Showing posts with label New Jersey charter schools. Show all posts
Showing posts with label New Jersey charter schools. Show all posts

Friday, March 9, 2012

Trenton Insider And Princeton Charter School Trustee Not In Favor Of Local Control. What A Surprise!!

An op-ed in today's Asbury Park Press is a pretty typical piece of reformy writing.  Paul Josephson comes out of the gate swinging with reformy talking points.  Heck, "status quo" is in the title of the piece!


It drones on in much the same fashion, finger wagging at typical reformy targets, teachers' unions and school boards.


Opponents of public charter schools are wasting obscene amounts of our taxpayer funds on lobbyists, lawyers and political advisers to fight public charter schools. Their mission: to preserve the current education establishment and ways of doing business, by preventing parents from creating better and more innovative educational opportunities in their towns with a public charter school.


Teachers’ unions and school boards across the state have scared parents and teachers with the mantra that public charter schools are robbing their districts of revenues. They want taxpayers to believe that public charter schools are to blame for reductions and layoffs. They prefer to vilify charters and avoid responsibility for the real reforms and tough choices we need to make.


Save Our Schools New Jersey, backed by well over 6,000 parentsis the driving force behind the legislation Mr. Josephson is denigrating.  But Save Our Schools New Jersey is not anti charter, and Mr. Josephson knows that.  In fact, it isn't a secret that Julia Sass Rubin, one of the main spokespersons for Save Our Schools NJ, has a child that attends the same charter as Mr. Josephson's two children, Princeton Charter School.  


Save Our Schools NJ, is a grassroots organization led and run by parents - not unions or school boards - and works to ensure that local communities have a say in whether they want a charter. 


I have testified before both the Senate and Assembly Education Committees.  The only fancy lobbyists I have seen were Carlos Perez of the New Jersey Charter Schools Association, with lobbyists from the National Association of Charter School Authorizers and the National Alliance for Public Charter Schools in tow.  They testified against local control and hobnobbed with NJDOE officials in the hallway.  They had fancy suits and glossy brochures, and more Walton, Gates and Robertson Foundation money behind them than I could ever imagine seeing in my lifetime.  


So, Mr. Josephson, where's the proof to back up your statement that "opponents of public charter schools are wasting "obscene amounts of our taxpayer funds on lobbyists, lawyers and political advisers to fight public charter schools?"


Exactly who is Mr. Josephson anyway, and what game is he playing here?  At the bottom of the op-ed it says he is a trustee of the Princeton Charter School.  Check out his bio on the schools website.


Paul is Partner-in-Charge of the Regulatory & Government Practice at Hill Wallack LLP in Princeton, and Principal in Government Process Solutions LLC, a Trenton policy and media firm. He litigates for and advises corporations, nonprofits and public entities on administrative and procurement matters, governance, and communications strategies. He previously served the State of New Jersey as Chief Counsel to the Governor, Chief of Authorities, and Director of the Division of Law, overseeing the State's 550 civil attorneys and its 50 independent authorities. He advises numerous Democratic and Republican officeholders and lectures on policy, election and ethics issues.  He chairs the New Jersey State Bar Association's Administrative Law Section and is a member of the Citizen's Campaign Legal Task Force, which promotes citizen-led government reforms. (emphasis mine)


Now we're getting somewhere.  Not exactly a Trenton outsider.  So, let's see, what does Government Process Solutions LLC do?


At Government Process Solutions (GPS), we provide unmatched strategic guidance and services for our clients' most difficult public affairs challenges. Our bipartisan professionals combine over 90 years of experience in government, law and business development to provide unique and creative solutions to any government problem.  (emphasis mine)


Well, there you have it.  Mr. Josephson is using the op-ed page of the Asbury Park Press to "provide a unique and creative solution" to a "government problem."  Namely, that parents in the state of New Jersey are showing how powerful their voice is, and have become a "difficult public affairs challenge."  What better way to squelch that voice then to claim that the driving force behind the legislation is actually unions and school boards.  Much better targets and easier scapegoats, especially in New Jersey under Chris Christie.


Strange that someone that's a member of the Citizen's Campaign Legal Task Force, which claims "to teach citizens about the legal rights and political skills they need to bring constructive, responsible leadership to the service of our communities and our country" would lash out this way against legislation that is being driven by public outcry.  


Parents, not the school boards and the teachers unions, are making it hard for the actual powers that be, namely the Governor, Education Commissioner Chris Cerf and the big money backers of the New Jersey Charter Schools Association, to jam their agenda of more charter schools down the throats of New Jersey parents that support public education.     


We're not going away either.  


Mr. Josephson purposefully has it backwards.  Clearly, this guy is not a novice.  He knows his way around the charter school issue, the media, and the Statehouse.  


This op-ed is nothing but a smear campaign.


Looks to me like Mr. Josephson is protecting his own status quo.  After all, Princeton Charter has been around since 1997; it is one of the oldest charters in the state.  Perhaps now that the tide is turning on charters, especially those in the suburbs, he is feeling like he needs to defend his school.  


In fact, just recently the Princeton School Board did an analysis and stated they believe they could save $3.15 million if the Princeton Charter school was absorbed into the regular public school system.  Gee, I am sure the taxpayers in Princeton are interested in that number.


Could there be any other reason he wants to keep traditional public school parents from asking too many questions?  Let's take a quick look at the kids Princeton Charter School is serving.


Looks a lot like they are "cream skimming" off of the traditional public schools, doesn't it?  Perhaps the backlash against "boutique charters" in suburbs, which has even Governor Christie and Acting Commissioner Cerf questioning the need for charters in successful districts, has Mr. Josephson a little nervous too?  


In his argument against local control Mr. Josephson threw out a huge red herring.   He tried desperately to make the argument that because the majority of school boards decided to move their elections to November, thus doing away with the need for voter approval on school budgets if districts stay within a 2% cap, school boards are being hypocritical to support voter referendums on charters.


Here's a bit more detail on the legislation, as well as what the Governor himself had to say about it:

Perhaps the most far-reaching consequence is districts that switch their elections to November are no longer compelled to put their budgets before voters for approval, provided they stay within the 2 percent tax levy cap. Any requests for spending above the cap would be presented to the voters in November.
"I urge school board members and voters in every one of our districts to act as quickly as possible to take hold of these benefits," Christie said when signing the bill. (emphasis mine)
And as Save Our Schools NJ pointed out in their comment to Mr. Josephsons' op-ed:
In most cases, even in towns that have moved their school budget elections in November, the local community would still have a say before a new traditional public school is opened with local tax dollars, most likely through a November ballot question on a bond amount; why shouldn't the public also have a vote on the opening of charter school paid for with local tax dollars?  (emphasis mine)


So Mr. Josephson, clearly you are trying to obfuscate the facts here.  The tax burden of any new school, charter or traditional public, should be put to the voters.  And not having to put the budget up for a vote every year is not a get out of jail free card for districts.  If the budget needs to increase more than 2%, or a new school is needed, the budget gets voted on.   


I'll make you a deal.  You subject your charter school's budget to the will of the people for as many years as the traditional public schools in Princeton have.  Spend months and months preparing it, only to have each line item scrutinized, and folks come out just to vote it down because they don't want to pay ANY taxes for public schools let alone MORE taxes!   And then deal with a bully of a Governor telling those same taxpayers to vote down your budget and see how you make out.  


What's that?  No thank you?  Well, I can't blame you.  The charter status quo is pretty sweet.  It must be awfully nice to get public dollars, not have to educate the same population as the rest of the district and not have to deal with public scrutiny to boot.  


Pot, meet kettle.  


ADDING:


Check out today's piece by the Washington Post's wonderful Valerie Strauss about the failure of parent trigger legislation in Florida.


In the Florida capital today, as the legislature was debating and voting the bill, proponents, who had been dropped off in vans, wore yellow T-shirts with “Parent Power” emblazoned on them, and they handed out fliers calling Florida parent groups “union affiliates” and defenders of the status quo. Those are insults often hurled at those who oppose the “school choice” movement and standardized test-based accountability. (emphasis mine)


Like I said, Mr. Josephson's reformy talking points aren't terribly original.  Looks like legislators may finally be catching on. 

Saturday, February 11, 2012

No Transparency At NJDOE Or For-Profit White Hat. What Are They Hiding?

Ten charter schools in Ohio that contract with White Hat Management, aren't too happy.   The saga is being covered extensively by StateImpact Ohio.


White Hat has been sued by the governing boards of some of the schools it manages. According to the lawsuit, White Hat collects at least 95 percent of the schools’ tax funding. It also owns everything from computers to student files. The governing authorities of the schools involved in the lawsuit would like to gain access to the materials and equipment and to decide if they want White Hat to continue to operate their schools.
For the 2010-11 school year, no Ohio White Hat school earned higher than the equivalent of a “C” on its state report card. Most were rated “D” or “F.”
And it looks like the lawsuit is heating up.  Today the Columbus Dispatch reported that:
Common Pleas Judge John F. Bender gave White Hat until March 6 to provide tax returns, building leases, transactions with its subsidiaries and other information to 10 charter schools that had contracted with the firm for management services.
“Public money must be accounted for,” Bender wrote in a 19-page order.
The judge asked attorneys for both sides to meet with him March 7 to discuss whether White Hat has complied.
For nearly two years, the company has fought against disclosing the information, arguing that it was proprietary. (emphasis mine)
Make sure to read the comment section of the Dispatch article.  The people of Ohio clearly see that they are being taken for a ride by this for-profit management company, and that their legislators are allowing it to happen.  I have written about Governor Christie's desire to allow for-profits to manage charters in New Jersey.  If he has his way, New Jersey will not be far behind Ohio.
Notice how White Hat is claiming they don't have to open their books because the information is "proprietary?"  
This reminds me of the NJDOE's refusal to release charter application reviewer comments.  I have been denied this information several times (I am expecting the third denial early this week!)   The reason for the denial is that the information is "deliberative." 
Let's break this down a bit.  
In all of our research we have learned a lot about the application review process, both at the state level for charters and at the federal level for grants.  (And by we I mean all of the fine folks I have been working with to battle Tikun Olam.)  In comparing these processes one thing is very clear. For all the problems with the federal process, it is COMPLETELY transparent.  When you file a Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) request for a grant application, whether it was approved or denied, you also receive the reviewers scores and comments.  This is because the applications are scored, and the highest scorers get the money.  It's just that simple.  
But the public is not allowed to see reviewer comments on charter applications.  Applicants can see them, and the proposed Quest Academy even posted them on their website, but concerned citizens or districts that want to see them to better understand how the NJDOE is making their decisions are denied.  
So why can we see the reviewer comments on a federal grant application but we can't see the reviewer comments on a state charter application?  Simple.  
In New Jersey the decisions are not made based on the reviews.  The decisions are left to the Commissioner of Education.  
This is why the reviewer comments are considered deliberative.  They are not the final deciding factor.  New Jersey's charter school law gives Acting Commissioner Cerf the power.  
Jersey Jazzman did a great write up on this topic.  The only detail he missed was that the reviewer comments on the Regis Academy application were not released in response to an Open Public Records Act (OPRA) request.  Cherry Hill did OPRA them, but they were denied.  The reviewer comments were part of documents released for their appeal of the approval of Regis Academy.  
And clearly it is a good thing they appealed, since the reviews clearly show that the application was not scored well by the three reviewers.  This is from Cherry Hill Superintendent Dr. Reusche's Assembly Education Committee testimony:
In attempting to determine why this charter was approved, we filed an OPRA request for the application review sheets; the DOE denied our OPRA request, but later released the review sheets to our solicitor as part of the official record on appeal. Here’s what we found: Three reviewers reviewed the application, giving scores of “Meets the Standard,” “Approaches the Standard,” or “Does Not Meet the Standard” in 14 categories. Three reviewers, 14 categories, for a total of 42 indicators. Regis’s application was deemed to meet the standard in just 20 of the 42 possible indicators. That’s a score of 47.6%. Shouldn’t a charter school application be subject to at least the 80% standard that school districts must achieve in the NJQSAC review? 
If we could see ALL of the reviews of ALL of the applications that were considered in that round, how many denied applications would we find that scored much higher than Regis?  It's hard to imagine that all 56 of the applications that were denied in that round scored lower than 47.6%.  So why did Regis get approved?
The Education Law Center and ACLU-NJ sued the NJDOE for the names of the individuals reviewing charter school applications and ultimately the information was released to Senator Gill via an OPRA request.  In the last round of approvals the NJDOE released the list of reviewers without any fanfare in their official press release.  But apparently the ratings of those reviewers mean very little. 
Cerf is "The Decider".  
What we really need is for someone with some power to OPRA the reviewer comments for ALL of those applications, and to do it in a very public way.  Individuals like me and school districts like Cherry Hill are easy to deny information.  
Any takers?

Wednesday, February 1, 2012

Take Back The Fight! Defend Public Ed With One Phone Call! (Don't Let Big Money Win)

The following email went out to charter schools and charter school parents from the New Jersey Charter Schools Association. 


The State Legislators need to hear from the charter school community.  We need your help!

On Thursday, February 2, 2012 the Assembly Education committee will hold a hearing to consider the vote on two charter school bills A- 1877- and A-2147.

A-1877- would require community approval on all charter applications and petitions for expansionsbefore the charter application goes to the Department of Education for review.

A-2147- Would require automatic enrollment of all students in the charter school district. 

NJCSA does NOT support A-1877 and A-2147 for the following reasons:

A-1877-

    • The charter approval process will become a political campaign, diverting scarce resources intended for children to operate and fund a campaign.
    • It creates an unfunded mandate. Referendums require the expenditure of funds at the county and local level.
    • Voter referendums will impede the development of innovative schools in urban and suburban communities.
    • Parents vote with their feet. If parents did not want more options, then a charter school would not open.
A-2147-
    • This will cause a logistical nightmare for all charter schools.
    • However, this bill does attempt to address increased accountability and collaboration between school districts and charters. We feel that any change to current charter law should come from the people within the charter community who know it best.
Our recommendation is to OPPOSE A-1877 and A-2147 and amend the current Charter law to provide for more diverse authorizers and more community input throughout the process.

How Can You Help?

We would like to ensure that the people who will be impacted by these proposals be informed about them and be a present voice in the discussion of the future of charter schools in New Jersey. If you are free, please
    • · Attend the hearing in Trenton on Thursday. It will be held in the State House Annex, Committee room 11, 4th Floor at 2:00 p.m. If you plan to attend, please contact the Community Outreach Manager, Jay Wright atjwright@njcharters.org or call (609) 989-9700 ext. 4416.
    • · If you can NOT attend the hearing, you can voice your concerns by calling the following committee members and/or your local representative. Tell them you are a “charter school (parent, teacher and/or advocate) and you OPPOSE A-1877”.


Assembly Education Committee Members


-Patrick Diegnan, Jr.
908-757-1677

-Bonnie Watson Coleman
609-292-0500

-Ralph Caputo
973-450-0484

Mila Jasey
-973-762-1886

Angelica Jimenez
-201-223-4247
Troy Singelton
856-461-3997

Connie Wagner
201-576-9199

David Wolfe
732-840-9028

Scott Rumana
973-237-1362

NJCSA believes that the current process under which charter schools are authorized must be improved to allow for more community input and involvement. Stay involved and make a difference for our charter school kids!

Not a big surprise that the NJCSA is asking charter school parents to oppose legislation that would allow communities to decide their own fate.  Especially when the current system is working so well to expand charter schools, whether districts and communities want them or not.


But here's the part that gets me.  The NJCSA got close to 1M from the Walton Foundation alone in 2010.



I can't easily access where the rest of their money comes from, and they do not list their donors on their website like some other organizations do.  But clearly Mr. Perez has access to mad cash to fund his association and their activities (like sending out the above email missives, testifying before the Senate and Assembly against legislation, and supporting charters in lawsuits against the school districts they intend to serve.)


In a press release supporting the PIACS lawsuit Mr Perez stated:

The school districts participate in the evaluation process of charter schools. Their concerns and objections are taken into consideration. If the authorizer approves the application, the school districts have the opportunity to appeal. If, as in this case, they do not appeal, the school districts should not continue to expend public resources to obstruct the school from opening and, by extension, the children who are enrolled in the school from attending.

So let me get this straight.  Mr. Perez can use his foundation money any way he sees fit to increase the number of charter schools in the state of New Jersey, even if those charters are approved despite the concerns and objections of the effected districts.  Yet NJCSA supported (and funded??) a lawsuit brought by a charter school against districts in an attempt to prevent them from spending relatively few tax dollars to prevent the use of millions of tax dollars to create a charter many parents and residents in the community do not want but can not vote on?


Looks like we are back to Mr. Perez protecting the good citizens of New Jersey from that "tyranny of the majority" he is so concerned about.


Don't let the NJCSA and Carlos Perez get away with this!  Let's use their foundation money to spread the word ourselves and show them how democracy really works.  Let's take his call list and blast it out to everyone that cares about public schools and ask them to call the Assembly Education Committee in SUPPORT of A-1877 and A-2147. 


Are you with me?


Here, I'll make it easy, just cut and paste the following and email it to your friends and post it to your Facebook wall.  If you're on Twitter, tweet this post!  


CALL TO ACTION!  Please call the members of the Assembly Education Committee TODAY and let them know you are a PROUD PUBLIC SCHOOL SUPPORTER and you want them to support the following bills that  will be considered and voted on tomorrow, Thursday, February 2nd!




  • Assembly bill 1877 (bill A3852/S2243 last session), which would require local approval before the establishment of new charter schools, and
  • Assembly bill 2147 (bills A3356/S3005/S3001 last session), which would increase charter school educational and financial accountability and transparency and address the fact that NJ charter school students do not represent the demographics of their sending districts.


Assembly Education Committee Members

-Patrick Diegnan, Jr.
-Bonnie Watson Coleman
-Ralph Caputo
Mila Jasey
Angelica Jimenez
Troy Singelton
Connie Wagner
David Wolfe
Scott Rumana


If you only have time to make one call, call Assemblyman Diegnan, the chair of the committee.  Tell him you support these bills because LOCAL COMMUNITIES should decide what is right for their students, NOT THE COMMISSIONER OF EDUCATION AND THE STATE! 


ADDING:


Whoa.  


Critics worry that requiring public approval will dampen the growth of charter schools. They’re right, but that’s the way it should be if communities don’t want them, and don’t want their tax dollars going toward schools that are free to operate with little public scrutiny over spending decisions and curriculum choices.


To date the state’s charter-school approvals have mostly been clustered where they are needed, in the struggling urban districts. But other “luxury” charters have popped up in some high-performing districts, with the specter of additional ones hanging over public schools all across the state. Meanwhile, state officials continue to ignore any broader community opposition to specific applications.


If state policy cannot properly reflect the stark differences between the urban charters of need and the suburban charters of want, the public needs the power of approval to assure those differences are recognized and respected.


Yeah, what they said...

Friday, January 27, 2012

Ragin' Grannies v. For Profit Charter Operator

One of the founders of Speak Up South Jersey (yes, you heard that right, Speak Up Highland Park is branching out…) posted a link to a YouTube video on their Facebook page that, I'm not ashamed to admit, literally brought me to tears:



I say we take the Ragin' Grannies on tour.  Their fight in Chapel Hill is in many ways the same as the fight in Cherry Hill.  What sets their fight apart however is the inclusion of a for-profit entity, in this case National Heritage Academy, which prides itself on it's "mandatory and extensive" use of testing data to "inform and adjust teaching."

But it's only a matter of time before New Jersey is confronted with a massive for-profit invasion.

As I've detailed previously, Imagine Schools, the nation's largest and perhaps most controversial for-profit charter operator with huge problems in Florida, Washington DC and Indiana just to name a few, has already been behind four applications in New Jersey.   Last October the Star Ledger reported:


Among the proposals were some with ties to out-of-state charter school networks, like Imagine Schools, which helped local residents write applications in Jersey City, Newark, Camden, Trenton.
Imagine serves 40,000 students in 72 schools in 12 states, according to its website. "New Jersey is an area that is favorable for (education) alternatives," Samuel Howard, Imagine School’s executive vice president, said.
Christie has said he hoped to attract charter networks to New Jersey, but out-of-state companies face a roundabout process. A local group must first win approval for a charter then, if it wants to outsource the operation, must ask for bids. (emphasis mine)
Meanwhile, in St. Louis Missouri Imagine schools are an unmitigated disaster:


Education Commissioner Chris Nicastro advised Jim French, chairman of the university's education division, to announce "immediately" the closure of the underperforming schools after this school year.
Nicastro's recommendation comes days after French said the university needed more support and direction from the Missouri Department of Elementary and Secondary Education as it scrutinizes the charter schools operated by Virginia-based Imagine Schools Inc.
The six schools, which enroll about 3,800 students, fared worse on standardized tests this year than nearly all traditional and charter schools in St. Louis. French said the university is not getting the direction it needs from the education department or from state statutes to ensure the schools are living up to their charters.
Nicastro wrote that it is the sponsor's role, not the state's, to regulate charter schools.

So with Imagine's abysmal track record across the nation, clearly New Jersey should be wary of for-profit operators.  And since a university authorized and oversaw Imagine in St. Louis, and then seemed not to know what to do with the ensuing disaster, clearly we should also be careful about who we select as authorizers.


What's that Governor?


Earlier this week in his State of the State speech, Governor Christie urged the legislature to make much needed changes to the state’s charter school law through bill A-4167 introduced last June.  Sweeping changes to New Jersey’s charter school laws are needed to remove barriers and roadblocks to the growth of high-quality charter schools. The current laws and rules governing charter schools act as a deterrent to growth instead of fostering expansion. It is time to aggressively encourage some of the nation’s most-respected and successful charter school operators to come to New Jersey while making it possible to implement the same model of innovation and results in other new and existing charter schools. (emphasis mine)


Guess the Governor got tired of that "round about process."  So, what is added to, and taken away from, the charter school law in bill A-4167 to make it easier for for-profits to step in?


10.  Section 4 of P.L.1995, c.426 (C.18A:36A-4) is amended to read as follows:
     4.  a. A charter school may be established by:
     (1) teaching staff members[, parents with children attending the schools of the district, or a combination of teaching staff members and parents.  A charter school may also be established by an institution of higher education or a private entity located within the State in conjunction with teaching staff members and parents of children attending the schools of the district] who either reside or are employed in the State;
     (2) community residents who reside in the State;
     (3)  a public institution of higher education, except that a charter school authorizer which is an institution of higher education shall be prohibited from reviewing and approving a charter application submitted by that same institution of higher education;
     (4)  a private entity that is either for-profit or not-for-profit;
     (5)  a charter school that is currently operating in the State; or
     (6)  a combination of any of the above. (emphasis mine, and for damn good reason, too)

Here's your lesson for the day on how to read a proposed bill, if you don't already know that is.  Everything not underlined is the original legislation, and everything underlined is new and what's in [brackets] comes out.  


In the original law, an eligible applicant had to either teach in the district they wanted to serve or have kids in the PUBLIC schools of that district.  But even with this supposed limited pool of eligible applicants, who were supposed to represent the needs of the community, the charter school movement in New Jersey easily managed to subvert the intent of the law and to override local wishes.   


Bill A-4167 will REMOVE the part about being a public school parent or teacher ENTIRELY, and will open the door to everybody and anybody, unless you are the actual authorizer.  That sure does make it easier, now doesn't it?  


So who is going to do the authorizing?  The bill will allow public institutions of higher education in New Jersey to be authorizers.  


The fact that the Imagine Schools in St. Louis were authorized by Missouri Baptist University doesn't lend much credence to the fact that adding universities as authorizers will increase accountability.  Did you notice that when the Imagine Schools blew up in their face MBU looked to the state and said, "What should we do?" 


The bill does however say that the local school board may be an authorizer…


NOW we're getting somewhere.  Until districts and/or voters have local control over their schools, I think we can expect many more disasters like Imagine schools in St. Louis.  


And with the Christie administration behind legislation that will open the door to non-profits, we NEED local control more than ever.  Keep up with Save Our Schools NJ to help fight for legislation that will work for students, not for-profits.  


Take it grannies:


Let's say no to charter schools
They don't follow any rules


NHA will rip us off
For-profit at a very high cost


What to do, oh, what to do
Support Carrboro and Public Schools


Great, now I'm crying again...