Denis Smith retired from the Ohio Department of Education, where he worked in the charter school office and saw fraud after fraud. Ohio’s charter schools (which the state calls “community schools,” which they are not) are unusually low-performing; a large number are failing schools.
Smith wrote about the scandalous selection of the new state superintendent in the Ohio Capital Journal.
Smith writes:
At its May meeting, the State Board of Education voted to employ Steve Dackin as Ohio’s new Superintendent of Public Instruction. But the hiring of the veteran school administrator has raised some concerns that require further reflection.
The state board’s decision occurred in the middle of National Charter Schools Week and prompted questions about the processes used in the appointment and the search that led up to the board’s action.
To those familiar with the behavior of some charter school boards, where the members are usually hand-picked by the school’s operating company and where tales of conflicts of interest and self-dealing are legion, the state board’s action will need to be more closely examined lest it acquire the same reputation of so many conflicted charter school boards.
In covering the search process and appointment of a new state superintendent of schools, the Cleveland Plain Dealer summarized the situation succinctly:
“Steve Dackin was vice president of the State Board of Education and led the search for a vacant superintendent position before resigning and applying for the job three days later. The deadline to apply was the following day.”
You don’t have to read that Plain Dealer paragraph again to realize there was something wrong in the practices of a state board that allowed a board member to conduct the search for a superintendent, resign so that he could apply at the deadline for the position, add his resume to those already received from other candidates, and then months later be hired for the very position he oversaw as vice president of the board and head of the search committee that was charged with filling the position.
If a public board is concerned about optics, its actions might demonstrate that in addition to suffering from myopia, it’s also tone deaf as shown by its hiring of the new state superintendent.
Catherine Turcer, who directs Common Cause Ohio, an organization which promotes “transparency and accountability in government,” also examined the process that led up to Dackin’s candidacy and had concerns.
“The thing that’s important about this is that we have as much transparency as possible so that we can understand what happened and whether he was attempting to get himself the job inappropriately,” she said. “Right now, we have a lot of questions and things look odd. It’s not enough to do the pro forma, ‘I put my resignation in before I applied.’ You dotted one ‘i’ but what about all the ‘t’s?’ she told the Plain Dealer.
The appointment of a new state superintendent during National Charter Schools Week drew praise from the state charter school lobby, including kind words from the Thomas B. Fordham Institute, an organization that promotes these publicly funded, privately operated, underregulated entities and, like the schools it promotes, is conflicted in its purposes. That makes Fordham a comfortable and perfect fit in the midst of charter world.
The conflict that is Fordham was described last year in the Ohio Capital Journal. Fordham serves simultaneously as a charter school authorizer, promoter, and so-called “think tank,” crafting studies that unsurprisingly promote public school privatization, which it calls school choice. But with all of its “think tank” research, apparently Fordham hasn’t studied one of the major design flaws in charter schools.
That flaw doesn’t allow the democratic election of board members by qualified voters in a community. Instead, in many instances we have seen self-dealing by hand-picked board members, conflicts-of-interest by operators, and all of the ethical issues that surround organizations that are not fully transparent in their operations.
The most classic example of this was seen several years ago, where the chairman of a charter school board was also a part-owner of the company which owned the building where the school was located. The school made an overpayment of $478,000 to the company without any board approval. A number of individuals associated with the charter school were indicted, including the school founder, his wife and brother, the board chairman and school treasurer.
Which brings us back to the recent action of the State Board of Education in choosing a new state superintendent.
Because of a history of scandal in the state charter school industry, where more than $1 billion in public funds alone went to ECOT in the largest online charter school scandal in the country, and where the wreckage of more than 300 closed Ohio charters have further depleted the state treasury due to lax oversight caused by few controls, the State Board of Education itself should not be acting like a challenged and conflicted charter school board with few rules, policies, or any sense of institutional memory.
Moreover, the enthusiasm for Dackin’s appointment expressed by the charter school industry and the Fordham Institute should also raise even more concerns.
As someone who has experience in providing oversight of charter schools as well as service on non-profit boards, it is my view that the processes used in the Dackin appointment are troublesome. For example, some boards have policies that require at least a one-year separation by a board member before applying for employment with the organization. Such a board policy protects an organization and lessens the possibility of a conflict or self-dealing situation by any member.
And what about the State Board of Education? Why isn’t there policy which prohibits the employment of a former board member for an extended period of time after separation from the board? For that matter, are there any state boards that have a “time-out” policy before a board or advisory committee member seeks employment?
The Ohio Ethics Commission and its three-page review of the situation before the state board’s hiring of the new superintendent was, to put it mildly, inadequate for the circumstances in the Dackin situation. The appearance of a conflict of interest or any ethical question related to actions that employ past board members recently separated from a public board should be a serious issue.
There is no doubt that the State Board of Education can do better at policy formulation and practice. So too can the Ohio Ethics Commission, which should start a discussion about strengthening its guidelines to go beyond minimalist interpretations of statute and offer more robust models to boards and public agencies that promote greater transparency and accountability.
After all, a state public board by its actions should not mimic charter school boards that love to receive public money but hate regulation.

Seems my conservative friends are right. We don’t have an education problem, we have a sin problem. We keep committing the sin of political corruption. Of course, laws against political corruption would be useless; there are way too many corrupt political leaders. You might infringe on some right to freely grift found somewhere in the constitution.
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Public schools have so much more to offer than do charters, yet we do nothing to support systemic change. So we slowly perish!
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Based on my little view of Ohio education, I have come to the conclusion that some of the worst, most sinister enemies of public education are the people most responsible for preserving it. I have an elected school board that sticks its collective head in the sand as the superintendent blithely implements every bad rule and checks off every box. Their goal is administrative efficiency, not the education of each child or the welfare of each teacher.
I live in a so-called “high income” school district. My super is a member of the executive committee of the Alliance for High Quality Education, which, from all appearances, seems to be a Fordham-fronted group working out of the Ohio School Boards Association offices. It proudly claims to be an opponent of the “Robin Hood” principle. If you look at the fine print and follow the logical trail of their silence on charters and collaboration with Andrew Brenner, the patron saint of charters and privatization in the Ohio Assembly, seems to indicate the threat to the 80 or so school districts that belong to this alliance comes from urban public school districts, not the vultures making money off our children and teachers. I have come to the conclusion that the super is biding his time to qualify for his full pension and then magically take a Fordham-funded job as a former public ed super in favor of their agenda.
There is a dangerous game going on in this state. “High-value” public school districts think they can carve out their own piece of the state funding pie, coexist with privatization schemes, and separate themselves from those dastardly urban districts that “are draining our funds.” What they don’t realize, see New Orleans, is that there is no space for them to carve out. If the privatizers win, they will necessary suck in the entire educational infrastructure.
To illustrate this thesis to some degree, consider this tidbit that was deeply hidden in a story in our weekly community paper: “Poe noted in that meeting that it has been eight years since the district last adopted new social studies and English/language arts textbooks. He added the teaching staff has been instructed to teach only those topics and concepts found in the Ohio State Content Standard for Ohio public schools and that Critical Race Theory is not addressed in either the social studies or English programs.”
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The Pres. of the Ohio Federation of Teachers (Melissa Cropper) quoted in the Springfield News-Sun, as reported at Yahoo Money,
5-10-2022- We are encouraged to see Dackin selected.
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Frauds, cons, criminals, crooks all hate regulations and love secrecy. They also earn their money by stealing it one way or another. Their favorite part of the US Constitution is the 5th Amendment.
According to Bloomberg, Eric Trump took the 5th Amendment about 500 times since Traitor Trump lost the 2020 election.
Roger Stone was the 3rd Traitor Trump insider to take the 5th.
Members of the Destroy Public Education Crime Syndicate are no different than the Trump Mafia.
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Thank you Dennis Smith for your courageous and long struggle to expose Ohio Community School wrong-doings.
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Agree
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