Los Angeles Times

Teachers protest leadership at charter

- By Howard Blume howard.blume @latimes.com Twitter: @howardblum­e

A group of teachers and their supporters have begun calling openly for changes in senior management at El Camino Real Charter High School, which is facing allegation­s of serious financial wrongdoing — allegation­s that school leaders have denied.

About 60 teachers and others participat­ed in a Wednesday protest, which took place early in the morning, before staff members signed in for the day at the Woodland Hills campus.

Many drivers, including parents dropping off students, honked their support as they passed. But others ignored the protesters or made critical remarks about the demonstrat­ion.

The school community is divided over the best way to handle allegation­s that senior managers, especially Executive Director David Fehte, mishandled public education dollars.

“A large group of us passionate­ly spoke in defense of keeping our charter by imploring our board of directors to dismiss and terminate ... Dave Fehte and our chief business officer, Marshall Mayotte, for alleged criminal misconduct regarding our school’s finances,” said teacher Carlos Monroy.

“We are sending a message that our voices have been silenced by the inaction of our board and it is jeopardizi­ng our future as an independen­t charter.”

Many of the demonstrat­ors called for the immediate release of findings of an internal investigat­ion, which have not been made public.

El Camino officials declined to comment about the protest, but they have insisted that the school has worked diligently and successful­ly to address shortcomin­gs in its policies and practices.

Alleged problems cited by the Los Angeles Unified School District include possible inappropri­ate spending, poor accounting and oversight, and violations of public meeting rules. In coverage over the last several months, the Los Angeles Daily News reported on Fehte’s spending for such things as wine, first-class air travel and expensive hotel rooms.

Fehte has denied wrongdoing and said he inadverten­tly charged about $6,100 in personal expenses on his school credit card. He said he reimbursed the school as soon as these charges were pointed out to him.

Charter schools are independen­tly operated and exempt from some rules that govern traditiona­l campuses. But the authorizin­g school district retains an oversight role and can revoke a charter or decline to renew it when there is significan­t misconduct, mismanagem­ent or poor academic performanc­e.

Last month, the L.A. Board of Education approved a formal “notice of violations,” the first step in a lengthy, multi-step process that could lead to the campus returning to district control.

The school responded to the notice of violations on Sept. 23, submitting a 42page letter and nearly 400 pages of appendices.

“The charter school strongly believes that it has cured all alleged violations, and also that it has put in place mechanisms to ensure that such items do not happen again,” wrote Janelle A. Ruley, an attorney representi­ng El Camino. “The items identified in the [notice of violations] occurred in the past; the remedies implemente­d ensure that they will not be repeated.”

The letter also alluded to undisclose­d discipline against one or more employees — which, wrote Ruley, could be disclosed confidenti­ally to L.A. Unified.

L.A. Unified is reviewing El Camino’s submission.

El Camino has been considered a generally successful campus before and after 2011, when it converted to charter status under the leadership of Fehte.

The school won the national Academic Decathlon in 2014.

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