Jeremy Mohler of In the Public Interest explains why privatization of public schools in Puerto Rico is a very bad idea.
He writes:
“Last week, I travelled to Puerto Rico and found something I hadn’t expected. Sure, folks thought the Federal Emergency Management Agency, known as FEMA, hadn’t helped enough after Hurricane Maria, but they were resigned, not angry.
”One taxi driver calmly explained to me how he was planning, at 40 years old, to leave the island for Texas in hopes of new opportunities and higher pay. Hopelessness radiated from the Burger Kings, lavish hotels, and graffiti covered walls of San Juan’s tourist oriented service economy.
”Yet, the island’s public school teachers were both angry and optimistic. They held a rally on Friday in Old San Juan to oppose Gov. Ricardo Rosselló’s new education reform bill that would allow charter schools, which are publicly funded but privately operated, into an already stressed public education system. They practically ran the Secretary of Education, who has described Maria as “an opportunity to create new, better schools,” off the stage after she tried to soften the blow of the governor’s plan.
”I was there to help them make the argument that charter schools are a bad idea for Puerto Rico. I boiled it down to five reasons.
”The first: despite the rhetoric about “choice” and “local control,” charter schools actually take control from families and communities. Instead of elected school boards, they are managed by private groups with little guidance or regulation.
“This lack of democracy has a number of consequences, but one is particularly poignant when it comes to Puerto Rico. As Hurricane Irma approached Florida last September, residents of all ages huddled in shelters set up in government buildings, schools, and other well-built structures. But only a handful of the state’s 654 charter schools were available because their leaders decided not to open them or the school buildings weren’t required to meet construction guidelines for hurricane protections.
“Can you imagine if Puerto Rico’s public schools, many of which served as shelters and community centers during and after Maria, weren’t available?
“Second, charter schools tend to pull revenues away from public school districts faster than the districts can reduce their costs. This is because many of the expenses associated with educating a student who transfers to a charter school — and takes public funding with them — remain with the district due to fixed costs, such as building utilities.
”In 2016, the Los Angeles Unified School District estimated it had lost over $591 million the prior school year due to declining enrollment, increased oversight costs, and special education costs. In 2012, Philadelphia’s school district found that students that transferred to charter schools cost them $7,000 more per student in the first year.
”As Puerto Rico continues to suffer through a fiscal crisis, why destabilize the public school system even more?
”The third reason is, as the “school choice” rhetoric goes, charter schools do in fact “disrupt” students and teachers. They can close up shop at any time during the school year and often do. Two weeks ago, a school in Sacramento, California, closed halfway through the year by handing students a letter on their way out the door as school ended, leaving dozens of families scrambling to find another school over the weekend.
“As a trauma-induced mental health crisis sweeps the island, the last things students need is more disruption.”
Read on to learn the last two reasons.
Crisis capitalism is circling poor Puerto Rico.

From the posting—
“[O]nly a handful of the state’s 654 charter schools were available because their leaders decided not to open them or the school buildings weren’t required to meet construction guidelines for hurricane protections.”
Just when you think the corporate education crowd couldn’t set the bar any lower…
😳
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Good piece on the voucher scheme in Illinois:
“Illinois lawmakers last August passed a scholarship program that allows thousands of low- and moderate-income kids to attend private schools, with taxpayers footing the bill.
Now, the small advocacy organization that drafted the tax credit scholarship legislation and lobbied for it behind the scenes, has emerged as the main group collecting donations and handing out scholarships. The group changed its name in November to Empower Illinois and now controls $33 million in taxpayer contributions. That’s 74 percent of all scholarship donations pledged statewide since the program began in January.”
90% of families in Illinois use public schools. Yet their entire education budgetary process was hijacked by ed reformers. Every public school family in the state was held hostage until ed reform got their demands met.
It’s outrageous that NONE of these politicians serve public school families.
Public school families need to start demanding that their ed reform captured politicians add some value to public schools. 90% of families shouldn’t be an afterthought.
https://www.wbez.org/shows/wbez-news/how-a-group-youve-never-heard-of-now-controls-33-million-in-taxpayer-money/91468342-1d17-416a-8a6e-c5b58472dba6
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In 2018 let’s ask state politicians a simple question. What have they accomplished for PUBLIC schools since the last election?
What value did they add to the schools 90% of families use? If the answer is “vouchers” then the answer is “zero”.
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Puerto Rico’s status resembles that of Washington, D.C., a federal territory. Congress imposed charter legislation on DC in 1995: no cap on location or growth.
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a telling fact: what does the government want? Charters.
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The governor of Puerto Rico used the following rationale for charter schools: “We do not have money to support public schools, so we need to ask somebody else to run our schools, and hence we are opting for charter schools.”
Doesn’t he understand that charter schools do not use their own money but the public’s, so if there is no public money, there are no charter schools?
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Exactly right, Mate.
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Crisis capitalism means your crises opens the door for our fraud. We will profit off of your suffering and then you will suffer more.
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Is there non-crisis capitaliism?
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non-crises capitalism is planning that takes place before the crises to map out how to take advantage of the next crisis when it happens and with global warming, there are going to be many opportunities
ALEC has been at this for 45 years since 1973 with the Koch brothers launched that fake non-profit fraud factory.
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Heckuva job, Brownie…
Despite the POTUS’s protests to the contrary, Puerto Rico is playing out worse than Katrina in terms of the government’s responsiveness… the official body counts are now higher, the infrastructure is still not repaired nearly five months later… but Puerto Rico IS playing out exactly the same in terms of the government seizing the opportunity to privatize schools. To use one of the POTUS’s favorite tweets: “SAD”
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I was in Puerto Rico several weeks ago, the infrastructure is in shambles, drinking water and sewage still problematic, about two thirds of the people there do not have full electric power.. And now the assembly would like to use what little funds they have available for education to aid in the growth of charter schools. When does the stupidity stop?
https://mail.aol.com/webmail-std/en-us/suite Read Sue Leggs letter to the Puerto Rico Assembly
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