Brett Shipp of Spectrum News posted a video asserting that the Texas charter schools in the network founded by Mike Miles sent millions of dollars to Miles’ Colorado charter schools. His report was amply documented.
Miles was imposed as superintendent of the Houston Independent School District after the state took control of HISD, based on the low performance of ONE school, Wheatley High School. Miles was selected by State Superintendent Mike Morath, who served on the Dallas school board when Miles was superintendent for three years and failed to meet any of his lofty goals. Neither Morath nor Miles is an educator. Morath was in the software business, and Miles was in the military before joining Eli Broad’s Superintendent Academy, which emphasized top-down management and disruption.
Ana Hernandez, a Houston legislator, wrote Mike Morath to call for an investigation of Miles. Morath is unlikely to conduct a serious probe since he chose Miles. The State Attorney General Ken Paxton is under indictment for corruption, so he’s not likely to dig deep into Morath’s choice; Morath was picked by Governor Gregg Abbott.
Sam Gonzalez Kelly of The Houston Chronicle reported that Miles denounced Shipp’s charges:
HISD’s appointed Superintendent Mike Miles is vehemently denying reports that his former charter network, Third Future Schools, illegally used money from its Texas campuses to subsidize its schools in Colorado.
Miles, in a late night email to “friends, partners and board members,” wrote that the story by Spectrum News in Dallas “badly misunderstands, or worse, intentionally misrepresents the financial practices of Third Future Schools.” The story, by reporter Brett Shipp, who covered Miles during his tenure as Dallas ISD superintendent, accuses Third Future Schools of charging fees to its Texas network to subsidize one of its campuses in Colorado, and reported that Third Future Schools Texas had run a deficit due to debts to “other TFS network schools and to TFS corporate.”
The Spectrum report cites recordings of TFS corporate board and investor meetings, as well as the charter network’s financial records. The Houston Chronicle’s review of the documents confirmed that TFS Texas had sent funds to Colorado campuses, which a charter school finance expert said is generally permitted by state law.
“While I have not worked at the Third Future Schools network for more than a year, I find the piece irresponsibly inaccurate, and I cannot let this kind of misinformation go uncorrected,” Miles wrote.
Miles wrote that Third Future Schools “was always a responsible steward of every public dollar received” and that school finances were approved by local school boards and partner districts. He acknowledged that Texas schools paid “administrative fees” to the central Third Future office, which is headquartered in Colorado, to provide network-wide supports in areas, including finance and human resources, but said that such payments are common practice for charter networks.
“Spectrum News either intentionally or, through gross incompetence, mischaracterized these common place financial arrangements between charter schools and the charter management organizations that support them,” Miles wrote.
Neither Spectrum nor Shipp immediately responded to requests for comment.
Spectrum’s story immediately prompted outrage among HISD community members and some elected officials, who are demanding the superintendent’s resignation and a federal investigation over the charter network’s use of Texas taxpayer money in Colorado schools.
The Texas Education Agency said in a statement Tuesday that it was aware of Spectrum’s report and was reviewing the matter.
The “charter school finance expert” consulted by The Houston Chronicle worked for the state charter school association. It is not clear that state law allows charter schools in Texas to send Texas public funds to its offices or other charters in Colorado.

hmm, I wonder why there was so much opposition to this bill ? A Colorado bill aims to make charter schools more transparent. Opponents say it’s a “blatant attack.”
🤔
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Top down management is almost always the worst possible method to manage any organization (not including the military where everything is top down — a democratic military wouldn’t do well in combat. No time to vote or debate what to do.).
Top down is especially horrible for public education.
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charters are BAD…period.
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Period.
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ProPublica has a profile of a school board member in Granbury, Texas who realized she was being played by Abbott and his minions. What happened to her hasn’t been pretty.
https://www.propublica.org/article/texas-granbury-isd-school-board-courtney-gore
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The story on Miles will stand. Spectrum News is no tabloid. It does not matter how Miles & Minions structured the money flow through. Call it Administrative Fees, Strategically Engineered Deficits or Consultancy Dollars. Mike is lining his pockets by personally milking the Charter School Street Hustle for all it is worth. While taking Big Bucks from Greg Abbott to DESTROY HISD and PUNISH the City Of Houston for behaving like a Democratic stronghold.
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Exactly
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But when one grifter goes down, another takes his or her place.
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“which a charter school finance expert said is generally permitted by state law.”
Can you spot the weasel word?
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lol
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When you cite a representative of the charter industry as an “expert,” it’s misleading. An expert is not an industry spokesperson.
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generally
Meaning that sometimes, in some places, it is outright illegal, and sometimes the law hasn’t caught up with the illegality
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Miles broke the law. He used state funds to prop up his schools in another state. This is illegal. He cannot make it legal by calling it something else. If I rob a bank, I cannot make it legal by calling it consulting fees paid to me to illustrate to bank vulnerabilities.
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Charter operators also pay themselves enormous salaries as officers of the Charter Management Operations, or CMOs, that run the schools. It’s just a fancy name for stealing the funds provided by taxpayers for educating kids and putting them into one’s own pocket.
from Flor-uh-duh Bob’s EZ Entrepreneurial Guide to Charter Riches! | Bob Shepherd | Praxis (wordpress.com)
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I didn’t see Mike Miles name listed as a board member or leadership for Third Future, but his sister, PHD Shirley Miles, is deputy chief of Schools and operations for Third Future. His Sister can be seen in the the middle rectangle of the zoom meeting discussing the budget deficit in the Spectrum piece. Miles announced his leaving of Third Future Schools on June 1, 2023. He consulted for Third Future in 2023. Did he break the law? Is there a conflict of interest? Doesn’t matter. You can’t lead a school district unless you have public support and the educators, parents, and students at HISD don’t want him there, so it’s only a matter of time until he resigns.
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As a charter school hotshot, you can’t just write checks to strip clubs and massage parlors and the like from the school or CMO accounts. NO. DON’T DO THAT.
Instead, hire and pay as employees of the school and the CMO yourself, your spouse, your children, your brothers and sisters, your mistresses or misteresses, your ne’er-do-well cousins and golfing buddies, your pool boy, etc., and pay all these people exorbitant salaries and load them up with perks. You will be one popular person!!! Talk about an opportunity to throw your weight around! Remember this motto, which enshrines the American Way: one’s worth is one’s girth.
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That 40 percent for administrative costs going to Colorado got me curious, so I did a google search of average administrative costs, and in my state CA it’s 5 percent. The Girth at Third Future is impressive!
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I hope you are right that public opinion will drive Miles out. I’m not so sure that he cares because he has the support of the State Commissioner of Education, who appointed him, and the Governor, who picked the Commissioner.
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Bottom line: these fees are far, far, far too high to be simple payment for management services. That’s bullshit from a bullshitter.
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But Miles is right about one thing: this is how charter operators roll. They transfer taxpayer dollars that were supposed to go to educating children into a) payments of mortgages on buildings that they then own the equity in, and b) the coffers of Charter Management Organizations and thence into the owners’ own pockets, into the pockets of the owners’ relatives and buddies, into fancy perks like private airplanes, and into the owners’ other businesses (e.g., other schools that they have been bilking to the extent that they are running deficits).
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Done successfully, every cent gets transferred to the charter owner or his or her buddies and relatives, so the charter is then “non profit” and just great even in the eyes of Bernie Sanders.
That’s how little politicians know of how these scams operate.
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“Spectrum also reported that Miles received $40,000 last year consulting for Third Future Schools, which was dealing with deep financial setbacks leading to the closure of a Colorado school and $5 million in unpaid debt.
Third Future Schools was created in 2016 AFTER Mike Miles left the superintendent’s job at Dallas ISD! The charter school chain expanded into Texas in 2020, opening three schools in Odessa, Midland and Austin. The Texas expansion, according to Spectrum News, occurred about the time the Colorado schools were showing signs of financial distress.
By the end of 2023, the Texas schools had already accumulated more than $2.5 million dollars in debt.
The three Texas schools received $25 million in taxpayer dollars. About $15 million went to teachers and staff. But another $10 million was listed by Third Future Schools as unspecified administrative costs. Public documents also revealed that more than $2 million went from Third Future Schools’ Texas operation to help cover losses at a Colorado school.
https://www.texastribune.org/2024/05/14/hisd-mike-miles-tea-investigation/
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