky's SmallTalk Blog: Charter School Love:

Charter School Love



Have you heard? It's National Charter School Week. It's a time to "spread charter school love" and enter the Charter School Week Essay Contest. I think you get one of these ties if you win. Here's my entry. 



It's the time of year I start getting emails from Riya V. Anandwala from the National Alliance for Public Charter Schools, complaining that the cities aren't building charters fast enough to meet all the pent up demand. She may be right. Charter school ad-men, using public funds and with massive help from Arne Duncan's Dept. of Ed, have created a vibrant market.



Of course, creating a market and serving the public good are not the same thing. Take Apple Corp. for example. They have created quite a market for the Apple Watch, an $84defectiveplastic bauble that they're selling to a willing public for up to $17,000 (Sport Edition) and can't make them fast enough.



It's hard to argue against choice. Right? In our wonderful country, everyone has the choice to buy the Sport Edition (or not), chunky/smooth, or to stay at the Drake on Boul Mich or sleep on a bench in the park across the street.



The problem is, that when the bill comes due, supposedly "public" charter schools can be taken away, repossessed if you will, and the occupants thrown out in the street, if the "owners" don't get their check in the mail. That's exactly what owner UNO, the largest charter operator in Chicago, is threatening if THEIR charters don't come across with more than $3 million in "management fees" to the parent company. They say they will evict thousands of Latino students and parents for non-payment. I suppose that will create an even greater market.



Chicago is not alone. The same kind of thing is going on in D.C. where privatization and unbridled charter expansion became a thing under former Supt. Michelle Rhee.



Here's the latest:

Charter school founder Kent Amos and his management company have agreed to pay $3 million to settle a lawsuit that alleged he used the company to divert taxpayer funds from the school for his personal gain.
Last summer, the D.C. attorney general alleged that millions of dollars had been diverted from the school for personal gain, contrary to the school’s nonprofit status. Amos and his attorney did not immediately respond to requests for comment Monday.
Since 2004, the school paid more than $14 million to the company, according to court records. Management fees rose while costs Mike Klonsky's SmallTalk Blog: Charter School Love: