Andrea Gabor is Bloomberg Professor of Business Journalism at Baruch College of the City of New York. She writes often for the Bloomberg website, where this article appears. Michael Bloomberg has written in opposition to Biden’s proposed regulations for the federal Charter School Program. Hopefully, he will read this article and change his views. The National Aliance for Public Charter Schools has been running a full-fledged panic attack in opposition to the sensible regulations, claiming falsely that they are a mortal threat to all charter schools; they are not. The lobbyists have even paid for ads on MSNBC, paid for by one of their billionaire funders, assailing the regulations.
Gabor is the author of “After the Education Wars: How Smart Schools Upend the Business of Reform.” It contains one of the best—maybe the best—analyses of what happened to New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina.
Andrea Gabor explains why the regulations will improve the charter sector.
She writes:
Forget the battle over critical race theory. The latest salvos in the public-school culture wars are being fired over the federal charter schools program and the sensible guidelines that are being proposed by the administration of President Joe Biden.
Congress extended the program in March, approving $440 million for state agencies to help charters with startup expenses such as staffing and technology. Almost immediately, the White House is received a barrage of criticism for issuing guidelines intended, most importantly, to rein in charter-school funding abuses.
In particular, the proposed regulations would prevent for-profit management companies that run nonprofit charters from accessing federal funds. Even ardent charter supporters shun for-profit charters, which significantly underperform traditional public schools, and the new guidelines would close loopholes that have fostered fraud nationwide and especially in states including Arizonawhere loose regulations have emboldened legislators to enrich themselves on the taxpayer’s dime.
That kind of common-sense rule should serve as a first step toward a truce in the decades-long conflict over the role of charters in public education. Alas, it probably won’t.
The debate about charter-school regulations has become a proxy for a wider and even higher-stakes fight over the proper role of government. Since at least the era of President Ronald Reagan, conservatives have seen privatization as a way to undermine public schools and teachers unions, rejecting guardrails and often ignoring the original mission of charters to foster educational innovation.
Meanwhile, public-school advocates have been so busy defending the traditional public-school system, which they correctly argue is essential to democracy, that they rarely focus on finding ways to improve it.
Indeed, rancor between charter and public-school proponents is so toxic that a potentially mutually beneficial Biden proposal for granting funding to charter schools — that they demonstrate collaboration with a public school or district — seems almost impossible to achieve.
That’s a shame because the new guidelines offer quite a few possibilities to find common ground; ways to strengthen the charter sector while also protecting public schools.
Consider the proposed requirement that new charters reflect the movement’s original promise of promoting teacher innovation and “robust family and community engagement.” Such an approach could rebuild public trust in charter-friendly cities like New Orleans, which dismantled its public school system and replaced it with private operators over 15 years ago following Hurricane Katrina and, in the process, alienated much of its African-American community.
Instead of engaging local families, officials began by firing the city’s mostly African-American teachers — a sizeable swath of its middle class — and replacing them with inexperienced Teach-for-Americarecruits, most of whom only lasted a year or two. At the same time, charter authorizers recruited out-of-state charter-management organizations that established a harsh-discipline schooling model that often worked against the interests of New Orleans’s poorest and most vulnerable children. The authorizers explicitly excluded even well-regarded local groups from winning charters.
Given no say in the new education system, community groups rebelled — not just in New Orleans, but in Indianapolis, Kansas City and other cities where the same model was being imposed.
New Orleans belatedly and reluctantly recognized the need for community engagement and eventually made room for a handful of independent, community-led charters like Morris Jeff, which fought an uphill battle for authorization and funding and was launched with the express intention of allowing teachers to unionize and have a say in school policies. The well-regarded school offers an international baccalaureate program and is among a minority of integrated schools, but New Orleans is still dominated by large charter management organizations.
Increasing community engagement would mean supporting more schools like Morris Jeff and inviting more family input. It should also mean giving teachers a role in school decision-making, which has been shown to improve both public and charterschools. To that end, charter schools should reserve a percentage of governing-board seats for family members elected by parent-teacher organizations, as well as teachers elected by colleagues. (Unlike public schools, which have elected boards, charters have appointed boards and sometimes exclude family members from serving.)
The new guidelines also could be used to promote racial integration. Charters “can be a great vehicle” for doing so by drawing on students from multiple neighborhoods and appealing to students of diverse backgrounds, said Halley Potter an educational researcher at the Century Foundation.
There are also important elements of the White House guidelines that predictably inflame charter advocates. For example, they might keep some charters from opening when they threaten the stability of nearby public schools as they have in the East Harlem neighborhood of New York City. There, high concentrations of charters led regular public elementary and middle schools to enroll double and sometimes triple the proportion of special-needs kids of nearby charter schools, which often discourage special-needs applicants.
Traditional public schools still educate the vast majority of American children. The hostility to almost every aspect of the Biden guidelines is sad confirmation of the animosity toward this vital institution itself. It also shows the difficulty of finding common ground that could quell the education wars and foster improvements across sectors.

Diane This should say it all:
“The proposed regulations would prevent for-profit management companies that run nonprofit charters from accessing federal funds. Even ardent charter supporters shun for-profit charters, which significantly underperform traditional public schools, and the new guidelines would close loopholes that have fostered fraud nationwide and especially in states including Arizona where loose regulations have emboldened legislators to enrich themselves on the taxpayer’s dime.”
Irony abounds: The whole purpose of taxing is subverted when monies are used to support the businesses, bankbooks, wishes, and whims of those who already have more money than they know what to do with. Its reminiscent of “The Jungle” by Sinclair Lewis.
I am also reminded of Ukraine before the war where newly elected Zelensky introduced legislation to limit oligarchs’ influence in the legislative process. The oligarchs didn’t like it there either. (<–from the documentary about the making of Zelensky airing on BBC.) CBK
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Lobbyists work for special interest groups, and the charter lobby represents the interests of billionaires and corporations, and a tiny group of parents. The vast majority of parents support well-funded public schools, not charters or vouchers. The lobbyists work to pervert the original intent of charters and make more money for investors. Charter schools have not “saved children from failing schools” unless students are hand picked. Charters have not delivered superior education. They have merely transferred ownership from a public institution to a private operator. As a result they are rife with cronyism, waste and fraud. It is time for the federal government to regulate this profiteering sector. Biden’s plan is sound and reasonable after over a billion federal dollars have been wasted on failed privatization.
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retired teacher One of the problems (just one) is that these well-funded organizations employ not only trained lobbyists, but PROFESSIONAL marketing firms. They know what they are doing in communications and are not averse to duping the American public. From what we can see of their use of doublespeak, most have no problem saying or doing whatever to serve their masters desires. (It’s really easy for them to work from a quasi-fascist playbook.)
It’s also really hard to compete with that, even when “we” and authentic public service organizations, speak from the heart. CBK
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key point: “They know what they are doing” — they know their target, they know their end goal, and they are nonchalantly able to hide their intentions
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As a public service, public schools have no marketing budget. Public schools must rely on reputation among parents.
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I recall when Eva Moskowitz launched Success Academy, The NY Times wrote that she had a marketing budget of $325,000. The local public school eked out $500 to compete. The key to her strategy was to late many more applicants than places, then hold a lottery. She faked the allure of scarcity. Not many who “won” the lottery survived to graduate.
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Retired That’s exactly the point. Public anything is not about competition. It’s about providing qualified service to the people.
One of the worst Orwellian scams on the public that has occurred over the years is the idea that government and its public institutions are run by the same capitalist principles as are businesses.
Why would public schools even need a marketing firm? They don’t “market” anything (sell) and are funded by tax money and, again, not by selling anything. The current charter school gang leverages the public’s ignorance of that GREAT difference and uses all of its bells and whistles in their marketing against public schools and throwing school administrators and teaches into a capitalist entrepreneurial ethos and arena where they do not belong, on principle.
BTW, that difference is one thing that allows for several of our freedoms. If a teacher or administrator work for a business, they won’t be employed long if they criticize the owners or the corporation. CBK
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This actually makes perfect sense. The Right chooses CRT to distract about half the electorate so it can grift away. Meanwhile, charter supporters can blithely argue against reasonable regulation that is suggested without too many people thinking about their schools being stolen.
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Roy There seems no end to what can happen when ignorance, a bad conscience, and greed get politicized. CBK
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The National Alliance for Public [sic] Charter [sick] Schools does NOT care about improving schools; it wants more money. That is it. That is all.
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“How Biden’s New Regulations Will Help Charter Schools”
The title of this post is incorrect, and if it was corrected, it would explain why the pro-charter industry is so rabidly opposed to Biden’s regulations.
It should read:
“How Biden’s New Regulations Will Help STUDENTS in Charter Schools”
Biden’s new regulations help STUDENTS in charter schools but they would hurt the people whose needs are prioritized in the pro-charter industry — those who profit from “helping” students and their billionaire funders.
And when it comes to helping students versus helping themselves, the adults who are generously compensated for their work in the charter industry are generously compensated to prioritize their funders’ needs and their own needs over the needs of students.
Although they do seem to embrace the “trickle down” theory of help. For example, Eva Moskowitz prioritized her own needs and her billionaire funders’ needs when she made it her personal mission to get Betsy DeVos confirmed — Moskowitz was happy to devote lots of time writing op eds and giving interviews to lobby for DeVos.
Moskowitz claimed it was for “the students” but it was obviously for herself and the right wing billionaires who fund her. I have no doubt she decided what was good for her was good for students. Or at least, good for the students who make her look good!
But let’s dispel the myth that charters act for students. There would be no reason for charters to lie about their results or lie about the fact that they don’t want to teach students who don’t do well with inexperienced and cheap teachers if they were acting for students.
Telling the truth is the number one priority of those who actually prioritize helping students.
Lying is necessary for those who prioritize helping charter schools instead of helping charter school STUDENTS.
And Biden’s New Regulations will help Charter School STUDENTS. But not charter schools.
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The National Alliance for Public Charter Schools is apparently a front for frauds, liars, and grifters galore. This reaction is a panic attack that these greedy crooks might lose their opaque gravy train, a river of endless public money.
Geeze, these cons might have to go back to calling retired senior citizens living with dementia, easier to fool, in an attempt to swindle them out of their savings accounts and their monthly Social Security checks.
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