The billionaire boys club has opened a new branch in Connecticut, where they have a charter-loving governor, Dannell Malloy.
Connecticut experienced a gigantic charter scandal involving the governor’s favorite charter chain Jumoke Academy. It turned out that the leader of Jumoke had padded his resume and had hired people with criminal records, and engaged in other improprieties. But the governor learned nothing and continues to press for deregulated, unsupervised charter schools. (See here and here.) Jumoke had collected $53 million in public funds between 1998-2013, with no oversight. There was a glimmer of hope that this scandal would lead to legislative action to prevent future scandals.
The new billionaire-funded group is called “Connecticut Forward,” which should not be confused with the PAC of the same name that supported Malloy’s re-election bid. Among the billionaires contributing to this new organization are Michael Bloomberg, Paul Tudor Jones, and Ray Dalio. Don’t be surprised to see members of the Sackler family joining the effort to expand charter schools; these are the Connecticut billionaires who love charter schools and made their fortune by selling Oxycontin, the deadly prescription drug that has addicted so many people.
The organization is nonprofit, but it will survey the record of legislators to see which ones support replacing public schools with privately operated charter schools.
Once their survey is complete, pro-charter legislators can expect contributions to come rolling in. The group, please remember, is nonprofit. That means it has an IRS status that does not permit it to engage in political action.
Families for Excellent Schools, which has wrangled Bridgeport administrators over education reform, is behind the election year initiative.
“That struggle has lots of allies and lots of adversaries, and it will continue until every kid in the state has access to the education that they deserve,” said Jeremiah Kittredge, the CEO and co-founder of Families for Excellent Schools. “I actually think the biggest adversary here is the struggle of time.”
Connecticut has 24 charter schools, with five in the state’s largest city, Bridgeport, enrolling 2,350 students. There are three charter schools in Stamford and one in Norwalk.
New York City, on the other hand, added about 180 charter schools during Bloomberg’s tenure as mayor. Bloomberg’s former press secretary, Stu Loeser, runs the public relations and media consulting firm hired by Families for Excellent Schools.
In Bridgeport, FES successfully fought a proposed moratorium on charter schools in 2015. Some skeptics still view the push for public charter schools as a step toward privatization by wealthy outsiders, however.
Imagine that! Skeptics think that the goal of the charter school movement is “privatization by wealthy outsiders.” Where did they get that idea?
For giants of the hedge fund industry such as Jones and Dalio, both Greenwich residents, charter schools have become a favorite cause. Each has contributed to Families for Excellent Schools, which reported $17.6 million in contributions and grants for the fiscal year ending June 30, 2015, to the IRS. Kittredge’s compensation was $222,297 for that time period, more than Connecticut’s state education commissioner and New York City’s schools chancellor.
A spokesman for Jones declined to comment. Multiple requests for comment were also left for Dalio, whose Westport hedge fund, Bridgewater Associates, is the largest in the world. Bloomberg has not contributed directly to FES, but has been strongly linked to the charter school movement.

Charter mania is sweeping the country!
Maybe we should consider hiring some politicians who can think for themselves, huh? America’s finest private schools seem to be churning out a bunch of elite lemmings if ed reform is representative of the Best and Brightest.
It’s all charters all the time with these people. Complete and utter capture. An echo chamber.
LikeLike
No surprise the governor’s favorite charter crooks sound like:
Jamoke
A clumsy loser who is incapable of doing normal human tasks.
That stupid jamoke cant even cut the grass the right way.
LikeLike
Malloy is a very unpopular governor. Maybe he should spend less time privatizing schools and taking orders from billionaires and more time attempting to become competent at his basic job duties.
They can’t even pass budgets in a lot if these states and cities run by ed reformers yet they’re strutting around privatizing whole public systems. Why don’t they start with timely completion of their basic duties and then they can move up to “transformational experimentation”?
LikeLike
This is exactly how a market run by oligarchs works. They stack the deck by buying the representatives. Then, we get laws that benefit the 1% and nobody else. It is obscene that lawmakers line their own pockets while they create laws and regulations to dismantle democratic public schools. This is why we need to limit the amount of money in politics. By the time billionaires and corporations are done, they will have destroyed our country.
LikeLike
Can I just cut and paste the comment that I just made on yesterdays post about Allan Singer and Success Academy. In short these are political problems . Politics being the process of deciding who gets what in any economy . We will only solve these problems with either “pitchforks” or ballots. But to do so requires mass mobilization not seen in this country for decades if ever. The issue is not charter schools or testing or common core or trade policy or labor rights or voting rights or immigration policy or foreign policy or anti poverty programs or entitlements or the NRA blocking any reasonable progress on gun legislation or money in politics . It is all of the above and more and the the only way any of those issues will be solved is when a transformational movement emerges which says “enough is enough” . But perhaps Americans aren’t suffering enough yet to get it. When they do will it be a movement to an authoritarian demagogue or a progressive vision of America.
LikeLike
Connecticut students already had and still have the education they deserve through the existing traditional public schools.
The Hartford Courant reported, “Connecticut students remain on par or are outpacing many of their peers globally in areas of math, science and reading, according to a new assessment conducted by the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development.”
“Only four education systems worldwide did better than Connecticut students in reading. In this particular area we are outpacing our peers globally,” Donnelly said. Average scores in reading ranged from 570 in Shanghai-China to 384 in Peru. Massachusetts received a score of 527 and Connecticut 521, both comfortably above the U.S. average of 498 and the global average of 496.
And that was reported in December 2013.
http://articles.courant.com/2013-12-03/news/hc-pisa-test-connecticut-1203-20131202_1_oecd-pisa-international-student-assessment
If the anti-democratic, corporate autocratic overlords take over Connecticut’s excellent, world class education system with their repeated lies that traditional public schools are failing America’s children, they can take over every state in the country and then every country in the world.
Are there enough fools out there willing to be led around by a nose ring tied to a corporate chain? I think we will know the answer to that question in November. If Trump wins, yes. If he loses, no. Trump and his assembly line of lies and hate is the canary in the coal mine.
LikeLike
“If the anti-democratic, corporate autocratic overlords take over Connecticut’s excellent, world class education system with their repeated lies that traditional public schools are failing America’s children, they can take over every state in the country and then every country in the world.”
They already basically have and they have done it by owning both political parties in this Nation.
LikeLike
The entire Charter movement is an abomination…it is a bastardized, cobbled together end run around certification, unions and any kind of oversight…what a disaster. If allowed to continue these folks will destroy public education.
The answer is not charters it is: FIX the existing public schools…it can be done…
Using profiteers in the name of ‘markets’ is a con-job of the highest order…If a charter school operator wants to prove their methodology- run a district school with no special dispensations (that includes proper certification of all staff).
This just continues to boggle the mind!
LikeLiked by 1 person
As Camins has stated, you do not improve education by outsourcing schools. Improvement takes hard work and time while we also address some of the root causes of poverty.
LikeLike
“Multiple requests for comment were also left for Dalio, whose Westport hedge fund, Bridgewater Associates, is the largest in the world.”
I first read that as BILGEWATER ASSOCIATES.
LikeLike
For anyone listening to Bernie Sanders
it is NOT
JUST about charter schools.
True, THAT is an item of immense interest to teachers
but
as EDUCATORS we should, MUST be interested in these other aspects also.
As citizens we MUST become people who take a broad interest in governance. Their are several excellent groups with which to fight the moneyed interests who buy our politicians. Get involved. write letters: newspapers, your politicians and even those outside your district. Make your views known, not just on a blog like this but where it will most count.
This blog is excellent in getting information on public education but go beyond this blog even. MANY issues are of GREAT relevance to ourselves and our students
AND
are necessary to fight the corruption which has brought this nation to a standstill. Congress approval rating; something in or close to single digits. That is NOT a functioning democratic [small d] government.
LikeLike
Is Bridgewater the same hedge fund that received over 20 million in bonded funding from our Connecticut legislators??? Now that is really a relationship worth having….
LikeLike
Yes! Bridgewater is the same hedge fund that received over $20 million for the legislature. Money talks. Loud.
LikeLike
Yes faith… Yes the same. Oh Dannel boy… Some piece of work!
LikeLike
Yes faith, the same. Oh Dannel boy… Some piece of work!
LikeLike