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Monday, May 1, 2017

PolitiFact Florida: How not-for-profit are charter schools, really? | Tampa Bay Times

PolitiFact Florida: How not-for-profit are charter schools, really? | Tampa Bay Times:

PolitiFact Florida: How not-for-profit are charter schools, really?

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Florida lawmakers who support the expansion of charter schools have adopted a single talking point to explain how the schools are managed.



Rep. Bob Cortes, R-Altamonte Springs, faced a series of questions from Rep. David Richardson, D-Miami Beach, after introducing HB 7101, one of several measures in the legislative session that would increase access to charter schools.
Like public schools, charter schools receive state funds. The key difference is they are privately managed.
Richardson was curious about the bill's provision that specifies that a charter school operator may use assets of their charter school for K-12 educational purposes in "other schools."
"These other schools, would they also have to be a not-for-profit or could they be a for-profit?" Richardson asked.
Cortes said, "They would have to be a school within their own network. So part of the charter school system itself."
"So does that mean the other schools would have to be a 501(c)(3)?" Richardson asked.
"All charter schools are not-for-profit," Cortes said.
HB 7101 passed by a 81-39 vote.
The same argument resurfaced in debate of "schools of hope" legislation that would create a $200 million fund to lure charter schools to underperforming districts. Rep. Manny Diaz Jr., R-Hialeah, said, "Under Florida state statute, a charter school is a nonprofit organization, so there is no such thing in Florida as a for-profit charter school."
The point jumped out because there have been instances of charter schools being used to benefit people privately.
Florida law technically requires charter schools to be nonprofits. But the system is largely run by for-profit companies, which Cortes left out.
Not-for-profit, or not?
Cortes cited a provision of a Florida statute (1002.33 sec 12(i)) as evidence of this claim, which mandates that a charter must organize as, or be operated by, a nonprofit organization.
A not-for-profit is a type of organization that does not earn profits for its owners.
The Florida Department of Education echoed Cortes' evidence.
Audrey Walden, the agency's press secretary, said the defining document that sets the academic, financial and organizational performance benchmarks for a charter school is determined by the local school district and the nonprofit charter school board.
The charter governing board can choose to enter into contracts with private entities to provide services and support.
"But, ultimately, performance and accountability rests with the nonprofit governing board, which, when it enters into a charter agreement with its local school district, is subject to the same Sunshine Laws and School Accountability System that pertains to all public schools in Florida," she said.
Not all charter schools operate in the same way. And sometimes nonprofit charter governing boards enter into contract with for-profit companies.
The management company does not manage the governing board; rather, it handles certain aspects of the operations of the school under a contract with the governing board.
The Miami Herald's examination of South Florida's charter school industry found several instances of for-profit management companies controlling charter schools' day-to-day operations.
The Herald found examples of charter schools relinquishing total control of their staff and finances to for-profit management companies. In Miami-Dade County, the Life Skills Center paid 97 percent of its income to cover fees incurred by a management company.
Then, the governing board of two affiliated schools tried to "eject" the management company's managers. As a result, the management company withheld money from the school and threatened to press charges against people within the school who were trying to get the money back.
The Herald also found that some owners of the management companies also control the land and buildings used by the charter school. Owners of Academica Corp., the state's largest charter school management company based in South Miami, collected almost $19 million a year in lease payments on PolitiFact Florida: How not-for-profit are charter schools, really? | Tampa Bay Times: