The Signal

Charter school OK’d for SCV at former church site

- By Caleb Lunetta Signal Staff Writer

A new charter school is coming to Agua Dulce, after the state Board of Education approved its petition earlier this month against the recommenda­tion of local, county and state educationa­l officials.

The new charter school, named Eagle Collegiate Academy, is set to open its doors for the first time in fall 2021, per a condition of its state approval. The school, according to ECA founder Ogo Okoye-Johnson, is set to offer students from the Santa Clarita, Antelope and San Fernando valleys an Internatio­nal Baccalaure­ate program.

“It’s an Internatio­nal Baccalaure­ate pre-K8-college prep school,” said Okoye-Johnson, in reference to the new charter school. “We’re going to open with (prekinderg­arten to third grade) and then add grade levels as we go.”

The school is scheduled to provide the IB program, as well as

Spanish and Korean as languages, according to the school’s website.

Okoye-Johnson said she and her board were elated upon hearing the news that the state Board of Education approved the petition. The road to receiving such an approval had been an uphill battle for the proponents of ECA, and included more than one denial from the ActonAgua Dulce Union School District. The school is slated to open on the 13000 block of Sierra Highway, at the location of the former Tony Alamo Christian Church site, which falls within AADUSD’s boundaries.

On Sept. 26, 2019, the petitioner­s submitted their position to the AADUSD board, but on Nov. 14, 2019, the

petition was formally denied with a 5-0 vote.

During the Oct. 30, 2019, board meeting, AADUSD board President Ken Pfalzgraf said it was his concern that the school wouldn’t be able to remain financiall­y solvent if they could not keep up with their proposed average daily attendance — an important baseline for determinin­g a school’s future funding level from the state.

At the time of the school’s latest petition, a clause in the state’s charter school laws allowed schools denied by their local governing board to submit their petition to the Los Angeles County Department of Education. If denied there, they could then take it to the state Board of Education.

That law has changed as of Jan. 1 of this year, with the power largely shifting back to the local boards to decide on whether a charter is

approved. However, according to state officials, since the ECA petition was filed before the law change, they were allowed to advance their appeal to the AADUSD denial.

ECA officials submitted their petition to the county Nov. 25, 2019, and were subsequent­ly denied by the Los Angeles County Board of Education. ECA then submitted their petition to the state Board of Education on Jan. 27.

The officials at the California Department of Education recommende­d to the state board that the request to establish be denied.

“The CDE finds that the ECA petition is not consistent with sound educationa­l practice, and that the petitioner is demonstrab­ly unlikely to implement the program set forth in the ECA petition due to an unrealisti­c financial and operationa­l plan, including aggressive enrollment assumption­s

and a budget plan that is reliant on meeting the aggressive enrollment projection­s,” reads the agenda item for the board’s July 2020 meeting.

Ultimately, the state Board of Education went against the recommenda­tions of CDE staff and approved the charter. Officials from the state board had not returned requests for comment as of the publicatio­n of this article explaining their reasoning for going against staff recommenda­tions.

When asked about the recommenda­tions that questioned the programmin­g, Okoye-Johnson instead discussed a previous concern about the location, which she said was, by statute, not a reason for denying the petition.

For more informatio­n about Eagle Collegiate Academy, visit https://www. eaglecolle­giateacade­my. org/.

 ?? Bobby Block/The Signal ?? Eagle Collegiate Academy founder Ogo OkoyeJohns­on is spearheadi­ng efforts to open a charter school on the former site of Tony Alamo’s church.
Bobby Block/The Signal Eagle Collegiate Academy founder Ogo OkoyeJohns­on is spearheadi­ng efforts to open a charter school on the former site of Tony Alamo’s church.

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