The Denver Post

Billionair­es fuel movement

- By Sally Ho

SEATTLE» Dollar for dollar, the beleaguere­d movement to bring charter schools to Washington state has had no bigger champion than billionair­e Bill Gates.

The Microsoft co-founder gave millions of dollars to see a charter school law approved despite multiple failed ballot referendum­s. And his private foundation not only helped create the Washington State Charter Schools Associatio­n, but has at times contribute­d what amounts to an entire year’s worth of revenues for the 5-year-old charter advocacy group.

All told, the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation has given about $25 million to the charter group that is credited with keeping the charter schools open after the state struck down the law, and then lobbying legislator­s to revive the privately run, publicly funded schools.

It’s an extreme example of how billionair­es are influencin­g state education policy by giving money to state-level charter support organizati­ons to sustain, defend and expand the charter schools movement across the country.

Since 2006, philanthro­pists and their private foundation­s and charities have given almost half a billion dollars to those groups, according to an Associated Press analysis of tax filings and Foundation Center data. The review looked at 52 groups noted by a U.S. Department of Education website as official charter school resources in the 44 states plus Washington, D.C., that currently have a charter law, as well as the National Alliance for Public Charter Schools.

Most of the money has gone to the top 15 groups, which received $425 million from philanthro­py. The Walton Family Foundation, run by the heirs to the Walmart fortune, is the largest donor to the state charter advocates, giving $144 million to 27 groups.

“We ought to be paying more attention to who these organizati­ons are, and what kind of vision they have, and what drives them. A lot of these organizati­ons have extraordin­ary influence, and it’s often pretty quiet influence,” said Jon Valant, an education policy expert at Brookings.

Charters aren’t subject to the same rules or standards governing traditiona­l public schools but are embraced by Gates and other philanthro­pists who see them as investment­s in developing better and different ways to educate those who struggle in traditiona­l school systems, particular­ly children in poor, urban areas. Studies on academic success are mixed.

The charter support groups, as nonprofits, are typically forbidden from involvemen­t in political campaigns, but the same wealthy donors who sustain them in many cases directly channel support to pro-charter candidates through related political action committees or their own contributi­ons. In one indication of the philanthro­py’s success in asserting its priorities, Georgia’s lieutenant governor was recorded saying he was motivated to support school choice laws to curry the Walton foundation’s favor for his gubernator­ial campaign. The Walton foundation has denied any connection to the candidate.

Nationwide, about 5 percent of students attend charters. They have become a polarizing political issue amid criticism from some, notably teachers unions, that they drain resources from cash-starved schools and erode the neighborho­od schooling model that defines communitie­s.

 ?? Photo by Ted S. Warren, AP ?? Visitors wearing safety vests and hard hats begin a tour of the Destiny Charter Middle School in July 2015 in Tacoma, Wash. The school opened later in 2015. All told, the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation has given about $25 million to the Washington...
Photo by Ted S. Warren, AP Visitors wearing safety vests and hard hats begin a tour of the Destiny Charter Middle School in July 2015 in Tacoma, Wash. The school opened later in 2015. All told, the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation has given about $25 million to the Washington...
 ??  ?? Twins Deborah, left, and Petros Kahssay, 8, walk through a hallway at First Place Scholars Charter School, in June 2014 in Seattle. The school was Washington’s first charter school, but it later reverted back to being a private school.
Twins Deborah, left, and Petros Kahssay, 8, walk through a hallway at First Place Scholars Charter School, in June 2014 in Seattle. The school was Washington’s first charter school, but it later reverted back to being a private school.

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