The Education Law Center reports that the New Jersey legislature plans to give Camden’s public schools to out-of-state charter chains. Camden is one of the most impoverished small cities in the state. Public assets will be handed over to private entities, a blatant grab of public funds.
January 8, 2018
A NJ Senate bill pending in the lame duck legislative session would allow the State-operated Camden district to turn over operation of most, if not all, of its enrollment and schools to three out-of-state charter groups: New York-based KIPP and Uncommon and Philadelphia-based Mastery charter networks.
Under special legislation enacted in 2011, the Camden school district has approved the operation of 12 elementary, middle and high schools by KIPP, Uncommon and Mastery, closing several district schools in the process. Under the law, the three charter chains have also secured pre-approval from the NJ Department of Education and the Camden district to enroll over 9,000 Camden students, or more than 60 % of Camden’s total enrollment, and open 16 additional schools.
The NJ Senate bill would amend the existing law by expanding the scope of the geographical area in Camden where KIPP, Mastery and Uncommon can expand from specific Camden neighborhoods to the entire city.
Another amendment in the bill would eliminate the requirement that the charter chains can open schools only in new or substantially reconstructed buildings financed by the charters themselves. Instead, they would be allowed to expand to any building newly constructed or renovated in the last five years, including district schools. This opens the door to the takeover of buildings with improvements financed by the NJ Schools Development Authority (SDA) under the court-ordered Abbott v. Burke school construction program.
The SDA has approved the demolition of Camden High School and has authorized construction of a new, $130 million Camden High for the district.
In a January 5 statement prepared for the Senate Budget and Appropriations Committee, Education Law Center urged lawmakers to reject the Senate bill, expressing serious concerns including a potential turnover of the new Camden High to either KIPP, Uncommon or Mastery.
“The Senate bill will permit the State-operated Camden district to transfer, after construction by the SDA, the new Camden High School to either the KIPP, Uncommon or Mastery charter chains,” David Sciarra, ELC Executive Director and counsel to Camden school children in the landmark Abbott litigation, wrote in ELC’s testimony. “It would be a flagrant fraud upon the Abbott court rulings, the Abbott school construction program, the SDA, and NJ taxpayers if the SDA builds Camden High as a district public school, only to have the district then hand the brand new facility over to a non-public, private entity.”
ELC also opposes the bill because the amendments, taken together, would delegate to KIPP, Uncommon and Mastery the authority to serve the vast majority of Camden students, fueling the Camden district to close even more schools.
“This bill green-lights the State-operated Camden district to close not just a few, but all or most district-operated schools, and then consign all or the vast majority of Camden students to attend a KIPP, Uncommon or Mastery-run school,” Mr. Sciarra added in the testimony. “The bill delegates the authority and responsibility for the education of most, if not all, Camden school children to three private charter chains, with scant accountability to Camden parents, residents, voters and taxpayers.”

New Jersey taxpayers should be outraged at this lame duck proposal to legitimize the theft of public assets by private entities. The taxpayers get to shoulder the cost of constructing a new high school whose asset value will be moved to corporations. This is fraud under the guise of privatization. This moves also indicates that the state has thrown up its hands and refuses to address the problem of educating its poorest residents. Since these charters are mostly the “no excuses” genre of corporate charters, we know they will accept only the best strivers; they will have high rates of attrition, and they offer no solutions to educating all students, which is the obligation that the state bears. What happens to all the rejected students? They will wind up in unsafe, crumbling, underfunded public schools to prepare them for the next phase of their lives, Prison! The free market does not help all students. The free market is an anti-democratic economic system that ranks, sorts and ignores the bigger problems by creating separate and unequal options for all. Shame on the NJ legislature!
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If the entire district is taken over by charters, there will be no fall back public schools to accept the charter rejects.
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Holy cow!
NJ is suffering. Look at the addiction problem in this state going unaddressed while Charter SCAMS flourish. OY. CRAZY.
http://www.nj.com/healthfit/index.ssf/2017/07/the_death_toll_from_drugs_just_reached_a_grim_new_high_in_nj.html
https://patch.com/new-jersey/tomsriver/map-shows-nearly-2-000-opioid-deaths-new-jersey
https://www.nbcnewyork.com/news/local/13-Year-Old-Boy-Heroin-Fentanyl-Overdose-Middle-Township-New-Jersey-Opioid-440371063.html
http://www.njtvonline.org/addiction/
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cross-posted at https://www.opednews.com/Quicklink/New-Jersey-Legislature-Se-in-General_News-Charter-School-Failure_Diane-Ravitch_Education_Neighborhood-180109-112.html#comment685401
with this comment (from a previous post at this blog)
Di d you know: The Associated Press conducted a study of racial segregation in the schools and concluded that charter schools were responsible for intensifying segregation.
https://www.apnews.com/e9c25534dfd44851a5e56bd57454b4f5
“Charter schools are among the nation’s most segregated, an Associated Press analysis finds — an outcome at odds, critics say, with their goal of offering a better alternative to failing traditional public schools.
National enrollment data shows that charters are vastly over-represented among schools where minorities study in the most extreme racial isolation. As of school year 2014-2015, more than 1,000 of the nation’s 6,747 charter schools had minority enrollment of at least 99 percent, and the number has been rising steadily…
In the AP analysis of student achievement in the 42 states that have enacted charter school laws, along with the District of Columbia, the performance of students in charter schools varies widely. But schools that enroll 99 percent minorities-both charters and traditional public schools-on average have fewer students reaching state standards for proficiency in reading and math.
“Desegregation works. Nothing else does,” said Daniel Shulman, a Minnesota civil rights attorney. “There is no amount of money you can put into a segregated school that is going to make it equal.”
Shulman singled out charter schools for blame in a lawsuit that accuses the state of Minnesota of allowing racially segregated schools to proliferate, along with achievement gaps for minority students. Minority-owned charters have been allowed wrongly to recruit only minorities, he said, as others wrongly have focused on attracting whites.?
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One small nit-pick. I lived in Philadelphia, and I was married in a nearby suburb. Camden NJ is certainly impoverished. Its 2016 population is estimated at 74,420. It is hardly a small city. It has all of the problems of many northern de-industrialized cities.
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We’re in the second year of trying to improve attendance in our public schools. It’s been fun to watch it go up. You have to stick with it but it isn’t expensive or complicated. There’s a lot of buzz around it from parents. It’s starting to sink in that we really want the kids in school every day and we’re expecting parents to make sure they get there. I hate the word but it seems “empowering” to me- THIS they can do. They may have money problems or drug problems or family problems but they can do this one thing.
We had kids who were missing 5, 10, 15 days every marking period. No wonder they were lost and became overwhelmed, felt they couldn’t catch up. It’s such a simple thing and it’s had such a big effect. I’m wondering if this ALONE will bring up test scores and also make for happier kids- less stressed and adrift. If ed reformers put money or energy into simple things like this I wonder if there would be a big pay-off. I haven’t heard a single negative comment on it here because they somehow managed to do it without singling out certain parents and kids. It’s “all”. All of them, in school, every day.
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They wouldn’t want to pursue these simple solutions. There’s no money in it!
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Yep, all we need to do is elect Democrats – the NJ state legislature is controlled by the D’s – and our problems will be solved…
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MF, Cory Booker (D) wanted to make Newark a “charter capital.” Christopher Cerf’s consulting firm wrote the plan for him.
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Newark is more than half way to the goal post.
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So much for choice! Yeah, you can choose but only from the options we designate – non of them public.
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I hope everyone takes a minute and watches this video from the president of the Camden Education Association.
https://m.facebook.com/story.php?story_fbid=788989384640278&id=100005876700757
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