Tom Torkelson, c-founder of the IDEA charter chain, has stepped down as CEO and will be replaced by the other co-founder JoAnn Gama.
Based in Texas, IDEA is a favorite of Betsy DeVos, who has sent hundreds of millions of taxpayer dollars to the chain to help it expand. Less than two weeks ago, DeVos gave another $72 million to IDEA. The chain previously had received more than $200 million from DeVos. She sure likes IDEA.
Torkelson and Gama arrived in the Rio Grande Valley aspartame’s ofTeach for America and started IDEA in 2000. It has become a charter behemoth in the past two decades.
The chain attracted bad publicity for its free-spending ways. One of its worst ideas was leasing a private jet for nearly $2 million a year for exclusive use of its executives and their families. After getting negative press, the board canceled the lease, and now the executives fly first class.
Jacob Carpenter wrote in The Houston Chronicle:
Torkelson’s resignation caps a remarkable run for the charter pioneer, whose ambition, charisma and results-driven approach helped propel IDEA’s remarkable expansion over the past 20 years. In recent months, however, Torkelson’s push to lease a charter jet and the disclosure of questionable financial practices under his watch prompted scrutiny of the charter.
IDEA students, the vast majority of whom are Hispanic and come from low-income families, routinely score well-above average on state standardized tests and enroll in college at high rates compared to their peers. Skeptics argue IDEA’s success is inflated by high academic standards that deter families from enrolling students with more intensive academic and behavioral needs.
Torkelson and Gama started IDEA in the late 1990s while working as teachers in the Rio Grande Valley, opening a single school together in the border city of Donna. After meager growth in its first decade, IDEA rapidly expanded in the 2010s in the Valley, San Antonio, Austin, El Paso and Fort Worth.
The network operates 91 schools in Texas enrolling 49,500 students, along with five campuses in Louisiana. IDEA is scheduled to open its first four Houston-area schools this year on two sites in northern Harris County.
Torkelson served as a key figure in IDEA’s expansion, pushing to enroll 100,000 students across the country by 2022. Earlier this year, Torkelson told the Houston Chronicle that he wanted IDEA to become “the largest high-performing school system in the United States of America.”
Torkelson also played a significant role in fundraising for IDEA, which has received tens of millions of dollars from philanthropic groups to aid its expansion.
However, some of Torkelson’s financial and operational moves led to criticism over the past several months.
Torkelson’s desire to lease a charter jet as a method of reducing travel hassles between the network’s hubs drew sharp backlash in December 2019.
One month later, more scrutiny followed the disclosure that IDEA spent about $400,000 annually on luxury boxes and tickets for events at San Antonio’s AT&T Center. IDEA officials said more than 1,000 employees received tickets each season as a reward for performance, with the “lion’s share” allotted to campus-level staff and students
During Torkelson’s tenure, several relatives of IDEA executives and board members also engaged in business dealings with the charter, including a company co-owned by Chief Operating Officer Irma Muñoz’s husband that billed more than $600,000 for uniforms, other clothing and gear.
IDEA is the charter chain that Beto O’Rourke and his wife, Amy, a big charter cheerleader, were so eager to bring to El Paso.
Yes. The O’Rourkes are big supporters of IDEA.
These people, including Betsy DeVos, should be imprisoned. How can she oversee something she’s NEVER been a part of? This is criminal!! We NEED our PUBLIC schools back not private entities parading and masquerading as public schools!
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Torkelson is a TFA wunderkind, a marketer from the get go. With the help of two administrations, Obama/Duncan and Trump/Devos, he has pulled in over $297.4 million in grants to IDEA, about $41.2 from the Obama/Duncan administration and far more from the Trump’s charter-loving Betsy DeVos — $256.2 million up to April 6, 2020. All of these grants are for five years and for charter schools to “replicate and expand” up to 2025.
Here are few other charter school factoids.
Ten charter school franchises double-dipped–were funded by both the Obama/Duncan AND the Trump/Devos administrations. Next to IDEA, the darlings were KIPP with the biggest haul, over $218.4 million from 2010 to 2020. Other bi-partisan favorites were Success Academy at $54.1 million; Achievement First, $33,6 million; YES Prep $31.4 million; Aspire, $31.2 million; Rocketship $18.8 million, and Inspire NOLA $16,7 million.
Both administrations sent far more charter school grants into California, New York and Texas than to other states and both sent grants to 18 different states. However, Obama/Duncan awarded grants to five states that Trump/Devos did not. These are the Obama/Duncan states: Ohio, Oregon, Rhode Island, New Mexico and Wisconsin. I have no explanation for the “favored status” of these states.
The favored status for Trump/Devos grants may might be explained by politics, greasing the wheel a bit for charter funding in Arizona, Florida, Georgia, Michigan and Minnesota. These states were not funded by Obama/Duncan but all are considered swing or “battleground” states for the 2020 elections. Who knows? Here is the source for my analysis: Complete List of Charter Schools Program Grants for Replication and Expansion of High-Quality Charter Schools Grants at https://oese.ed.gov/offices/office-of-discretionary-grants-support-services/charter-school-programs/charter-schools-program-grants-for-replications-and-expansion-of-high-quality-charter-schools/awards/
USDE has more than one charter school program. If you want to see the scope and “rationales” for these grants, look at the press releases. During the Obama/Duncan years charter school grants were proudly announced for:
–national leadership in charter schools,
–increased “public school” options in selected states,
–charter school facilities,
–charter school management organizations,
–charter school developers,
–replication and expansion of charter schools,
–designing and planning charter schools in non-state agencies, especially for low-income students.
So far, the Trump/Devos administration has only published two press releases. One is for the launch and expansion of charter schools in “opportunity zones, the other is for charter school launch and expansion in “underserved communities.” https://www.ed.gov/category/program/charter-schools-program
We do not know how the COVID-19 virus will influence future charter school grants. USDE currently has open “discretionary grant applications” for existing and new charter schools, replications and expansion grants, charter management organizations, and charter school teacher participation in the school leader program and programs for teaching Native American or Native Hawaii languages.
The charter industry is trying to qualify for COVID-19 funds. They are trying to maneuver around identity issues that might qualify them for the various authorized streams of funds to date for COVID-19. Are they legally qualified for funds as small businesses? Or are they non-profits? The lawyers and accountants in the charter industry are lining up to help answer these and other questions. The following advisory on current COVID-19 funds is from the National Alliance for Public Charter schools and Bellwether Education Partners. WHAT CHARTER SCHOOLS NEED TO KNOW: Federal COVID-19 Response Legislation and Charter Schools https://covid.publiccharters.org/legislation
I have not seen a comparable document for the majority of our real-deal public schools, open to all… if open at all.
“Less than two weeks ago, DeVos gave another $72 million to IDEA.”
Maybe the CEO got this money and ran?