This is the third in the series of investigative articles about Washington State’s largest charter chain, written by Ann Dornfeld for Station KUOW in Seattle.
As we have seen over the dozen years, Bill Gates is an accountability hawk. He wants everything measured. He wants teachers and principals to be held accountable, usually by the test scores of their students. He has invested heavily in charter schools. But as Dornfeld shows, the charter schools that Bill Gates created in Washington are accountable to no one.
Will anyone hold Bill Gates accountable? Of course not. To paraphrase Leona Helmsley (the billionaire who famously said that “only the little people pay taxes”), accountability is only for working stiffs, not for billionaires.
She writes:
Over seven months, KUOW interviewed 50 current and former Impact staff and parents, and reviewed thousands of pages of documents from Impact and state agencies, including enrollment records, staff resignation letters, court records, charter contracts, nondisclosure agreements, and internal emails.
KUOW’s investigation revealed a charter school chain that state officials have allowed to grow rapidly even as, staff allege, it failed to identify and serve students with disabilities, offered little to English language learners, and where crowded classrooms are largely led by inexperienced teachers without the usual credentials. Many students were recommended to repeat a grade based on test scores.
Records show that staff members and parents have, for years, taken their complaints about how Impact serves students to the many agencies assigned to oversee charter schools. They emailed the Impact board of directors, testified to the Washington State Charter School Commission, and reported concerns to the State Auditor’s Office. Little, if anything, came of their efforts, they said.
After Impact’s first school, in Tukwila, opened in 2018, the state approved new branches in Seattle, Tacoma, and a Renton location set to open next year.
As the state’s charter school law requires, Impact promised to focus its mission on marginalized students, and its demographics reflect the communities around its schools.
The charter chain’s students are mostly children of color from low-income families. Black students make up the largest percentage, including many from East African immigrant and refugee families. Twenty-one percent of students are learning English, state records show.
Jen Davis Wickens, Impact Public Schools co-founder and CEO, declined multiple interview requests for this story and agreed only to respond to emailed questions via a spokesperson.
Impact spokesperson Rowena Yow said by e-mail that the state’s primary K-12 education agency, the Office of Superintendent of Public Instruction, “conducts a thorough annual audit of our [special education] program and services, and we have received approval since our inception in 2018.”
“Our special education program meets the highest standards,” Yow said, adding that the same is true for its English language learner program for the schools’ large number of students from immigrant and refugee families. Twenty percent of its students are learning English, state records show.
Chris Reykdal, the superintendent of public instruction, said his agency has relied entirely on what Impact claimed that it provides to special education and English language students.
“Most of what we do is ask districts to make attestations about their use of funds,” Reykdal said.
“Periodically, the state auditor will do a deep dive on a performance audit. But that’s very, very rare, especially for a new school.”
Reykdal said his agency oversees so many school districts that it often takes a complaint from the community to trigger the agency to take a closer look at school practices. As of March, when Reykdal was interviewed for this story, he said his agency had not received complaints about Impact’s special education and English language services.
Reykdal said that if Impact is not meeting its obligations, as parents and staff allege, “that’s alarming.”
The State Auditor’s Office has a significant lag time in completing school district audits — often two or more years — which means issues are often caught only in hindsight.
To date, the agency has issued one audit report for an Impact school, the Tukwila location: it reviewed the 2018-19 school year, its first in operation. That accountability audit looked at a handful of standard items, including whether the school had accurately classified students as needing special state-funded services, like English language lessons. The audit did not look into whether those services were actually provided.
With so many layers of oversight, the roles and responsibilities for each of the many agencies tasked with overseeing charters can be murky — both to the public, and to the agencies themselves.
Few of the 29 Impact parents KUOW interviewed pursued formal complaints regarding their concerns about how Impact schools run. More often, after raising issues at the school level, they gave up — or withdrew their children and enrolled them in their neighborhood schools.
Several Impact parents told KUOW there was no clear way to file a complaint about their concerns with the school — the website gave no clear path. Two said their emails to Impact’s public records address bounced back.
An extra layer of state oversight
The eight appointed members of the Washington State Charter School Commission authorize new charter schools, renew or revoke schools’ charter contracts, and are meant to ensure schools follow the law and their contracts.
The agency has a staff of six and a $1.8 million annual budget — money that comes almost entirely from fees paid by the charter schools it oversees. Because each school pays 3% of its state funding to the commission, the agency’s budget is directly tied to charter school enrollment.
Each additional school the commission approves — and each student who enrolls at that school — grows the commission budget. Conversely, if the commission limits a school’s growth, or revokes a school’s charter contract, the commission’s budget takes a hit.
Impact Public Schools paid the commission approximately $485,000 in fees this year, more than any other charter school or network, and about one-quarter of the agency’s budget.
The commission is supposed to produce annual reports on each charter school, as voters were promised: their academic success compared to traditional public schools, as well as the schools’ financial and organizational stability. The commission has not completed a charter school performance report since the 2018-19 school year, three school years ago...
In May 2020, former Impact teacher Claire Leong wrote to the Charter School Commission, imploring the agency to deny Impact’s efforts to add another two schools to its network.
Leong said the disciplinary system at Impact’s Tukwila school had been “abhorrent,” and that teachers were required to send students to another classroom after several minor infractions.
“This could be not looking at the speaker, not sitting up straight, not walking silently,” Leong wrote. “My students often missed learning time because of these marks, and were instead in a buddy class or with the admin team,” Leong said, adding that Black boys missed the most instruction.
“Impact Public Schools should not be allowed to open any more schools, and should have their current school audited to highlight the discrepancies between the values that they tout and the malpractice that is occurring when no one is there from a foundation or commission to see everyone on their best behavior,” Leong told the commission.
Several Impact staff and parents also testified in support of the school expansion.
Several weeks later, the Charter School Commission gave Impact the green light to open new schools in Tacoma and Renton.
When asked why the commission allowed Impact to open more schools despite serious concerns voiced by parents and staff, Commissioner Christine Varela, who serves as the agency spokesperson, said that the commission is required by state law to base its decisions for new schools “on documented evidence collected through the application review process…”
Impact parents said when they have complained to the commission, the commission often directed them to instead raise their issues with Impact’s board of directors.
A different kind of school board
Unlike traditional public school boards, which are elected by local voters, Impact’s board members are appointed.
When parents wrote to the board, they said board members often told them to complain instead to Impact co-founder and CEO Jen Davis Wickens, to voice their concerns during public comment at a board meeting, or to file a formal complaint with Impact.
Speaking during public comment at a board meeting can be difficult, because the meetings occur during work hours. It can also be intimidating for parents at Impact schools, said Jimmy, a parent at its Tukwila school — especially for its many immigrant and refugee families. He asked to use only his first name to protect his child’s privacy.
“Our voice is small,” Jimmy said. “English is our second language. If we want to say something, it’s hard, you know?”
At six Impact board meetings KUOW attended over the past seven months, unanimous approval of all agenda items was the norm, with little, if any, discussion. Meetings are typically over in 30 minutes.
Impact board members declined or did not respond to interview requests for this story, or to address any of the issues raised by parents and staff that KUOW shared with the board.
Although few people know more about the charter network than its staff, many former Impact educators told KUOW they were afraid to speak up with their serious concerns about the schools because they had signed non-disclosure agreements.
Impact has most departing staff sign an agreement barring them from sharing any information that “may cause harm to the employer.”
Some staff sign more stringent agreements that ban them from making “disparaging” remarks about Impact or divulging the reason for their resignation.
“Employee will simply state ‘I decided to pursue other opportunities,’ or something similar, and will make no further comment,” an Impact severance agreement reads.
Asmeret Habte, whose children, nieces, and nephews attended Impact’s Tukwila location this year, contacted the school, the board, and the state Charter School Commission about concerns about overcrowded classrooms at the school last fall.
As many as 38 students per class were eating at shared desks in one of the most Covid-affected areas in the region, and Habte and other parents worried the school was not doing enough to mitigate risk.
Krystal Starwich, then the commission’s interim executive director, told Habte that while the commission would ask Impact some questions, parents should go through their school’s established complaint and appeal processes.
Habte eventually gave up, and unenrolled her children from Impact. “Where is the accountability?” she asked. “There is no accountability, even though it’s public dollars” that fund Impact Public Schools, she said...
Reach Ann Dornfeld at adornfeld@kuow.org or 206-486-6505.
If only compelling evidence of failed policies and the ideology that drives them made a difference to their advocates. These advocates have different goals than the majority of Americans who just want the security of a decent life. If evidence of failed policies made a diffference, we’d be really fighting the causes of climate change, fulling promoting Covid-19 vaccinations and masking, supporting universal healthcare, insisting on living wages, buying back weapons and providing robust mental health services, insisting all manner of environmental safety measures, fully supporting free K-16 public education, on and on. To those that are driven by the lust for profit and power, the only evidence that matters is what keeps them in control. Nothing else matters, least of all democracy and the wellbeing of anyone but their own very small circle– not even a whole lot of their supporters.
great first sentence! IF ONLY
You title, Diane, nails the central contradiction of Ed Reform. It’s supposedly based on accountability, but it has been utterly unaccountable for the failure of ALL it’s fixes, for the fact, for example, that decades of mandatory standardized testing costing trillions of dollars and a profound devolution of both curricula and pedagogy has led to ZERO statistically improvement in math or reading based on the Deformers’ own preferred measure, test scores. None. Zip. Nada. Nought. Zero. Zilch. Diddly-squat.
How should we react to this fact? Well, just check out the Fordham Institute website. When something hasn’t worked for decades, what should you do? “Stay the course.” Haaaaaaaa!!!! OK. This isn’t funny. It’s absurd. It’s tragic. But it is NOT, emphatically NOT, funny.
VAM: failed. School grading: failed. Merit pay: failed. Voucher programs: failed. “Personalized” (i.e., depersonalized, computerized) learning: failed. Virtual charters: failed. Improvement districts: failed. Backpack full of cash: failed. And so on
Failure after failure after failure.
Heckuva job, Bill, Waltons, Hastings, Blumberg, and your bought minions. Maybe, Billy, you should do a photo op on an aircraft carrier. Mission Ack!nomplished.
cx: Your title
cx: its fixes
cx: statistically significant
I really should proofread before hitting the Reply button!
Well-said! Sometimes when we are writing from the heart about the hypocrisy of billionaires that try to put public educators on an eternal hamster wheel of fake accountability, we post before we fully edit. Been there and done that.
“It would be great if our education reforms worked, but we won’t know probably for a decade.” –Bill Gates, Sept., 2013
Well, Bill, here we are, almost. None of it worked. The only things they accomplished were to drain billions and billions from school budgets, to trivialize curricula and pedagogy, and to drive capable educators and curriculum designers from their professions.
Heckuvajob, Bill. Now, please go find some other field to ruin.
cx: None of them worked.
Too bad, of course, that the consequences of these incredibly bad ideas were a LOT more severe than those related to, say, Chippy the Paperclip.
Maybe Bill Gates could go help Putin win his war. With Gates helping Russia, Putin couldn’t win in Ukraine.
According to charter school enabling legislation, a person seeking appointment to the charter school commission must be an advocate for charter schools. So much for accountability.
an essential point: you HAVE to get on board with the entire game in order to monitor the game
Question to Bill Gates: where is the accountability?
Bills answer: She’s now living in a ($1.5 million) shack she bought in Seattle right before she filed the divorce papers.
A Bill to Pay
A bill’s to be paid
By Bill and his maid
Despite what they sayed
An “F” is their grade
Alternate title:
AccountaBillity
Alternate alternate title:
ResponsiBillity
I would love to also compose something about Gates involving the letter ‘F’. I had better refrain.
Nope, can’t help it.
A is for apple, and hoping one falls off the truck.
B is for ball, what when billionaires throw at us, we duck.
C is for cake, what at billionaires’ faces we chuck.
D is for dog, a word to describe Gates other than shmuck.
E is for earth, what Gates tells us to save, flies in private airliners, and wishes us luck.
F is for Gates. ‘Nough said.
AThe AlphaBillt
A is for a**terisk
B is for Bill
C is for Common Core
D is for drill
E is for Epstein
F is for FAIL
G is for Gates
That open to Hell
I is for ignorance
J is for jerk
K is for kreepy
L is for lurk
M is for money
N is for nuke
O is for orchestrate
P is for puke
Q is for quackery
R is for rat
S is for slippery
T is for trap
U is for useless
V is for VAM
W is for weird
X is for X-am
Y is for Y-ny
And Z is for zip
Gates’ contribution
To schools with his lip
Your acrostic poem says all you need to know about Gates.
A caustic Poem
Bill is an a**
A source of ordure
Venting a gas
A caustic, for sure
I wonder if “she” had to sign a nondisclosure agreement.
Prolly, regarding Bill’s non-relationship with Jeffrey Epstein.
The perceived stature of Bill Gates is an American tradition: anyone who makes a whole lot of money must necessarily be an authority on any issue that interests him.
As Leona Helmsley explained, accountability (and taxes) are for the little people.
The unelected agency overseeing charter approvals receives more money the more charter schools are approved?! That says it all. Charter scum.
It is typical that charter authorizers get a 3% commission for every student who enrolls in a charter.
This gives them an incentive to open more charters, ignore problems, and keep them open.
To say nothing of the fact that charters get many thousands of dollars of public dollars for each “enrolled” student, sometimes when said students are not even attending school.
The latter scam is particularly rampant in the case of virtual charter schools.
Virtual charters are virtually tailor made for this scam.
In other news (from the near future):
https://www.commondreams.org/views/2022/06/08/when-us-truly-run-these-fascists-it-will-be-too-late
I urge others, please read this. It’s really important. It’s what Greg Brozeit has been trying to warn us all about.
Tomorrow the televised Jan 6th Committee Hearings begin. If the Justice Department does not move against those at the top, including Trump, who planned that attempted coup, then we are doomed. What this article describes is our future.
There is zero chance that Garland will prosecute Trump.
Presidents are always let off the hook for the illegal things they do while in office.
And presidential immunity is basically assured by the exceedingly nebulous description of the president given in the Constitution.
For folks who had just finished a bloody war to separate themselves from the arbitrary and oft illegal actions of a King, the Framers sure had a lackadaisical approach when it came to laying out what the president could and could NOT do.
If Garland does not act on this, then he should at least do the right thing and rename his department The Department of Justice for Some People
I guess what King George did could not be classified as illegal because when a king does it, that necessarily means it is NOT illegal.
Just like when a president does it.
Trump warned us: he said Article 2 says the president is allowed to do anything.
It says no such thing.
He never read it.
No surprise.
The Department of Just us
Haaaa!!!! Oh, my, SomeDAM!!! That’s brilliant. Just perfect.
When the Law become lawless, the Lawless become law
Lawless Law
When Law become lawless
The Lawless are law
The Lawless foresaw this
The Law’s fatal flaw
If Trump had said “The Supreme Court allows the president to do pretty much anything”, he would have been correct.
“too late”, yep. Thom Hartman, after many, many paragraphs, gets to the topic of fascism and right wing religion. He could have named the two major sects that aligned but, of course, he didn’t, because no media nor influencer does.
Another group that media and influencers largely ignore is the Americans behind the PAC’s for Israel. They fund the Dems who serve business interests against the progressives, for example, Shontel Brown against Nina Turner. To the naive voter, the difference between the two parties become blurred when both serve the wealthy – GOP lite on the ballot as Democrat.
We’ll see how those omissions work out as strategy. It’s been going on for a long time.
Quick one-off history recap here: it’s amazing how political public education has become. Since “A Nation At Risk” was published to sow the early seeds of privatization as part of the Reaganomics juggernaut. It wasn’t until Rupert Murdoch said that he saw the American education sector as a $500 billion market that’s largely been untapped by companies like his that the entire enterprise became heavily and overly political. A third of this market? Labor costs = teachers. Hence the WalMart model of TFA hires marketed as “experts.” Ironic that he complained America’s educational system was that of a Third World nation’s in his quest to turn it into one of a Third World nation.
The goal of Murdoch and others like him is to turn the US into a Fourth World Nation: one owned by the billionaires.
Mhm, which is, pretty much, what’s been happening since 1971–a Race to the Bottom.
Something definitely stinks. It starts with Bill Gates and runs deep through the schools themselves and the state agencies that are supposed to be holding them accountable.
The 2022 Hollywood HS Valedictorian holds Gates and others accountable, to the chagrin of the vice principal who tried to shut him down.
Frames are decorative. It’s what’s in the work that counts. AXEL Britto counts. He is art.
Wow