Jim Hall retired after three decades in education. He founded Arizonans for Charter School Accountability. He explains here:
I retired in June after over 30 years in education and 23 years as a school principal. One day I happened to find my research on charter school financing that was to be my dissertation for a PhD I never completed. I did a little research into one of the charter school companies I was studying and realized there were still major concerns about the financial accountability of charter schools in Arizona. I noticed that the charter organization was having a board meeting on September 10th so I decided to attend.
I started this organization largely because of an incident that occurred when I attended the board meeting. The Board President demanded to know my name – I repeated over and over that I was a member of the public and did not have to give my name. At the end of the meeting, a senior member of the company that manages the charter schools demanded my name in the hallway outside the meeting room. I refused and she pulled out her phone and took my picture saying “I’m taking your picture in case there are problems in the future”. I was completely shocked at this display of arrogance.
Arizonans for Charter School Accountability was born the next day. I filed a complaint with the Attorney General on behalf of ACSA regarding the violations of Arizona’s open meeting law. The AG’s office investigated the charter organization and they were forced to revise their website at each school and provide documents they had neglected to post in the past. The investigation is ongoing. Apparently, from the Board agenda for the October 15, 2014, they are being subjected to a “document audit” by the Attorney General’s office.
The charter organization finally posted their 2015 budget that should have been posted in July. It was a mess – there were significant areas that had they simply left blank. I found that they submitted this budget to the Arizona Department of Education and it was accepted, apparently without examining it. I made official complaints to the Arizona State Board of Charter Schools against the charter organization for filing incomplete budgets. I registered a complaint to the Auditor General’s office because ADE was negligent in accepting the budgets.
This week, on October 15, 2014, the charter organization submitted their Annual Financial Report for 2014 to ADE as is required by law. It too was full of omissions. Looking back over the last five years, all of their annual financial reports were incomplete. Today I filed additional complaints with the Charter School Board and the Auditor General’s office.
The budget and the annual financial report are literally the only documents charters have to submit to the State, since they can request waivers from compliance from both financial regulations and procurement rules. The State of Arizona apparently doesn’t even read these documents.
Charter schools waste millions of education dollars every year, at the expense of public schools and the children of Arizona. Corporate charter schools act with impunity because no one examines their actions.
I now have a passion that will fill my retirement. The Arizonans for Charter School Accountability will continue to examine the financial dealings of this charter organization and others. We will file complaint after complaint. We will go to the media to expose corrupt organizations. We will fight to change the law so that charter schools have financial accountability to the taxpayers of Arizona.

Excellent way to use your time and talent. Whistleblowers are needed as never before.
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Does this include Basis which has Charter Schools in the Phoenix area? My granddaughter attends one and is learning a lot.
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Judi,
Read my report on BASIS charter schools in my book “Reign of Error.” The BASIS charters accept everyone but weed out those who can’t deal with the high academic standards. Attrition is very high. The ownership part of the story is complex and involves enriching the founders.
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I understand that but my granddaugter wasn’t being challenged in public school. She is learning much more than in public school. I was a teacher and talk to many children. They are not enthusiastic about school. First priority is to get rid of Common
Core. Google Deliberately Dumbing Down (Charlotte Iserbyte).
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I am a State Rep. in Delaware and I attended a charter school board meeting after learning there were concerns about one of our charter schools. I asked questions during the meeting and after the meeting I was approached by one of the members asking me why I was there – he told me it was not my place to attend. He informed me he was going to run against me when I was up for re-election. What took place during this meeting was alarming. They were not following open meeting laws, there was a divide among the staff, the attorney who was guiding them did not have a license to practice in Delaware – I could go on. The feds recently filed charges against one of the leaders of this charter school. He is accused of taking $160,000 of taxpayer dollars. Last year, I sponsored a charter audit bill which was signed by our governor last year. This is not the only charter school in Delaware where school leaders have stolen from the children they serve and our taxpayers.
Recently, our Department of Education just recently approved a name change for this charter school and they approved it. Yet, Delaware ESSA’s plan wants to label all of our public schools with a one to five star rating stating that it is the best way to inform our parents and community. Yet, some of our charters use grades, assessment, attendance, behavior as a way to decide who can attend their schools and those who cannot, our public schools take every student. Charters are able to have students removed from their schools if grades slip, students miss school or if a student’s behavior changes. They can even change their name if things are looking bad for the school. Our Department of Education allowed one charter school to change their name three times and the school eventually closed.
Public schools when they have issues, they must work hard to change and they have to inform the community as to what they are doing to improve things – they must gain the communities trust and reassurance that things are improving, not change their name!
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Public schools are accountable to the local community. With corporate owned charters, there is often little oversight and accountability. Charters get to access public funds so they socialize the risk of the investment, and privatize the profit, all to the detriment of local public schools. Once charters become established, they will try to manipulate to maintain control of their investment. As a private company, they feel the need to protect their brand. Their primary allegiance is to the parent company, not the local community.
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Please keep us updated! I pledge to assist you in whatever way I can.
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Thank you!
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Cross post t http://www.opednews.com/Quicklink/About-Us–Arizonans-for-C-in-Best_Web_OpEds-Accountability_Arizona_Charter-Schools_Education-170204-241.html#comment643733
with this comment :
Diane Ravitch , who YOU SHOULD FOLLOW https://dianeravitch.net/?s=charter+school++fraud IF YOU WANT TO KNOW WHAT IS REALLY HAPPENING OT OUR SCHOOLS. — REPORTS that Zephyr Teachout, the Fordham University law professor who ran against Governor Andrew Cuomo in the recent gubernatorial election, released a powerful and shocking–but well documented–report on the powerful hedge funds that seek to gain control of education in New York state. They are very, very rich. They have no particular expertise in education, nor are they accountable to anyone. Yet they are attempting to privatize one of the most important public institutions of our society. Khan. His contact information is listed below.
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Thanks Jim Hall for all you are doing. I am a retired teacher, who only worked in low income schools and was forced out. I am also a taxpayer and don’t want my taxes going to charters who use taxes to become rich and the funding isn’t going to our children.
Look what they are trying to do now: http://www.azcentral.com/story/opinion/op-ed/laurieroberts/2017/02/01/roberts-211-million-cut-school-funding/97357268/
We need to educate parents as much as possible. Dr. Ravitch has been my source to know what is going on. I know that she uses information based on facts–not alternative facts!
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Has anyone in California started a group like this?
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I was the director if the charter school oversight and accountability unit for a large county for about 7 years. I saw much worse than you described including fraud and financial mismanagement. Our office was able to have several of these schools were closed.
Conversely, I saw schools that were run effectively, ethically, and produced outstanding academic outcomes.
My take on Arizona is that there is insufficient of oversight and the State Charter Board has no interest in improving that situation.
Entities that receive public funds must be held accountable not just for educational outcomes but for operational ones as well.
I am happy to be part of your effort.
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Thank you, Judy.
We (NPE) would be happy to have your wisdom as we try to figure out the current lack of accountability for charters and voucher schools.
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