The Columbus Dispatch

Ex-congressma­n emerges to blister operators

- By Randy Ludlow rludlow@dispatch.com @RandyLudlo­w

“corruption” within the General Assembly.

More than three years removed from eight terms in the U.S. House, the former Cleveland mayor and presidenti­al candidate surfaced to

Former U.S. Rep. Dennis Kucinich is on the attack against Ohio’s charter-school industry and associated stage a Statehouse news conference Monday.

Asked if he is running for governor next year, the Democrat responded: “I’m not going to get into that — politics.”

Kucinich plans four town-hall meetings this week to dissect how publicly funded but privately operated for-profit charter schools are, in his words, “bleeding” $10 billion in funding from traditiona­l public schools since 1999. A Columbus meeting will be at 6:30 p.m. today at First Unitarian Universali­st Church, 93 W. Weisheimer Road in Clintonvil­le.

The one-time state senator said he wants to inform Ohioans of a fact they likely don’t know about charter-school funding: When a student enrolls in one, the per-student share of state funding to his or her public-school district follows the student to the charter school. Public districts have long argued that charters also drain away local tax dollars. “Public education’s financial base is being destroyed by private, for-profit corporate interests,” Kucinich said. “When state revenue for public schools decreases because of money which goes to private for-profit charters, public school officials must make up the difference by asking local property taxpayers for more money.”

Charter schools are privately run, nonprofit public schools, a number of whom are run on an day-to-day basis by for-profit operators.

“It represents a deliberate, destructiv­e underminin­g of the public education of Ohio’s children,” he said. “What is our educationa­l philosophy today? Let for-profit corporatio­ns exploit the mass of children by controllin­g the state government?” he asked.

Kucinich attacked what he called a “payto-play” culture among majority legislativ­e Republican­s who have accepted millions of dollars in campaign contributi­ons from charter-school operators, notably William Lager of the Electronic Classroom of Tomorrow and David Brennan of White Hat Management. Lawmakers are auctioning off public education funds to the “highest bidder,” he said.

The privatizat­ion of K-12 schools has further undermined the adequacy of funding for public schools that still remain overly reliant on local property taxes and property wealth, contrary to Ohio Supreme Court rulings, he said.

Kucinich said he plans to work with experts to present a report to the General Assembly in January on the impact of charters on public schools. He also said he is working with legal experts to determine if the funding and operation of charter schools can be challenged in court.

Ron Adler, president of the Ohio Coalition for Quality Education, a charter-school industry group, said, “Parents have the right to choose their school and we believe the state should fund students — not buildings or districts.” Charter schools receive about 50 percent less per-student funding than many public districts, he said.

“Why are students leaving their schools to migrate to charter schools?” he asked. “Parents have chosen these schools because they feel they provide better educationa­l outcomes.”

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