Los Angeles Times

LAUSD VOTES TO NOT RENEW 5 SITES

3 Magnolia charter schools and 2 Celerity campuses are denied. El Camino is OKd, but leader steps down.

- By Howard Blume

The ongoing tug of war between pro-charter school and anti-charter forces was focused Tuesday on the Los Angeles Board of Education, which faced controvers­ial decisions on the future of six campuses.

By the end of a sometimes contentiou­s meeting, the school board allowed one high-profile charter to survive in exchange for the departure of its leader. The board also voted to reject petitions for five schools run by two other organizati­ons.

The outcome was bitterswee­t for many at El Camino Real Charter High School in Woodland Hills.

The district agreed to stay a revocation process that would have returned El Camino to the control of the L.A. Unified School District. But founding executive director David Fehte consented to leave within the next week. Several governing board members also are expected to depart over the next several months.

The L.A. school board’s vote was 6 to 0 against a fiveyear renewal for three schools operated by locally based Magnolia Educationa­l and Research Foundation. Board member George McKenna abstained.

Magnolia came under widespread scrutiny after the Turkish government accused it and other U.S.based charters with Turkish governing boards of helping foment a failed July coup in Turkey. The schools’ leaders

denied any involvemen­t.

A more direct concern for L.A. Unified was Magnolia’s importing of Turkish nationals and their families for teaching and other staff positions. That past practice is the subject of an ongoing investigat­ion by the district’s inspector general.

Magnolia operates 10 campuses, including eight in L.A. Unified; the ones up for renewal were Magnolia Science Academy 1 in Reseda, Magnolia Science Academy 2 in Van Nuys and Magnolia Science Academy 3 in Carson.

The school board denied the other two charter renewals, for Celerity Dyad in South Los Angeles and Celerity Troika in Eagle Rock, in a 6-0 vote. Ref Rodriguez, who represents the area where the schools are located, abstained.

The actions on these schools directly affected more than 13,000 students but also took on greater significan­ce as the L.A. Unified School District struggles both to oversee and compete with charters.

L.A. Unified has more of these independen­tly operated schools than any other district, and, as they compete for students, charter growth is one major factor affecting the district’s financial stability.

Charter advocates on Tuesday asserted that L.A. Unified is growing increasing­ly hostile to new and existing charters, and that district evaluators are seeking to close charters over relatively minor matters that have no bearing on academic performanc­e.

They insisted that L.A. Unified is acting unfairly and possibly in violation of state regulation­s. An attorney for Magnolia went further, calling the focus on the Turkish workers, “discrimina­tion based on nationalit­y and religious beliefs.”

“These people have never done anything but provide a world-class education to inner-city kids in Los Angeles,” attorney Jerry Simmons said.

District officials maintained that all six of the schools had problems that justified taking action despite their academic performanc­e, which ranged from acceptable to much better.

The approval process for charters has taken on a ritual-like quality in the secondlarg­est U.S. school system.

Whenever a charter has an item affecting its future before the board, its supporters, officials and attorneys turn out en masse.

Tuesday was no different, as Magnolia and Celerity brought out hundreds of supporters.

Like Magnolia, Celerity Educationa­l Group has been dealing with an inspector-general’s investigat­ion, which examined possible conflicts of interest.

The unfinished investigat­ions are confidenti­al, so the official presentati­ons against Celerity and Magnolia involved other matters, including alleged shortcomin­gs in the wording of renewal petitions and allegation­s that the organizati­ons failed to provide investigat­ors with all requested documents in a timely fashion.

L.A. board members were ultimately swayed by the argument that Celerity was operating too secretivel­y and that an independen­t fiscal team had issues with Magnolia’s responsive­ness to problems. Celerity and Magnolia could appeal to the county and the state to remain open.

El Camino’s charter had been renewed last year, but it faced possible revocation over such issues as Fehte’s use of school credit cards for wine, costly dining tabs, upgraded air travel and expensive hotel rooms.

He called the charges inadverten­t and reimbursed the school for more than $6,000 when they were called to his attention.

El Camino took a variety of measures to placate L.A. Unified, including canceling staff credit cards. Then, last week, chief business officer Marshall Mayotte agreed to leave. But that apparently wasn’t enough for the school district, and Fehte, whom supporters considered instrument­al to the school’s success, became the next domino to fall.

“I will do what it takes to preserve this charter which we all worked so hard to establish,” Fehte said in a statement.

 ?? Photograph­s by Luis Sinco Los Angeles Times ?? STUDENTS AND staff from Magnolia Science Academy 3, a charter school in Carson, demonstrat­e at LAUSD headquarte­rs Tuesday.
Photograph­s by Luis Sinco Los Angeles Times STUDENTS AND staff from Magnolia Science Academy 3, a charter school in Carson, demonstrat­e at LAUSD headquarte­rs Tuesday.
 ??  ?? LOS ANGELES UNIFIED School District Supt. Michelle King, left, and Board of Education President Steve Zimmer listen to comments about charter schools from members of the public at Tuesday’s meeting.
LOS ANGELES UNIFIED School District Supt. Michelle King, left, and Board of Education President Steve Zimmer listen to comments about charter schools from members of the public at Tuesday’s meeting.

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