The Morning Journal (Lorain, OH)

Audit: Online school inflated time students spent learning

- By Julie Carr Smyth

Ohio’s thenlarges­t online charter school may have broken the law by withholdin­g informatio­n used in calculatin­g payments and inflated the amount of time students spent learning, the state auditor said Thursday.

The now-shuttered Electronic Classroom of Tomorrow also didn’t deduct time the students were inactive online and didn’t properly document whether students were learning during times the company claimed for payment, according to the report from Republican Auditor David Yost.

“ECOT officials had the ability to provide honest, accurate informatio­n to the state and they chose not to,” Yost said.

Yost said that withholdin­g informatio­n and misleading state education regulators could represent criminal fraud. He has referred the audit’s findings to the FBI, the U.S. Attorney, the Franklin County prosecutor and the U.S. Department of Education’s inspector general.

Republican­s’ handling of the now-shuttered charter school, which has given generously to GOP candidates, is a key campaign issue for Ohio Democrats this fall. Yost won the Republican primary Tuesday in the race for attorney general.

An attorney representi­ng ECOT didn’t immediatel­y return a phone message seeking comment. The school, which closed in January, has previously alleged the state engaged in a conspiracy to show the school had been overpaid.

The Ohio Department of Education has sought about $80 million in repayments from ECOT through its last two attendance reviews — $60 million for the 2015-2016 school year and $19 million for the 2016-2017 school year. Yost said he now suspects ECOT owes Ohio taxpayers much more.

Yost’s audit, covering the school’s finances for 2016-2017, also said three private companies affiliated with ECOT should return $250,000 spent on an ad campaign attacking state lawmakers and the state Education Department for seeking the repayments. The companies said in a joint response that none of the parties involved were ECOT employees and none of the money spent was directly linked to ECOT.

The audit incorporat­ed input from a former ECOT technology employee who told The Associated Press that ECOT officials had ordered staff to manipulate data gathered using ActivTrak software installed in 2016 to reach desired outcomes.

ECOT’s former spokesman told the AP at the time that most allegation­s against ECOT were “madeup, ridiculous attempts to abuse a corpse.”

Yost called ActivTrak the “smoking gun” and said that they can now prove ECOT submitted false informatio­n to get paid more.

“For the first time, we have evidence that... ECOT hid the truth beneath meaningles­s and unreliable informatio­n, fake proof that ODE inexplicab­ly accepted,” he said.

Yost said the whistleblo­wer didn’t tell state auditors anything they didn’t already know when he first came to the office in May. The auditor said state investigat­ors needed to build a strong case before turning the allegation­s over to prosecutor­s.

Former U.S. Attorney Steve Dettelbach, who’s running against Yost in November’s attorney general race, rejected Yost’s .

“That is not even close to accurate. That’s not even in the stratosphe­re of how it happens,” he said. “As a federal prosecutor for 20 years, I know fraud cases don’t get better with age.”

Yost faulted the state Education Department, which handled the review of ECOT’s attendance data, for not doing more and for accepting what he said were “watered down, blanked out spreadshee­ts.”

Spokeswoma­n Brittany Halpin said that the Education Department “repeatedly questioned and subsequent­ly rejected portions of ECOT’s data.”

“No one has held ECOT more accountabl­e for the education of students than the Department of Education, and our work to return approximat­ely $80 million to Ohio’s taxpayers continues,” she said.

Yost’s office had planned to release the audit May 1. The office attributed the delay to waiting for updated financials reflecting the school’s closure and spending on the $250,000 ad campaign, and other data that’s part of the investigat­ion.

That period also included Tuesday’s primary election.

Democratic gubernator­ial nominee Richard Cordray called the audit the latest attempt by Republican­s “to whitewash their ECOT scandal.” ECOT’s owner, Bill Lager, has donated generously over the years to GOP campaigns, including to Yost.

“They willfully looked the other way as a billion of our taxpayer dollars went to a politicall­y-connected for-profit charter school instead of to educating Ohio students,” Cordray said.

Yost said contributo­rs only get “good government” when they donate to him. “Bill Lager’s been getting lots and lots of good government from my office, and I don’t think he likes it very much.”

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