Daily Breeze (Torrance)

Challenge needed to LAUSD’s attack on charter schools

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The Los Angeles Unified School District board voted last month to create a new policy banning public charter schools from sharing space with other public schools on more than 300 district campuses, known in the LAUSD as co-location.

An obvious question arises: What's the board afraid of? Cooties?

“We have consistent­ly maintained that this policy is a shameful and discrimina­tory attack on public charter school students for which the district shares a responsibi­lity to house,” said Myrna Castrejón, president of the California Charter Schools Associatio­n. “CCSA was left with no other option than legal action to enforce the rights of charter school students to reasonably equivalent facilities from the district under Propositio­n 39.”

The plain fact is that the ability to access public school campuses by charter schools — and the ones we're talking about are public as well — is guaranteed by California law. Yet a narrow majority of board members on a 4-3 vote want to prohibit the new location of charters at an unknown number of L.A. campuses with special needs programs.

How to have your say:

L.A. law firm Latham & Watkins wrote the board in support of the charters, saying that “public school facilities should be shared fairly among all public school pupils, including those in charter schools.” The firm says that by “prioritizi­ng public school students attending district-run schools over public school students who attend charter public schools, the policy violates” California law.

It doesn't make any sense. It seems merely punitive. School board President Jackie Goldberg, long anti-charter, says that the new rules would protect, for instance, traditiona­l middle schools from competitio­n for students with charter middle schools that had been placed on properties with traditiona­l elementari­es.

The solution to that supposed problem? Make your traditiona­l schools better, LAUSD, and win the competitio­n.

Instead of legislatin­g away the competitio­n, put the interests of students above all others. Craft budgets that are about student achievemen­t, not just appeasing big-spending labor unions or protecting bloated bureaucrac­ies. You know, do something other than what LAUSD has been doing for decades.

We welcome letters on all issues of public concern. All are subject to editing and condensati­on, and they can be published only with the writer’s true name. Letters must include the writer’s home community and daytime telephone number for verificati­on purposes. Please limit letters to 150words.

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