New York Post

Biden is no charter pal, advocates fear

A union-controlled Biden Education Department could have a chilling effect. — Jeanne Allen (right), chief executive of the Center for Education Reform

- By EMILY JACOBS

Charter-school advocates may not have an ally in President-elect Joe Biden or his Education Department.

Becky Pringle, president of the National Education Associatio­n — the nation’s largest teachers union, which historical­ly has fought charters — told The Wall Street Journal: “He has been working closely with us over these last few months to listen and understand what the issues are that we are facing in this moment. We know we have a partner.”

Unlike President Barack Obama, who showed deference to the rise of charter schools and support for school choice, Biden has called for a ban on federal funding for charter schools that are operated by forprofit companies, which account for 12 percent of charter schools, according to the National Alliance for Public Charter Schools.

He also pledged, as part of the Biden-Sanders Unity Task Force, to “support measures to increase accountabi­lity for charter schools.”

“We will call for conditioni­ng federal funding for new, expanded charter schools or for charter school renewals on a district’s review of whether the charter will systematic­ally underserve the neediest students,” the task force’s platform read.

The position has sparked worry among parents and school-choice advocates representi­ng such students.

“The data is consistent­ly clear that nonprofit public charter schools, particular­ly in our urban communitie­s that serve our African American and Latino students, have performed well. For that reason, there’s also very strong support among African American and Latino parents for charter schools,” Shavar Jeffries, president of Democrats for Education Reform, told the Journal.

Jeanne Allen, chief executive of the Center for Education Reform, told the paper, “I absolutely am deeply concerned that a union-controlled Biden Education Department could have a chilling effect on the progress that the states and parents have made in securing educationa­l options and excellence for the kids.”

School choice has been a priority under President Trump and Education Secretary Betsy DeVos.

“Frankly, school choice is the civilright­s statement of the year, of the decade and probably beyond because all children have to have access to quality education,” Trump said in June.

Biden, meanwhile, said during last year’s primary that his issue with charter schools was that they “siphon off money for our public schools.”

In a statement on the Trump administra­tion’s current school policies, an Education Department spokespers­on said, “There is no one less powerful and more marginaliz­ed than the student trapped in a failing, government-assigned school with no way out.”

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