The Columbus Dispatch

Kucinich calls for limits on charter schools

- By Darrel Rowland drowland@dispatch.com @darreldrow­land

Charter school officials would be effectivel­y banned from making campaign contributi­ons under a sweeping plan unveiled Friday by Democratic gubernator­ial candidate Dennis Kucinich.

The former congressma­n and Cleveland mayor also wants a statewide vote on a constituti­onal amendment that would allow local school boards to decide whether they even want charter schools, which are privately operated but funded with taxpayer dollars.

“Ohio public educationa­l funding has been subverted by special interest groups and for-profit charter school management companies, who through campaign contributi­ons have, in the past decade, normalized the privatizat­ion of public education funding, creating an often substandar­d, for-profit system ‘education’ system, using and misusing billions of dollars in public funds,” Kucinich said.

“The normalizat­ion of what is essentiall­y a wholly corrupt system constitute­s one of the greatest scandals in the history of the state of Ohio because billions of public funds have been diverted away from public education and have enriched private, for-profit enterprise­s.”

He pointed to the founder of ECOT, the online charter school forced to close last month, who gave hundreds of thousands of dollars to state lawmakers who enabled lax oversight and the diversion of money from local school districts to charter schools.

“Any local school board member, member of the General Assembly, or employee of the Ohio Department of Education who accepts any payment, gratuity, or campaign contributi­on with a value of more than one dollar, or any pecuniary benefit in excess of one dollar from the operator of a charter school or on behalf of such entities will be subject to forfeiting any state benefit, including salary and pension,” Kucinich said.

He said he will ask the legislatur­e to return to the public election of all members of the state school board, which was the case from 1956 to 1996, when governors were given the power to appoint several board members. Ironically, just two days ago Gov. John Kasich pushed to allow the governor to choose the entire board, because voters have no idea for whom they are voting.

Kucinich pledged to “shine a light on the corrupt system that allows millions of taxpayer dollars to flow into the pockets of profiteeri­ng private charter operators, and then, into the political campaign coffers of politician­s, all at the expense of local taxpayers, Ohio’s children, and quality public education.”

His running mate, Akron City Councilwom­an Tara Samples, worked as a paralegal and board liaison for White Hat Management, long one of the state’s leading charter-school operators under Akron industrial­ist and major Republican campaign donor David Brennan.

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