Los Angeles Times

Did L.A. relax rules for charters?

Those schools made gains in new pact with LAUSD, but role of investigat­or is intact.

- HOWARD BLUME howard.blume @latimes.com Twitter: @howardblum­e

Los Angeles charter school leaders won changes to the rules under which they operate last week after they put pressure on the Los Angeles Unified School District.

Students, they say, will benefit. But some district officials say that it is better for students that the charters did not get everything they wanted.

Here is a look at what the district agreed to change, where charters backed down, and what might happen next.

Services to disabled students: Changed The rule: A charter school “reserves the right” to work with an agency other than L.A. Unified to provide or pay for services to disabled students.

How best to educate the disabled has long been a point of contention. Though all public schools have an obligation to provide a free and appropriat­e education to all students, neither the state nor the federal government provides anywhere near the funding necessary to cover the extra expenses of serving the disabled, especially those with moderate to severe disabiliti­es.

Some charters have been accused of making it harder for disabled students to enroll or remain in their programs. Others have been faulted for serving mainly those with milder disabiliti­es, whose education costs less.

L.A. Unified extracts a portion of the cost for the more expensive students by essentiall­y taxing charters that take part in its regional special education program. The district is able to provide classes for students with rarer disabiliti­es and oversee charter schools’ own efforts. But under state law, charters don’t have to use L.A. Unified’s program. They can use the services of any education agency in the state.

Several years ago, a large group signed up with the El Dorado County Office of Education, several hundred miles to the north.

El Dorado officials insisted that they provided sound supervisio­n of the charter schools’ special education programs.

And they didn’t require L.A.-based charters to pay a share for students their schools weren’t serving. So the charters saved money while El Dorado got a windfall from the fees they paid.

L.A. Unified eventually managed to bring most of these charters back into the fold, in part by asking less of them financiall­y but also by adding rules that made it more difficult for charters to contract with other agencies such as El Dorado. Charters worried that their authorizat­ions would not be renewed if they didn’t contract with L.A. Unified.

Last week’s changes in the rules spelled out a charter’s right to contract with an agency other than L.A. Unified for special education.

Critics fear that charter operators now will have the freedom to search out the cheapest agencies, regardless of standards. In fact, under state law, they already had that option.

Charter leaders insist that the change was needed to stop the district from pressuring them to pay for special education programs that they think are inadequate or overpriced.

L.A. Unified could lose if many charters look elsewhere to meet their special education requiremen­ts.

Powers of inspector general: No change The rule: Charters are “subject to audit by LAUSD, including, without limitation, audit by the District Office of the Inspector General.” Charters “shall cooperate with any ... inquiry and/or investigat­ion undertaken by the District and/or the Office of the Inspector General Investigat­ions Unit.”

Charter schools wanted very much to limit the inspector general’s authority to investigat­e. They complained that such investigat­ions have been secretive, burdensome and so openended that they sometimes last several years.

The timing seemed right to push for change after control of the school board shifted in July to a majority elected with major financial support from charter backers.

But in last week’s deal with the district, charter leaders did not insist on this point. Recent events worked against them: two long-running inspector general investigat­ions that appeared to have legs. Celerity Educationa­l Group was raided by the FBI. And PUC Schools, which was co-founded by board member Ref Rodriguez, contacted local and state regulators alleging that Rodriguez had conflicts of interest when he authorized a series of payments while he was employed there. Rodriguez faces unrelated criminal charges for alleged political money laundering, and has denied any wrongdoing.

For now, Inspector General Ken Bramlett retains his formal authority, but he has no civil service job protection. Board members who want to respond to complaints from the charters also could use the budget to cut back his activities.

Following district policies: Changed The rule: Charter schools must comply with district policies as they relate to charter schools and are “adopted through Board action.” The district will compile a list of such policies by April 1, 2018, and annual changes must be approved by the Board of Education.

This new language could prove to be the most important. Before, at least in principle, charters were expected to follow all district policies. Now, they must follow only those policies that are required by law or that the school board, whose majority was elected with major support from charter advocates, votes to apply to them.

Before, the administra­tors of the district’s charter division could change rules for charters based on their own profession­al judgment and experience. The school board could overrule their decisions but rarely did. Now, any proposed changes would have to be approved by a more charter-friendly school board.

With this opening, charters could also lean on board members to vote to change other rules. For example, some charters object to having to abide by the district’s approach to student discipline. Under last week’s compromise, they still are bound by these district policies. But they now have a way to circumvent these and other rules.

Limits on leased campus space: Removed The rule: Agreements that allow charters to use available space on campuses “shall be limited to one school year” and separate multiyear agreements “shall not exceed five years.”

These limits have now been removed, which could allow charters to become permanent fixtures on district campuses they are using.

In the recent fight over rules, charters mostly opposed district efforts to impose rules on them that went beyond state law. But when it came to their use of district campuses, they wanted L.A. Unified to do more than state law requires.

Under state law, school districts must make classrooms and other campus facilities available for charters in a way that is “reasonably equivalent” to what is provided to traditiona­l schools. But these offers of space only have to be good one year at a time.

Charters have complained that the district really doesn’t want to share space and they’ve had to fight, sometimes in court, to enforce their legal rights to space. Parents of students in traditiona­l schools, on the other hand, often complain that having charters on their campuses forces cutbacks to programs for their children.

Of the 224 independen­t charter schools in L.A. Unified, 89 are occupying district-owned space, according to California Charter Schools Assn., and more would want to do so. Fortynine of the charters currently on district properties are there under the one-year agreements laid out in state law, while the others have arranged more stable — sometimes virtually permanent — occupancy.

Under the revised rules, the district also commits to settling disputes over campus space more quickly. This could provide more stability to charters planning for the next school year.

Insurance f lexibility: Added The rule: Charter schools can now meet increased insurance requiremen­ts by banding together or in an approved “self-insurance program.”

L.A. Unified has been hammered in recent years by legal claims from sexual misconduct and other problems. To avoid being blindsided by similar lawsuits stemming from problems at charter schools, over which the district has limited control, L.A. Unified required them to purchase more expensive insurance.

Charters protested that the costs were exorbitant.

The compromise is that charters now are allowed to get better rates by buying in groups. They also can “selfinsure,” meaning they can commit to paying such claims themselves. L.A. Unified retains the authority to approve or nix these alternativ­e arrangemen­ts.

 ?? Don Bartletti Los Angeles Times ?? “BUMPY TILE” helps blind students at Frances Blend Elementary learn to navigate. It’s uncertain whether disabled children will fare better under newly changed operating rules for charters in L.A. Unified.
Don Bartletti Los Angeles Times “BUMPY TILE” helps blind students at Frances Blend Elementary learn to navigate. It’s uncertain whether disabled children will fare better under newly changed operating rules for charters in L.A. Unified.

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