25 Reasons to Vote NO on PA #HB530
Charter School Reform
Keystone State
Education Coalition July 10, 2016
The Pennsylvania House may vote on House Bill 530 as early
as Sunday evening. Please reach out to
your State Representative and urge them to vote NO on this legislation.
Call your State Rep’s office and urge them to oppose
HB530
Pennsylvania taxpayers now spend more than $1.4 billion on
charter and cyber charter school tuition bills annually in addition to funding
all of the state’s traditional public schools.
The current “rob from public school Peter to pay charter school Paul” system
drains money from traditional public schools, forcing districts to cut programs
and services for the students who remain.
In 2011 the charter reimbursement: line was eliminated from the state
budget. It used to provide state funding
to districts for the costs and financial exposure resulting from the addition
of charter schools.
1.
#HB530 does bring much
needed reform and has several helpful provisions, but the harm that it does far
outweighs the good.
2.
#HB530 does not provide
significant accountability to taxpayers for payments made to charter school
entities. It fails to adequately serve
the interests of Pennsylvania taxpayers.
3.
#HB530 Would create a Charter
School Funding Commission. The commission would consider establishing an
independent state level board to authorize charter school entities, bypassing
any local decision-making by school boards and their communities.
4.
#HB530 further limits the
ability of communities to negotiate the role of charters locally. The decisions about how, when, and where to
expand them should be made by those who have the information and expertise to
do so in ways that improve education.
5.
#HB530 is an entirely
unwarranted intervention in the local governance of school districts. It would remove local control of tax dollars
from PA taxpayers and their elected school directors.
6.
#HB530 means even less charter
accountability, potential skyrocketing costs to districts and unelected panels
making decisions with public tax dollars.
7.
#HB530 sets no limits to
money that charters can drain from local school districts and eliminates the
capability for districts to plan and budget.
8.
#HB530 is a vehicle for
the PA Legislature to have local taxpayers pay for unlimited charter expansion.
9.
#HB530 would let charter
operators expand and spend your public tax dollars without any public input.
10. #HB530 would let charters
expand by adding grades without any local input or authorization regardless of
performance.
11. #HB530 would let charters
expand by enrolling students from outside of the district. A charter school that has reached an agreed
upon enrollment cap of resident students would be able to circumvent that cap
by enrolling students from outside the district in which it is located.
12. #HB530 does nothing to
address the enormous drain of tax dollars from all 500 school districts for
chronically underperforming cyber schools that were authorized by the state. Nearly every national study of virtual school
performance has found their performance lacking, including studies by “pro
school choice” organizations.
13. Cyber
charters continue to perform poorly, but in #HB530, the PA
legislature didn't create a cyber charter quality task force or a commission to
study student outcomes in cybers. Not
one PA cyber charter has achieved a passing score of 70 on the state’s School
Performance Profile in the three years that it has been in use. Most cybers never made Adequate Yearly
Progress under all the years that No Child Left Behind was in effect.
14. #HB530 sets no limits on
the amount of taxpayer dollars that can be spent on charter advertising annually.
15. #HB530 proposes a new
14-member Charter School Funding Advisory Commission without including a single
one of the state’s 4500 locally elected school directors who are responsible for
raising revenue in their school districts.
16. Even
though over 90% of PA kids are educated in district schools #HB530 stacks the Charter
Appeals Board in favor of charter schools.
17. If
charter schools are public schools, why should they have different methods of
evaluating the schools and their teachers as proposed in #HB530?
18. #HB530 requires use of a
performance matrix that makes it impossible to compare charters’ performance with
their sending school districts’ performance.
19. #HB530 creates a separate
evaluation system for charter school teachers instead of using the existing
state system.
20. #HB530 would let charters
keep your tax dollars to accumulate fund balances that are 4% to 8% higher than
their respective school districts.
21. All
of the accountability provisions in #HB530 mean nothing and can
be easily bypassed if a charter school contracts with a management company to
run the operations of the charter. Chester Community Charter School, the state’s
largest charter, is the poster child for this with Charter School Management,
Inc. founded and run by Republican power broker Vahan Gureghian.
22. None
of the accountability, audit or transparency provisions of #HB530 would apply to
charter management companies.
23. If
a charter is run by a management company, the public has zero information on
how their tax dollars are spent. #HB530 does not address
this.
24. #HB530 does nothing to
require any fiscal transparency or reporting from charter management companies.
25. #HB530 would divert an
additional $25 million in tax dollars to unaccountable private and religious
schools through the EITC program.
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