During Governor Jerry Brown’s tenure in office, he vetoed all efforts to hold charter schools accountable, to consider their fiscal impact, or to limit their numbers. Those days are over under Governor Gavin Newsom.
Edsource reports:
“The chairman of the Assembly Education Committee and several Democratic colleagues introduced a package of bills Monday that would impose severe restrictions on the growth of charter schools.
“Three of the bills would eliminate the ability of charter schools to appeal rejected applications to the county and state, place an unspecified cap on charter school growth and enable school districts to consider the financial impact of charter schools when deciding whether to approve them. A fourth bill would abolish the right of a charter school that can’t find a facility in its authorizing district to locate a school in an adjoining district.
“Assemblyman Patrick O’Donnell, D-Long Beach, who chairs the Education Committee, said the bills collectively would enable school districts “to make responsible and informed decisions” that are “critical for student success and taxpayer accountability.” Eric Premack, a veteran charter school adviser and advocate, called the legislation a “full-frontal” assault and “scorched earth” approach to charter schools.”
”Scorched earth”=accountability, ethics, transparency.
At the heart of the strikes in Los Angeles and Oakland was the fiscal drain caused by runaway charter schools, which have operated and proliferated in the state without accountability for years.
The power of the charters was guaranteed by their lobby, the California Charter School Association, which spends $20 million a year to defeat accountability measures.
It’s a new day in California!
Elections have consequences. The charter lobby backed Antonio Villaraigosa for governor and Marshall Tuck for State Superintendent.Both lost.
Both houses of the legislature swiftly approved a bill to impose accountability and transparency on charter schools and Governor Gavin Newsom has promised to sign it.
In the future, charters will be subject to the same open meetings laws and conflicts of interest laws as public schools.
More stringent regulation may be on the way, for example, one bill would no longer allow charter operators who were rejected by their district to appeal to the county, and if rejected by the county, appeal to the state board.
At present, charters may open without consideration of their fiscal impact on the public schools.
Also, a charter may be authorized by a district to operate in another district hundreds of miles away.
John Fensterwald writes in Edsource:
“Capitalizing on the momentum, this week O’Donnell and three other legislators announced four more bills that would restrict charter schools. They would eliminate the right of appeals to the county and the state, cap the number of schools to what’s operating now, let school districts reject charter schools based on their financial impact and prevent charter schools approved in one district from setting up in another.
“This week, the West Contra Costa Unified School District board followed the lead of boards in Los Angeles and Oakland to endorse some form of a moratorium on charter schools. Newsom has not indicated his position on the latest bills or on a moratorium, now that the bill on transparency has passed.”
Are the “days of wine and roses” coming to an end for the richly funded charter lobby?
This NPE report explains why charters in California need regulation and accountability.
Click to access NPE-Report-Charters-and-Consequences.pdf
Imagine a charter school in a shopping mall where students see a teacher once every 21 days. Imagine charter schools with graduation rates of 10% or less.
Imagine rampant fraud that goes unchecked for years.
Could these excesses finally be subject to oversight?

Encouraging news to wake up to.
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It’s a first step.
Many more issues on the table.
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It is about time that states wake up to the plundering of their public funds by supporters of privatization. Newsom seems to be keeping his promises, and he is off to a good start. The charter industry has taken advantage of the refusal to regulate for too long, and it has cost the taxpayers millions of wasted dollars while public school students face gigantic class sizes and few resources.
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Bad news for Tom Torkelson of IDEA Public Schools. Once planned to expand into California, would now think twice given his proclivity to use district funds to travel in private planes, drive his Tesla and have an apartment in San Antonio (he lives in a new almost million dollar home in Weslaco, TX), etc.
All of this is apparently allowed by his Board (appointed by him) and the Texas Education Agency.
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Proud to have voted for Gov. Newsom!
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Thanks to all the teachers on the line, the parents walking with us, the neighbors bringing coffee, the police smiling, nodding, the truck drivers honking and pumping their fists, the kids on their best behavior… Thanks to voters, Governor Newsom, Superintendent Thurmond, the California Legislature… Thanks to the unions. Thanks to the Network for Public Education, Diane Ravitch, and all of you.
Changing California charter law is a win, yes it is, the win of an important battle in the ongoing war against public schools and teachers. This is the beginning of a new day in California. Good morning!
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The fact that the legislature and the governor agreed to demand accountability and transparency from the charter industry is a big deal. It is the first step and it must not be the last step.
Charters should lose their endless appeals process. They should be directly chartered by districts and supervised by them.
Charters should not be allowed to open where they are not needed or wanted.
Charter operators should be located in the same district as the charter, not hundreds or thousands of miles away.
The state and the districts must regularly audit their books.
The charter industry says it will be fatally injured if they can’t continue to have closed door meetings of their board and if they must comply with conflict of interest rules.
Tough.
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Yes. No more closed door meetings is an important step. No more secret plotting will help stop the suppression of charter teachers joining unions. That will help stop the profiteering via wage suppression and classroom underfunding. Compliance with conflict of interest rules will also help stop the profiteering. The charter industry is right, greatly lessening charter profiteering with transparency will make charter chains far less attractive investments for vulture capitalists. That will be a fatal injury because when the billionaire oligarchs stop investing by throwing money at our elections to rig our state, city, and school governments in their favor, democracy will overcome privatization completely and the charter industry will slowly die. Caps will eventually be imposed. Charters with low graduation, integration, and special ed rates will eventually be closed. The industry will wither and die. It will happen. Keep fighting. We need a moratorium while new transparency and accountability laws take effect. Public education will be the great social good it was many years ago. Reimagine that!
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This is a good start but unfortunately the way the bill is written related to Brown Act will still be primarily the responsiblity of the authorizer to try to enforce. Which, good authorizers will do but the problematic “virtual” and “home study” schools are typically authorized by districts that do zero oversight because they authorized the charters for financial gain. They will continue to do nothing and even if the public complains to the authorizer they will still continue to do very little. Don’t even get me started on the fact that the charter itself is responsible for approving their COI policy. Again, good charters and authorizers won’t be the problem but given that the problematic charters have non-existent authorizers, it will truly be up to the public to attempt to enforce the COI issues. Sigh…as someone who works as a charter authorizer, I can’t help but feeling that this bill is primarily symbolic much as the bill last year which banned for-profit charter operators. The real problem is the crooked charter operators that are operating as nonprofits and paying themselves outrageous salaries with ZERO justification. I’m so tired of this nonsense.
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