Ismael Loera writes in The Fulcrum about the recent scandal at Success Academy, the celebrated charter chain that regularly posts high test scores. Recordings leaked, showing that the leadership required teachers and all other staff to contact legislators on behalf of charter schools.
To a seasoned New Yorker who follows the shenanigans at charter schools, this is no scandal. It’s simply the charter school way of doing business. Both students and staff are props for their political and financial interests. Loera lives in Boston, so she might not be accustomed to Success Academy’s tactics.
Success Academy has been systematic about mobilizing its teachers and its students to demand legislation to protest any restrictions and to oppose accountability. This not a New York City phenomenon. It’s the way that charters get a firm foothold in state legislatures.
The fact that Loera finds this blatant political activity disturbing seems to reflect a certain naïveté. The charter lobbyists in every state have worked as other lobbyists do: they write the legislation; they build in privileges and protections; they attack the motives of anyone demanding accountability. Eva Moskowitz has been more eative than most charter leaders in using students to pack legislative hearings, to take buses to the state Capitol, and to engage in activities to protect the charters’ interests.
Loera wrote:
When I was running a school, I knew that every hour of my team’s day mattered. A well-prepared lesson, a timely phone call home to a parent, or a few extra minutes spent helping a struggling student were the kinds of investments that added up to better outcomes for kids.
That is why the leaked recording of Success Academy CEO Eva Moskowitz pressuring staff to lobby elected officials hit me so hard. In an audio first reported by Gothamist, she tells employees, “Every single one of you must make calls,” assigning quotas to contact lawmakers. On September 18th, the network of 59 schools canceled classes for its roughly 22,000 students to bring them to a political rally during the school day. What should have been time for teaching and learning became a political operation.
This is not simply about one leader’s poor judgment. It exposes a structural reality in the charter model. Unlike traditional public schools, charters must continually secure their share of taxpayer dollars, which creates pressures that blur the line between education and politics. Public money intended for classrooms can easily be redirected toward political activity.
Success Academy has a history of doing this, having mobilized staff and families for rallies during the early days of Mayor Bill de Blasio’s administration. More recently, charter leaders aimed pointed comments at Zohran Mamdani’s opposition to lifting the charter school cap in NYC beyond the current limit of 275, avoiding his name but making clear he was the target. That level of hostility toward an elected official’s policy stance edges close to electioneering and shows how charters use taxpayer resources and compromise public trust.
The pattern makes clear that this is not a one-time mistake but a recurring strategy. If a school cannot survive without turning its teachers and its students into a lobbying force, then it does not deserve to survive.
The costs of this pressure are real. Every hour assigned to calling legislators is an hour lost to lesson planning, supporting a struggling reader, or improving curriculum. Involving children in rallies goes even further, turning students into props for a cause they did not choose. Families send their children to school to learn, and taxpayers expect their dollars to fund classrooms, not political campaigns.
I know from personal experience how easily this kind of mission drift happens. As a charter school leader, I once sat through an anti-union presentation about blocking organizing. The tactic was different, but the impulse was the same: using institutional power to shape employees’ civic choices. Whether the issue is suppressing a union drive or directing staff to advocate for legislation, coercing political activity erodes trust and undermines the purpose of schools.
Charter networks have also invested heavily in professional lobbying. Families for Excellent Schools, a former NYC advocacy group for charters, once spent nearly $10 million on lobbying in a single year in New York. Success Academy itself reported $160,000 in federal lobbying in 2024. Those outlays are legal. But was Moskowitz trying to save money by conscripting educators and even students into the work that paid lobbyists usually do? That is legally questionable. The fact that someone on the inside took the risk to leak the recording shows some recognition of how inappropriate these practices were.
Lawmakers have already taken notice. State Senators John Liu and Shelley Mayer called the Moskowitz rally “an egregious misuse of instructional time and state funds” and urged a formal investigation.
Publicly funded institutions should never compel political participation, and clear boundaries protect everyone. Leaders know their limits, employees know their rights, and families can trust that students will not be pulled into political theater.
Policy reforms can strengthen those boundaries. Oregon bars employers from disciplining workers who refuse to attend political or religious meetings, and Connecticut bans mandatory political meetings outright. New York should adopt similar protections and go further for publicly funded schools. Any requirement that employees engage in political lobbying during work hours or with public resources should be explicitly prohibited. Students should never be taken out of class to participate in political events.
Some will argue this is only one leader’s excess. That response ignores the incentives built into a model that ties school growth and charter renewal to political capital. Unless lawmakers act, the cycle will repeat. The safer and fairer path is to set boundaries that keep politics out of the school day, protect staff from coercion, and safeguard children’s learning.
When I left school leadership, a mentor told me, “The real test of a model is what it makes people do under pressure.” The Success Academy scandal is a test for the charter sector, and it’s failing. Institutions that rely on coerced speech to sustain themselves are not just bending rules; they are breaking faith with the families and taxpayers who fund them.
Ismael Loera is the Director of People and Culture at Room to Grow and a Paul and Daisy Soros and Public Voices Fellow with the OpEd Project.

if we had a graduated income tax, there would be no money in this for the bloated administration of Success or other charter schools. I propose we create a tax system that takes the profit motive out of service for profits. Money made, for example, by providing a necessary service to communities should be taxed at a very high rate. Success Academy is a great example. An administrator earning a very high wage should have to pay a very high percentage of that money to a government that has the education of all its citizens in mind.
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I just found this article from a former SUCCESS ACADEMY middle school teacher who reports that her students, even after years attending SUCCESS ACADEMY schools, were so bereft of grammar knowledge that they couldn’t write a sentence. Also, since the school shunned writing with a pen or pencil, they were unable to write legibly, with the sixth, seventh and eighth grade students were “teenagers with handwriting that would not be out of place in an average third-grade classroom,” as the teachers are forbidden to do class work or homework with pen/pencil and paper. (???!!!)
Furthermore, this woman who uses her own name and opens her up to being sued, claims that middle school Success Academy students couldn’t even identify nouns and verbs in a sentence, nor did even know the functions of nouns and verbs in a sentence.
https://liviacamperi.medium.com/the-cruel-dystopia-of-success-academy-53524cfc53d0
Livia Camperi:
*”The first time I attempted to teach students about something as simple as subject-verb agreement, I realized they literally could not identify nouns and verbs, let alone the function of a subject and a verb in a sentence. My fourteen-year-old students, who were about to go to high school, did not know what an adjective was. The school simply does not teach students the fundamental building blocks of grammar. Every single time I raised an issue with this, whether to my managers, principals, or curriculum writers at the network, I received some version of the same answer: the school believes that if we teach kids to read, the writing will come naturally.”*
*”They used the excuse that in Math we teach the ‘why’ and ‘how’ behind concepts instead of forcing rote memorization. When I asked how that squared with the fact that we do teach formulas to be memorized, since, for example, we can’t expect students to come up with Pythagoras’s theorem independently, I was shut down.
“There is also an important physical issue with the school’s lack of writing: the students do not know how to write by hand. The school prides itself on being a ‘paperless’ institution (supposedly motivated by environmental reasons), and all students receive a laptop from the school, albeit one that will break if you breathe on it too hard.
“The teachers are prohibited from assigning classwork or homework on paper (I was pulled into meetings about this), and even kindergarten students practice writing their alphabets with flimsy styluses on their laptops. As a result, I have teenagers with handwriting that would not be out of place in an average third-grade classroom.”
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I found the same phenomenon in my first teaching position (early ‘70s), at a private high school that had recently become the upper campus of a K12 thanks to a merger of a military academy and a country day school [quite an interesting mix of students!]. It was an issue only for the 9th & 10th graders from the country day school; neither their elder cohort nor the former military kids were so ignorant. It became immediately apparent to this French teacher with a lesson on fem/ masc/ sing/ plural agreement between “noun”/ “pronoun” and “adjective.” They needed all 3 terms explained and illustrated in English context before we could proceed. Apparently their progressive primary school was among the vanguard introducing whole language reading to schoolkids.
Success Academy does not use whole language methods per se; they have a phonics-based program called “Reading Roots” (part of “Success for All” series). However, googling, I found this: “Reading Roots” teaches students to recognize the distinguishing features of a sentence, like capitalization at the beginning and punctuation at the end. Grammar is not taught in isolation but is integrated into the reading and writing process, particularly through direct instruction on comprehension strategies like summarization and clarification.”
At dinner today on Thanksgiving, my millennial sons initiated a lively discussion about misuse/ invention of words (one is in grad school and caught his prof doing it). Their contributions revolved around their understanding of how nouns, verbs, pronouns, adjectives should be used. They went to our public elemschool (NJ) in the mid-‘90s/ early 00’s, before Success Academy was founded. [And before the current emphasis on ‘the science of reading’ – perhaps that approach also shirks grammar basics.]
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I would not give Loera a pass because she lives in Boston. We’ve had our share charter shenanigans too, though it’s diminished since Walton-backed Charlie Baker is no longer governor.
I think many who weren’t paying attention to privatization of government services are shocked when they see what the regime has in store for education. None so blind as those who will not see.
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I’m just a bumpkin from Los Angeles, but even I am kinder sure I can see the writing on the wall in New York City all the way from here. Those legislators might want to wake up to the present moment and stop giving ear to Eva’s flunkies. There’s a new mayor in town. He’s not a billionaire or a member of a powerful political dynasty. He’s elected to stop giving away New Yorkers’ money to kleptomaniacs like Moscowitz. The future looks bright for Democrats who look out for the demos.
Wake up, not woke up, time. Go Bernie!
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Moskowitz has already decided to bring her grift game to the deregulated “free state of Florida.” DeSantis wants to get rid of property taxes and, of course, public schools. BTW Manny Diaz was just voted in as the permanent President of UWF. It is easy to get elected when the governor stacks the board of trustees. Now Diaz can unleash his inner profiteer on Northwest Florida. The privatization of public education is all about politicking to gain access to grift and greed. Moskowitz will fit right in with the reckless right wing in Florida.
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In the news today is a story about hundreds of millions of missing tax dollars from Florida’s universal voucher program. Incompetence reigns supreme here in swampland. State accountants hired by the clueless GOP believe there have been duplicate payments made, but they will investigate to be sure. In the meantime Floridians are standing in food bank lines because they cannot afford to buy food for Thanksgiving. Vouchers are a torpedo to public education, but the state can’t even bother to keep accurate records on their reckless, wasteful vouchers. Why do people keep voting for the GOP?
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A correction and update to the Manny Diaz story. He is the sole finalist in the search for a UWF President, not currently President. The local TV station polled the public and asked if Diaz should get the job. 24% said “yes,” but 76% were opposed.
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As you mentioned, New Yorkers who have followed the charter schools movement, and especially Eva Markowitz’a Success Academy, are not surprised by what she does. Her at least 6-digit salary at public tax payer expense is an outrage.
Roberta M. Eisenberg
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Her salary is about $180,000.
Her annual bonus is about $800,000.
Her compensation is about $1 million.
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