What happens when Florida’s biggest for-profit charter chain takes over three low-performing public schools? Follow the money. Ka-Ching!
Sue Legg of the Florida League of Women Voters guides you through a path paved with greenbacks.
Here is her summary:

Remember when the three Jefferson County schools were closed and taken over by Academica, the largest for-profit charter management company in the state? The story makes your hair curl. Here is a report by WLRN news that details where the money came from and where it went.
New funding included a $2.5 million special appropriation from the Florida Legislature, $2 million from federal startup grant funds, and a $1.9 million interest free loan from Academica’s Somerset division. This was funding denied unless it became a charter district. Academica received $327,000 in fees in 2017-18 to manage the fewer than 800 student K12 school. The per student cost rose to $16,600 which school leaders recognize cannot be sustained. The state pays much less.
The behind the scenes orchestrators for the takeover were Senators Manny Diaz and Anitere Flores, both of whom have close ties to Academica. Diaz is an administrator at Doral College and is Chair of the Senate Education Committee. Flores is deputy Majority Leader for the Florida Senate and moved from being the head of Doral College to the Academica foundation. The current Doral College president, Rodriquez, was named to supervise the transition of the Jefferson County schools to Academica.
In previous posts, I reported on a series of misdeedsassociated with Diaz and Flores related to their association with Doral College. The college was bankrupt and had no students or faculty when Academica took it on. It now offers online courses to Academica students. The credit was worthless because the college had no accreditation. Diaz worked to get a private school accreditation agency to recognize the college. Diaz’s personal interest is noted here.
What is the result of the takeover? Behavioral specialists were hired to help students, teacher salaries increased, and the physical facilities were improved. Initially, the school grades rose to a ‘C’, but the elementary school has now reverted to a ‘D’. The increase in the percentage of students passing the FSA state examinations in order to raise the school grades may have had as much to do with discipline policies as with learning strategies. The charter school policy created a 45 day suspension policy in which students were given a laptop and sent home. They were to take online classes from Doral College. Many students never returned. It is one way to raise school grades…just limit which students take the tests.
How convenient when those who give and those who receive public funds are one and the same.
The schools in Jefferson County Florida are 85% black. When Florida sees a minority majority district, the state politicians make their move to privatize. It is clear that the politicians are intent on establishing separate and unequal schools for students of color. The current cost of education in Jefferson is $14,634 per student, and the state average per pupil expenditure is $7,307. The privatizers are making a lot of profit from public money.
exactly true in our Denver district as well: the poorest and generally non-White kids bring in that “we care so much about these deficit kids” reformer money and the opportunists pile on
The dark side of school choice in Florida is so dark it has been sucked into a black hole and is trapped there.