Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Charter school, parent company in legal fight

LV academy seeks independen­t status

- By Julie Wootton-Greener Contact Julie Wootton-Greener at jgreener@reviewjour­nal.com or 702-387-2921. Follow @julieswoot­ton on Twitter.

A popular Las Vegas charter school is embroiled in a legal battle with its parent company, adding to the uncertaint­ies facing the school’s more than 2,000 students and families heading into the new school year.

After breaking ties with its management organizati­on, American Preparator­y Academy Las Vegas is being sued. American Preparator­y Schools, a for-profit Utah corporatio­n, filed the lawsuit June 24 in U.S. District Court in Nevada seeking to prevent the school from terminatin­g the management agreement without cause, according to court documents.

APA Las Vegas’ board voted unanimousl­y June 11 not to renew its contract with American Preparator­y Schools, effective July 31. And the Nevada State Public Charter School Authority’s board voted June 26 to authorize the separation.

That leaves APA Las Vegas in a transition­al period toward becoming a stand-alone charter school as it works to complete a reopening plan for the school year beginning next month. It also faces constructi­on delays on a second campus that is supposed to open this fall.

The charter authority is monitoring the situation, Executive Director Rebecca Feiden said at a June 26 board meeting.

“I do believe that moving forward today will allow them to effectuate this change and allow them to move forward with that planning process,” Feiden told the board. “I want to be clear that staff does have a number of concerns about the content of those changes.”

Among the challenges facing the charter school is filling the holes where the parent organizati­on was providing services that will now have to be done in-house, Feiden said.

$1.6M ‘for essentiall­y nothing’

Rachelle Hulet, who was previously the APA Las Vegas administra­tor, was named interim managing director for the school early this summer. The school also formed a transition task force — which includes employees, parents and a School Coard liaison — and hired Brian Carpenter, a national charter school expert, as a consultant.

Hulet told the charter authority board on June 26 that the support and services APA Las Vegas received from American Preparator­y Schools declined over time to an extent that she believes it was harming students. The school’s students will be far better served by APA Las Vegas becoming a self-managed school, she said.

APA Las Vegas attorney Jason Guinasso and board Chairman Lee Iglody both told the charter board that the school paid the parent company $997 per student, or about $1.6 million per year. But thanks to American Preparator­y Schools’ “epic mismanagem­ent,” that money paid “for essentiall­y nothing,” Iglody said.

Neither officials at APA Las Vegas and American Preparator­y Schools nor their attorneys responded to multiple Review-Journal requests for comment over a weeklong period.

The legal dispute is something of a family affair. Hulet’s aunt, Carolyn Sharette, is a co-founder and executive director of American Preparator­y Schools. Sharette’s sister, Laura Campbell, is also a co-founder.

In its lawsuit, American Preparator­y Schools alleges “a deteriorat­ion in the relationsh­ip” between Hulet and APS over the past two years, “as well as some other troubling developmen­ts” at the school.

In July 2019, Hulet communicat­ed with Sharette “that she desired to have her own management company that would take over the APA-LV contract from APS,” according to the complaint. “She suggested that Ms. Sharette could serve as a consultant for this effort.”

The proposal was shocking to Sharette, who “clearly communicat­ed that she had no intention to relinquish her company to Ms. Hulet, especially since, during Ms. Hulet’s tenure as administra­tor, the school had just fallen from a 5-star rating to a 2-star rating, and because Mrs. Hulet lacked the credential­s for a position she sought,” according to the complaint.

The company, which offers a classical model of education that includes cursive writing and Latin, as well as character developmen­t and a social dance class, also took a swipe at APA-LV in a post on its website.

American Preparator­y’s model “may no longer be available at the existing Las Vegas campuses,” according to the post. “The governing board may try to continue the same academic rigor and culture; however, they will be departing from much of the proven American Prep curriculum, models and methods.”

Second campus behind schedule

APA Las Vegas has nearly 1,700 students in kindergart­en through 12th grades on its campus on Patrick Lane in southwest Las Vegas and more than 2,500 others on a waiting list.

The second campus, also on Patrick Lane, will accommodat­e up to 650 elementary school students. But when it will open remains unclear.

The project is $500,000 to $750,000 over budget, Iglody told the charter board, adding the management organizati­on “tried to conceal that from us.”

Constructi­on is behind schedule partly because of utility issues, and substantia­l completion is now expected the week of Sept. 21-28. That could mean having to push back the school start date.

APA Las Vegas originally was planning to start school Aug. 19, but a note on its website said that is subject to change because of the COVID-19 pandemic.

Feiden said she has been in touch with APA Las Vegas about constructi­on delays and isn’t comfortabl­e with school starting in late September. “Frankly, kids will leave if school starts at the end of September,” she said.

She said charter authority staff will work with the school on “an appropriat­e start date.”

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 ?? Ellen Schmidt Las Vegas Review-Journal @ellenkschm­idt_ ?? Students at American Preparator­y Academy head to their reading groups in February. The charter school is pursuing a separation from its parent company, based in Utah.
Ellen Schmidt Las Vegas Review-Journal @ellenkschm­idt_ Students at American Preparator­y Academy head to their reading groups in February. The charter school is pursuing a separation from its parent company, based in Utah.

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