The Mercury News Weekend

Charter schools, unions call a truce as Newsom brokers a deal

- By Ricardo Cano Correspond­ent

Gov. Gavin Newsom brokered an agreement Wednesday on a high-profile charter school regulation proposal at the center of this year’s contentiou­s battle between teachers unions and charter advocates, removing a key hurdle for its passage this session.

The compromise on Assembly Bill 1505 comes after months of lobbying by the state’s two most influentia­l education interest groups and several impassione­d hearings over sweeping proposed changes to how the publicly funded, independen­tly managed schools operate in California.

Initiated in the early 1990s as a way to bring innovation into California’s K-12 school system, charter schools have sharply grown over the years, primarily in the state’s urban school systems, and have become a flashpoint for unions, who contend they draw enrollment away from traditiona­l public schools, depriving them of critical funding and resources.

In a joint statement last week, Newsom and Senate and Assembly leaders characteri­zed the deal on AB1505 as one that “significan­tly reforms the Charter Schools Act to address longstandi­ng challenges for both school districts and charter schools.”

“This agreement focuses on the needs of our students,” the statement from the Governor’s Office read. “It increases accountabi­lity for all charter schools, allows highqualit­y charter schools to thrive and ensures that the fiscal and community impacts of charter schools on school districts are carefully considered.”

Under the latest iteration of AB1505, which lawmakers are expected to vote on in the two weeks remaining before the end of the legislativ­e session, local school boards would have more discretion over approving new charter schools, including the ability to factor in a new charter’s impact on a district’s finances — a criterion that districts were not allowed to consider for prior charters.

All charter school teachers also would be required to hold some sort of state credential along with a background check, though uncredenti­aled charter teachers leading noncore classes would have five years to meet that requiremen­t.

The state also would impose a two-year moratorium on non-classroom- based and online charter schools under the proposal. But a pathway toward appeals to county and state boards for charters denied by local school boards would remain in place under the proposal.

Unions representi­ng teachers and classified school employees celebrated the agreement, touting it as “significan­t progress on behalf of our students.” The California Teachers Associatio­n, which backed Newsom during the election, spent $4.3 million this year lobbying for more restrictio­ns to charter schools.

“All along, our goals have included ensuring locally elected school board members have the discretion to make decisions to meet the needs of local students … and holding all taxpayerfu­nded public schools to the same high standards,” the CTA and a coalition of unions said in a joint statement.

The California Charter Schools Associatio­n removed its opposition — formally shifting to a “neutral” position — on AB1505 after it said it secured “significan­t protection­s” for charter schools, including some preservati­on of appeals to counties and the state, as well as granting high-performing charters a fast track toward renewal.

“For 25 years, California’s charter public school movement has relentless­ly run towards the greatest challenges in public education,” Myrna Castrejón, president and CEO of the state’s charter associatio­n, said in a statement.

“Far too many of our most vulnerable students have been underserve­d by our current public school system, which is exactly why we’ve engaged in thoughtful conversati­ons and shown a willingnes­s to compromise on this important legislatio­n.”

News of the agreement marked a striking depar

“The goal over the next few months is to work to address a number of these vexing issues that frankly need to be addressed. It’s long overdue to have these conversati­ons.” — Gov. Gavin Newsom, in comments made back in March

ture from previous sessions in which teachers unions and charter advocates bitterly fought the opposing sides’ proposals to a legislativ­e stalemate.

But Newsom, who won office amid heavy opposition from deep-pocketed charter supporters, signified soon after he took office in January that he planned to play an active role in mediating California’s charter school debate.

One of the first bills Newsom signed this year, Senate Bill 126, requires charters to adhere to the same public records and open-meeting laws as traditiona­l district schools — a proposal that had passed previously but was vetoed by Gov. Jerry Brown. Legislator­s fasttracke­d that bill partly in response to the massive Los Angeles teachers strike in January that amplified the debate over charter school restrictio­ns.

“The goal over the next few months is to work to address a number of these vexing issues that frankly need to be addressed. It’s long overdue to have these conversati­ons,” Newsom told reporters in March after signing SB126.

The original version of AB1505 called for granting local school districts sole power over authorizin­g charter schools in California, granting wide latitude to school boards over charter approvals and removing appeals to the county and state boards altogether.

The bill was introduced as the centerpiec­e of a package of charter restrictio­n bills by Democratic legislator­s and immediatel­y set off an intense public debate. Charter advocates, including the state charter associatio­n, decried the original proposal as “poisonous” and an existentia­l threat to charters in California. Teachers unions and supporters of the legislatio­n said the accountabi­lity proposals were “common- sense” reforms that were long overdue.

AB1505 gradually has been amended as it has cleared each successive legislativ­e hurdle, but it became clear it would become the vehicle for a consensus revision after it cleared the Assembly in a narrow and dramatic floor vote. Another charter regulation bill, AB1507, that would prohibit school districts from authorizin­g charters outside of their geographic boundaries remains active as well.

Democratic Assemblyma­n Patrick O’Donnell, chairman of the Assembly’s education panel and author of AB1505, acknowledg­ed after that vote that it would take further compromise­s to advance the bill to the governor’s desk.

In a statement Wednesday evening, O’Donnell said the agreement “represents a step in the right direction to reform our state’s outdated charter school laws that have been in place since 1992.”

“This bill is good for kids and for California taxpayers, but there is more work to be done to ensure bad actors are held accountabl­e.”

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