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Tuesday, February 4, 2020

PA Ed Policy Roundup for Feb 4: Wolf pushing charter-school bill that would change funding, accountability rules


Started in November 2010, daily postings from the Keystone State Education Coalition now reach more than 4050 Pennsylvania education policymakers – school directors, administrators, legislators, legislative and congressional staffers, Governor's staff, current/former PA Secretaries of Education, Wolf education transition team members, superintendents, school solicitors, principals, charter school leaders, PTO/PTA officers, parent advocates, teacher leaders, business leaders, faith-based organizations, labor organizations, education professors, members of the press and a broad array of P-16 regulatory agencies, professional associations and education advocacy organizations via emails, website, Facebook, Twitter, Instagram and LinkedIn.

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PA Ed Policy Roundup for Feb 4, 2020

Some Selected Provisions of the proposed Charter School Reform Act of 2020:
• Requires any company running a charter school to open up their records so the people can see if they’re educating kids properly or just cashing in.
• Requires a statewide, data-driven cyber charter school tuition rate to make sure all taxpayers are getting the same results for the same dollars and ending the wide disparity in rates affecting tuition in neighboring districts;
• Requires charter schools to use the Special Education Fair Funding Formula public schools use


.@PSBA .@PASA .@PAIU school leaders - this is the best shot we've had for charter reform in 20 years. Come meet your legislators in their Capitol offices for Advocacy Day on March 23rd. Register at http://mypsba.org


Wonder where some of that cyber charter tuition goes?
Morningstar: K12 Inc. Executive Compensation 2015-2019

Blogger note: In yesterday’s PA Ed Policy Roundup the link to this PASBO/PASA Report was not correct. You can view the report at the link below.
PASBO and PASA Release 2020 Winter School District Budget Report
ByPASBO On: 01/31/2020 08:21:37
PASBO and PASA today shared their latest school district budget report, outlining the financial health, needs and challenges of school districts ahead of state budget discussions.

Adopt the 2020 resolution for charter school funding reform
PSBA Website POSTED ON FEBRUARY 3, 2020 IN PSBA NEWS
In this legislative session, PSBA has been leading the charge with the Senate, House of Representatives and the Governor’s Administration to push for positive charter reform. We’re now asking you to join the campaign: Adopt the resolution: We’re asking all school boards to adopt the 2020 resolution for charter school funding reform at your next board meeting and submit it to your legislators and to PSBA.

“Mike Straub, a spokesperson for House Republicans, said it was “too early to tell" how much support the charter law changes may have going forward because the sponsoring lawmakers — Sens. Lindsey Williams and James Brewster of Allegheny County, and Rep. Joe Ciresi of Montgomery County — were still collecting cosponsors.”
Inquirer by Maddie Hanna, Updated: February 3, 2020- 6:40 PM
Gov. Tom Wolf is pushing significant changes to Pennsylvania’s charter school law that his office says could save school districts statewide $280 million a year and would leave the existing charters with less funding each year. The changes are outlined in a bill, sponsored by several Democratic House and Senate lawmakers and released Monday by the governor’s office, that would change the way district payments to charters are calculated. It follows Wolf’s call last year to overhaul Pennsylvania’s rules for charter school funding and accountability, as districts statewide have complained about how their budgets are affected by schools that they say they have insufficient ability to regulate. “Every student deserves a great education, whether in a traditional public school or a charter school, but the state’s flawed and outdated charter school law is failing children, parents, and taxpayers," Wolf said in a statement Monday. “Pennsylvania has a history of school choice, which I support, but there is widespread agreement that we must change the law to prioritize quality and align funding to actual costs.”

Blogger note: this cosponsorship memo details some of the provisions of the proposed charter school bill. You can view the entire 120 page bill here.
COSPONSORSHIP MEMORANDUM
Posted:         February 3, 2020 11:01 AM
From:             Representative Joe Ciresi
To:                  All House members
Subject:        Fixing Pennsylvania’s Charter School Law to protect kids and taxpayers

In 1997 Google and Netflix didn’t exist, but Woolworth’s still did. The world has changed a lot since then, but one thing hasn’t: PA’s antique charter school law.
If we’re going to treat ALL schools fairly – and put kids and families first – we need a law built for 2020 and beyond. We need them to be partners with our public schools, not competitors for dollars taken from long-suffering homeowners.
We need to be tough on the schools failing our kids when it comes to academics, ethics, and cost. We need to reward solid performers who are innovating while still delivering on our obligations.
We can make our current system better, and there’s a plan to do that. You’ll know more, you’ll see better results, and you’ll know your money is being invested to build a future our kids deserve.


Protecting Your Right to Know
·         Requires charter school trustees and administrators to live by the same financial and ethical reporting standards public school board members and school district officials live up to;
·         Requires charter school meetings to follow the Sunshine Act;

Protecting Your Property Tax Dollars
·         Requires charter schools to use the Special Education Fair Funding Formula public schools use to ensure students in need are getting the results they deserve and preventing huge tax rate increases on homeowners in districts serving rapidly growing populations of students with special needs;
·         Requires charter schools to use actual accounting and enrollment in calculating tuition – backed up by PA Department of Education – to make sure payments are fair, consistent, and promises are kept;
·         Requires charter schools to carry enough insurance to take care of kids and families if the charter closes or the parent company goes out of business.

Protecting the Future of Our Kids
·         Creates a standard state framework for charter school applications so potential school operators know just what is required to deliver success;
·         Standardizes the method to change charter schools’ missions and goals to reward innovation and best practices, and ensure school districts have the tools needed to evaluate changes to charters;
·         Creates a state grading system for charters to allow high-performing schools even more self-determination while focusing attention on low-performing schools to better serve the kids;
·         Stops the creation of new cyber charter schools until the existing schools improve performance – right three out of every four charter schools rank in the bottom five percent of schools statewide – and charges DoE with creating enrollment and performance standards of the worst performers.

It’s a big job, but our kids, their parents, and our taxpayers are counting on us. It’s time for a change for the better. Please sign onto this bill and let’s get to work on passing a new, modern charter school law.


“Here’s what the public should know. The conversion of MCTI to a full service high school could be fully paid for with existing general funds from each school district in one year, without incurring any debt, or without raising taxes, or wondering if there will be more money from the state, if the county’s school districts were not burdened with the $20 million they currently must pay in tuition every year for charter schools— schools that simply duplicate the offerings of existing public schools. We hear a lot about the virtues of school choice. Here’s a choice: the ability of students to choose a comprehensive education at MCTI that results in professional credentials and certifications. This is a real choice, not a made up one. If the legislature is serious about providing meaningful choice to students, it must relieve school districts of the burden of paying for charter schools that simply duplicate the existing public schools.”
My Turn: Give students a real choice
Pocono Record Opinion By Merlyn Clarke Posted at 10:27 AM February 3, 2020
Senator Mario Scavello writes that the Monroe Career and Technical School (MCTI) should go forward with plans to become a full-service high school. This would provide a better opportunity for students and meet the increasing demand for skilled people in the trades. He correctly points out that students with an aptitude for the trades can acquire these skills while in high school and avoid the lost time, expense and often excessive debt necessary to obtain a college degree— a degree that often does not guarantee employment or the ability to repay college debt. He further makes the point that, since the programs at MCTI are currently only part time, students spend many hours every day either riding the bus or waiting for a bus to transport them to and from MCTI mid-day when they should be focusing on academics, skill development, or taking electives or participating in extracurricular activities. He’s right about this as well.
Almost no one opposes this proposal to convert MCTI into a full service high school. It’s good for the students. It’s good for local business. It’s good for the community, as anyone who has trouble finding a good tradesperson knows. The only obstacle, of course, is the cost, not only of expanding the MCTI facility, but the cost of supporting the additional staff needed to provide a comprehensive program. Sen. Scevello speaks of additional monies being made available from the state, some, apparently in the form of continuing line items, but others in the form of grants, the availability of which are not assured from one year to the next. The burden of providing these additional funds would fall on each of the school districts in the county, that is, on the taxpayers.
Merlyn Clarke, Stroud Township, SASD School Board

PA ranked 47th worst state for opportunities for students of color
West Chester University Quad by Caroline Helms February 3, 2020
The U.S. Department of Education has found that Pennsylvania gives students of color some of the worst educational opportunities in the United States. Pennsylvania is ranked the 47th worst state when it comes to the opportunity gap between black and white students, ranking similarly between Hispanic and white students. Educational equality for students of color has always been an upwards battle and has more ground to cover. WHYY, a Philadelphia based radio station, states that, “Students of color in Pennsylvania are far less likely than their white peers to have access to small classes, certified teachers and advanced coursework.” The American Psychological Association also reports that black students are 54% less likely to be recommended for gifted programs than white students. This is not an observation of the intelligence of black students, but instead an observation of the lack of resources provided for them. Similar trends can be found in the treatment of Hispanic students in a K-12 environment.

#PaBudget 2020: Our students deserve safe and healthy schools. This should be Job One | Opinion
By Jerry T. Jordan  Capital-Star Op-Ed Contributor February 3, 2020
In January 2016, SEIU member Chris Trakimas reported to the FS Edmonds school to perform maintenance work on the school’s boiler and was gravely injured when it exploded. After a long battle, Chris died of his injuries. Historically, the task he was performing was assigned to pairs, but years of austerity left him assigned to the job alone. In May 2017, Cassidy Elementary student Chelsea Mungo described her school building as “like a prison or a junkyard.” She asked Senator Vincent Hughes why the color of her skin affected the amount of funding allocated to her school. In September 2017, as reported in the Inquirer’s Pulitzer Prize nominated Toxic Schools series, 6 year old Dean Pagan wanted to keep his desk at Comly Elementary school tidy. So when dust rained down from the ceiling, and lead paint chips coated his desk daily, he ate them—and now suffers the life-long effects of severe lead poisoning. And in August 2019, one of our beloved PFT members, Lea DiRusso was diagnosed with mesothelioma after having spent her entire career teaching in schools with known damaged asbestos. After a career of service to Philadelphia’s young people, she is now undergoing grueling treatment for an incurable disease.
Enough.

#PaBudget 2020: Let’s talk about fixing Pennsylvania’s educator shortage | Opinion
By Rich Askey  Capital-Star Op-Ed Contributor February 3, 2020
Do you like living in a world with doctors, engineers, entrepreneurs, and artists?
We wouldn’t have any of these professionals — or countless others — without educators. Education is the career that makes every other career possible. So, it should trouble all of us that Pennsylvania, like much of the nation, is experiencing a shortage of educators, teaching assistants, school nurses, and counselors. How bad is it? Between the 2012-13 and 2018-19 school years, the Pennsylvania Department of Education saw a 74 percent drop in the number of Level 1 teaching certificates it issued. And between 2013-14 and 2017-18, the number of students graduating from Pennsylvania’s teacher prep programs declined by 32 percent. This is a real problem. That’s why the Pennsylvania State Education Association wants to tackle the educator shortage head-on. We started by asking our members how best to do that. Here are some of their ideas.

Philly schools implement new rules for lockdowns to reduce trauma
Also planned is the district’s first-ever staff training dedicated to the procedure.
Billy Penn by Michaela Winberg February 3, 2020
The School District of Philadelphia is fundamentally restructuring the way it deals with and classifies lockdowns. Officials hope the changes will lead to fewer interruptions of student learning, and make the incidents less traumatic. Perhaps the biggest change: the word “lockdown” will only be used when there’s an unknown individual inside the building — for example, a potential active shooter. When it’s other circumstances that warrant a building-wide response, school officials will use new categories that entail varying levels of severity. They’ll use “lock-in” for a fight inside the building, and “lock-out” for violence in the neighborhood. Also new: SDP officials will visit every school in the district in the next year, training staff on how to deploy these new categories. While they’re there, they’ll also distribute trauma kits to all schools, with gauze and tourniquets in case of emergency. Over the past decade, Philly schools have reported more than 700 lockdowns. That equates to an average of one lockdown every other school day. Plus, officials admit record-keeping has been sloppy, so the number probably misses many occurrences.

Our City Our Schools coalition reflects on the fight for equity, justice in the 2010s
The activist group is now focused on struggles for fair funding and healthy school buildings.
The notebook Commentary by Kristen P. Goessling and Pep Marie February 3  10:08 am, 2020
The Our City Our Schools (OCOS) coalition formed in 2016 with a goal of abolishing the School Reform Commission (SRC) and regaining local control of the School District. The coalition’s work is dynamic and it responds to pressing education-related issues in the city. It is important for our movement to take note of the significant gains and recognize the people and groups that have led successful campaigns toward education justice in the past decade. The decade got off to an auspicious start when the newly elected governor, Tom Corbett, announced a staggering $1 billion cut to education funding. Corbett’s plan disproportionately affected Philadelphia, causing the District’s budget gap to reach $629 million in 2011. The SRC responded with austerity measures and mass layoffs. These measures were met with public outcry and protests locally and in Harrisburg. This gave rise to the Philadelphia Coalition Advocating for Public Schools (PCAPS), which included all three school unions and more than a dozen community-based groups.

"Out of the 6,319 students who received EdChoice vouchers, we found 4,013, or 63.5%, were never enrolled in the district left footing the bill for their vouchers."
OHIO: More Voucher Nonsense
Curmuducation Blog by Peter Greene Friday, January 31, 2020
I've frequently kvetched that a central fallacy at the heart of school choice is the notion that several parallel school system can be run for the cost of one. "Why," I ask, "can't politicians have the cojones to just say they think school choice is so important that they are going to raise peoples' taxes to pay for it?" Well, the legislature of Ohio (motto "We want to be Florida when we grow up") is coming really close. You will recall that Ohio school districts are facing an explosion in costs as they enter the next phase of the privatization program. Phase One is familiar to most of us--you start out with vouchers and charters just for the poor families who have to "escape failing public schools." Phase Two is the part where you expand the program so that it covers everybody. Well, Ohio screwed up its Phase Two. Basically, they expanded the parameters of their privatization so quickly that lots of people noticed. The number of eligible school districts skyrocketed, and that brought attention to a crazy little quirk in their system, as noted by this report from a Cleveland tv station:

From the National School Boards Action Center:
National Poll Shows Strong Voter Support for Public Schools
We surveyed likely voters.  Here’s what they said:

"The Walton Foundation is the biggest single private funder of charters schools and vouchers in the United States."
For Your Browsing Pleasure: Who Got Walton Money for Education Disruption in 2018?
Diane Ravitch’s Blog By dianeravitch February 3, 2020
The Walton Family Foundation is the fruit of the Walmart chain. It was created by the Waltons, one of the richest families in the world. The three senior members of the Walton family–Alice Walton, Jim Walton, and Rob Walton–have a collective net worth in excess of $150 billion. There is a younger generation of Waltons whose wealth is not included in that total. The Walton family increases its wealth by $4 million an hour, every hour of every day. The Walton Foundation has a few causes in which it concentrates its giving. Reforming K-12 education is one of the major areas for giving. The Walton Foundation is the biggest single private funder of charters schools and vouchers in the United States. In 2018, it gave $210 million to a long list of grantees to promote its K-12 goals, especially privatization of public schools via charters and vouchers. In the same year, it increased that giving by another $238.6 million, in a section of its website called “Special Projects,” many of which went to the same K-12 charters and vouchers, or advocacy for charters and vouchers.

Wyndham Destinations pulls Florida voucher donations over anti-gay school policies
The timeshare company joined Wells Fargo and Fifth Third Bank in saying they’ll stop donating to the program after discovering some beneficiaries have anti-LGBTQ policies.
NBC News By Brooke Sopelsa and Ryan Ruggiero, CNBC January 30, 2020
Wyndham Destinations became the third major company in three days to announce it will stop donating millions of dollars to Florida’s private school voucher program after a newspaper investigation found that some of the program's beneficiaries discriminate against LGBTQ students. Wyndham said that it told the organization last year that it would "halt funding if concerns about the voucher program were not addressed." "As we have not seen any further action to address our concerns, we are today discontinuing our support and funding for Step Up For Students and hope that the organization will quickly work with the Florida Legislature to immediately end any discriminatory practices existing within the voucher program," the company told NBC News and CNBC on Thursday afternoon. The timeshare company also said it would re-evaluate its support if the concerns are addressed, adding, "we remain in agreement with the value in providing low income families with the opportunity to choose the best education for their children." The Orlando-based hotel company’s announcement comes just two days after a similar announcement by Cincinnati-based Fifth Third Bank and one day after an announcement from San Francisco-based Wells Fargo.

House Oversight Committee Threatens to Subpoena Education Secretary Betsy DeVos
The committee’s Democratic chairwoman criticized the education secretary for campaigning on behalf of the president while ignoring Congress.
US News By Lauren Camera, Senior Education Writer Feb. 3, 2020, at 2:56 p.m.
DEMOCRATS ON THE HOUSE Committee on Oversight and Reform threatened to subpoena Education Secretary Betsy DeVos on Monday, citing a long-standing failure to provide members of Congress requested documents and her refusal to testify. "Ignoring – or defying – requests for congressional oversight in order to spend your time campaigning for President Trump is an abuse of your position as Secretary of Education," Chairwoman Carolyn Maloney wrote in a letter to DeVos. "I am not suggesting that you may never campaign for the president, but you may not do so when it interferes with your official duties, including your duty to testify before Congress." DeVos is scheduled to appear at a steakhouse in Cedar Rapids as a surrogate for the president during the Iowa caucuses on Monday. She's also slated to campaign for him in Pennsylvania on Wednesday.


Five compelling reasons for .@PSBA .@PASA .@PAIU school leaders to come to the Capitol for Advocacy Day on March 23rd:
Charter Reform
Cyber Charter Reform
Basic Ed Funding
Special Ed Funding
PLANCON
Register at http://mypsba.org

Hear relevant content from statewide experts, district practitioners and PSBA government affairs staff at PSBA’s annual membership gathering. PSBA Sectional Advisors and Advocacy Ambassadors are on-site to connect with district leaders in their region and share important information for you to take back to your district.
Locations and dates

Sectional Meetings are 6:00 p.m. -8:00 p.m. (across all locations). Light refreshments will be offered.
Cost: Complimentary for PSBA member entities.
Registration: Registration is now open. To register, please sign into myPSBA and look for Store/Registration on the left.

Allegheny County Legislative Forum on Education March 12
by Allegheny Intermediate Unit Thu, March 12, 2020 7:00 PM – 10:00 PM EDT
Join us on March 12 at 7:00 pm for the Allegheny Intermediate Unit's annual Allegheny County Legislative Forum. The event will feature a discussion with state lawmakers on a variety of issues impacting public schools. We hope you will join us and be part of the conversation about education in Allegheny County.

All school leaders are invited to attend Advocacy Day at the state Capitol in Harrisburg. The Pennsylvania School Boards Association (PSBA), Pennsylvania Association of Intermediate Units (PAIU) and the Pennsylvania Association of School Administrators (PASA) are partnering together to strengthen our advocacy impact. The day will center around meetings with legislators to discuss critical issues affecting public education. Click here for more information or register at http://www.mypsba.org/
School directors can register online now by logging in to myPSBA. If you need assistance logging in and registering contact Alysha Newingham, Member Data System Administrator at alysha.newingham@psba.org

Register now for Network for Public Education Action National Conference in Philadelphia March 28-29, 2020
Registration, hotel information, keynote speakers and panels:

PARSS Annual Conference April 29 – May 1, 2020 in State College
The 2020 PARSS Conference is April 29 through May 1, 2020, at Wyndham Garden Hotel at Mountain View Country Club in State College. Please register as a member or a vendor by accessing the links below.

Any comments contained herein are my comments, alone, and do not necessarily reflect the opinions of any other person or organization that I may be affiliated with.


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