Jitu Brown, civil rights leader and director of Journey for Justice, joins here with Randi Weingarten, president of the American Federation of Teachers, to support the Biden administration’s modest proposals to reform the federal Charter Schools Program. The charter lobby has vigorously opposed any reform of the program. Their article appeared in Education Week.
Charter schools have been part of the fabric of public education in the United States for decades. Like a patchwork quilt, there is a great deal of variation among them. Some have a history of improvements to student achievement, while others have been ineffective or even harmful. Some charter operators are fiscally responsible, while others have been deemed incompetent or fraudulent.
As with every public school, and every expenditure of taxpayer funds, reasonable oversight enhances the quality and accountability of charter schools. This is the goal of the Biden administration’s proposed modest changes to the federal Charter Schools Program. But some charter school proponents have responded to the proposed changes with a fierce and well-funded opposition campaign.
The charter lobby is pushing back with big TV ad buys and op-ed campaigns, claiming that the proposed regulations would “halt innovation in its tracks,” “gut the federal Charter Schools Program,” and impose a “needlessly restrictive regulatory scheme.”
In fact, President Joe Biden’s fiscal 2023 budget proposes a $440 million investment in the federal grant program for charter schools. The Biden administration is right to seek more oversight of this program. As with all federal funding, there are rules to ensure proper use of the money. One study from the advocacy group Network for Public Education found that between 2006 and 2014, $45.5 million was handed out to charter schools that never even opened.
The charter lobby is chafing at one provision in particular—the requirement for applicants for Charter Schools Program startup funds to provide a community-impact statement. For the first time, the program requires charter operators to state how their new school would impact the surrounding community. The intent is to ensure that the applicant has engaged with residents in planning for the school, that there is a need for a new charter school in the community, and that the school won’t promote racial segregation…
Every school system in America, when it considers where to build a new school, considers the proposed school’s impact on the surrounding community from which it will draw students. Charter schools should not be islands unto themselves, nor should they thrust themselves onto communities that do not want them there.
Charters that function as centers for innovation and best practices for public schools should be welcome in every community. A charter industry that advocates and benefits from the closing of traditional public schools is not welcome.
Take the example of Detroit, where between 1995 and 2016, 152 charter schools opened, contributing to the closure of 195 traditional public schools in a city that already had a declining student population. This left some neighborhoods with no public schools—traditional or charter…
Responding to parents’ and communities’ needs is what many charter school operators say they are all about. Yet, this responsiveness happens less than it should. In 2017, students at Hirsch Metropolitan High School on the South Side of Chicago held a walkout protesting a proposed charter school that would be sited at their building. Parents of students at the high school complained about a lack of community engagement from the proposed charter operator. The charter school eventually found a new, nearby location and promptly obtained $840,000 in grant money from the U.S. Department of Education.
We are lifelong advocates of high-quality public schools for all students, whether those schools are charters or traditional. Schools that aspire to serve our children and communities should embrace their accountability to the public. Schools are community institutions and should not seek to destabilize other institutions in our communities. One must wonder why those seeking to open charter schools are afraid of or resistant to this reasonable transparency and engagement proposal. The proposed rules would give more students access to high-quality schools, which is what we all—charter boosters and traditional public school champions—really want for America’s children.

Heads of unions should also be accountable.
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imagine what change could look like
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I’ve tried to imagine a model of integrity & honesty
for the head of our teacher unions. The late Karen Lewis of CTU and the current Sara Nelson for The Association of Flight Attendants come to mind.
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great choices
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So how does that happen? By defeating the union and hoping that from the ashes once it is completely disempowered, a progressive leader arises?
I don’t mean to sound snarky. I am not in the union. But if the union isn’t electing progressive heads, who is to blame? I support a strong union, and I don’t believe that demonizing the heads of the union does anything but make parents hate unions. Being critical without demonizing is a fine line to walk but it is not that difficult. Diane Ravitch does it all the time with Democrats.
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So, saying that a leader needs to be held accountable is “demonizing”
Thanks for clarifying that.
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I’ll remember that the next time Diane or anyone else says that Trump should be held accountable.
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And least you try to claim that I am equating Weingarten with Trump, let me disabuse you of that misguided conclusion before you have a chance to let your imagination run free.
I am merely pointing out that leaders need to be held accountable.
Nothing more. Nothing less.
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SomeDAM Poet,
I did not say that you were demonizing the union. I asked how you could hold them accountable. I absolutely think you can criticize the union without demonizing them, just like I think you can criticize the Dems without demonizing them.
I asked whether there was some way to hold the union accountable. I really want to know. We clearly both believe that reinforcing the narrative that the union is corrupt or the union is controlled by corporate interests is not going to make the union more accountable, but will make the public, teachers, and parents far less likely to support unions. Or at least I think we agree on that.
Is there a better way to hold them accountable?
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Absofrigginlutely, Some DAM.
And: Jitu Brown is an A+, #1 Education Hero. I am thinking about how he led those brave Dyett H.S. parents & community in the hunger strike that saved Dyett from demolition. In having kept their community school, I’m absolutely certain
that the lives of many, many children were not only enriched but were saved.1
If someone out there could, I would love to see a follow-up on those who graduated from & have attended this resurrected Dyett.
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How about we just leave it at “ We are lifelong advocates of high-quality public schools for all students.” No muddying or compromising the waters with a string of other descriptors or categories.
Cash Cow Charter Schools need to back off the taxpayer teat and find another source of financial nutrition.
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“Schools are community institutions and should not seek to destabilize other institutions in our communities. One must wonder why those seeking to open charter schools are afraid of or resistant to this reasonable transparency and engagement proposal.”
Through the way in which charter schools are funded, they were designed with the intention of undermining the schools that serve the most students and the neediest students. Charter schools operate in a robbing Peter to pay Paul scenario. When funds follow students, public schools shoulder all the fixed costs of operation. Many charter schools also receive additional funds from other assorted foundations, the federal government and billionaires. Public schools have no such revenue streams. They serve the most vulnerable students with less money due to charter drain in under funded schools. Unlike public schools charter schools are highly political. They actively lobby for more money from state governments. Many states also have trigger laws for public schools when students receive low scores on standardized tests. These laws often close public schools, but there are rarely similar trigger laws for failing charter schools. Many low scoring charter schools stagger on, even as public schools are closed.
The lack of accountability for charter schools has resulted in a lot of wasted tax dollars spent on unscrupulous CMOs and fraud. The Biden revisions to the federal grants are reasonable and very much needed. When private organizations receive tax dollars, they should expect to the held to account.
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Somewhat off topic, but this is a good example of how the quest for accountability in all parts of public and private life are never-ending:
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We could word a little stronger
For the segregation monger
Let us think a little deeper,
And a little less of “me”.
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Re: religious schools, one must simply refer to the Gideon Bible Supreme Court case. Gideons wanted to pass out their Bibles Guess who opposed it? Catholics, Baptist, Methodist and every other religion. They all didn’t want THAT Bible given to their children.
Now, in the church school case. Once you give public money to say, a Catholic School, you MAY NOT REFUSE money to ANY Religious based school INCLUDING EXTREMEST RELIGIOUS SCHOOLS!
This is supported by the equal protection clause. of the 14th amendment. Think of the wars over religion : Ireland, protestants vs Catholics. , Taliban forever wars etc etc etc. This Supreme court will turn our country into one big religious war. AND we are almost there?
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caplee, see my posts tomorrow morning. The religious schools in Maine that sued are evangelical, born-again Christian schools. They exclude students and teachers who do not share their religion.
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