The Oklahoman

Audit is a ‘personally motivated’ attack

Santa Fe South super says he was blindsided

- Nuria Martinez-Keel

An Oklahoma City charter school leader said an investigat­ive audit ordered for his schools is an unwarrante­d attack.

Chris Brewster said he was blindsided Monday night when Oklahoma City Public Schools requested a state audit of Santa Fe South Charter Schools, where he is superinten­dent.

The Oklahoma City Brewster school district has autho

rized Santa Fe South’s charter contract for 19 years. Brewster said district officials have never approached him about financial concerns, including in the days leading up to the audit request.

“This is what infuriates me,” Brewster said. “If it wasn’t personally motivated, then they should have had the profession­al courtesy to reach out and ask us about this. It can only be personally motivated at this point.”

Oklahoma City schools declined to comment for this story.

The district school board voted unanimousl­y to ask the Oklahoma State Auditor and Inspector’s Office to audit

Santa Fe South’s finances from the 201819 and 2019-20 school years and “any other years deemed necessary.”

Auditors will also review whether Santa Fe South followed state law.

The school board made the request after Santa Fe South’s financial practices came into question on Friday during an Oklahoma State Board of Education meeting.

Santa Fe South encompasse­s seven charter schools in south Oklahoma City and has more than 3,500 students.

Brewster said the school district might have pushed for the audit out of ill will. Santa Fe South will stop working on a charter through school district and will have begin a contract with Oklahoma City Community College in July, meaning the district will no longer collect 3% of Santa Fe South’s state funds as an administra­tion fee.

Brewster is also the president of the Oklahoma Public Charter School Associatio­n, which reached a landmark lawsuit settlement last month with the Oklahoma State Board of Education. The state board agreed to allow charter schools access to local tax revenue, an income stream previously reserved for traditiona­l school districts.

Districts across the state, including Oklahoma City, are challengin­g the controvers­ial settlement in court, arguing it could cut their funding deeply.

“It looks to me like the loss of control, revenue and the ability to keep us from expanding has created in (Oklahoma City schools) a desire for a response, and it seems to be capricious in nature,” Brewster said.

Santa Fe South came under scrutiny last week when the Oklahoma State Department of Education’s general counsel, Brad Clark, outlined concerns about the charter system’s relationsh­ip with its nonprofit, Santa Fe South Developmen­t Corp.

While speaking to the state Board of Education on Friday, Clark questioned a $300,000 loan the nonprofit gave at 0% interest to Sovereign Community School , a struggling charter school in Oklahoma City. Sovereign, a school designed to serve Native American students, received the funds in May.

Brewster said the Oklahoma City district prohibited Santa Fe South from absorbing Sovereign into its charter network and from giving the loan directly from school accounts.

Instead, the nonprofit made the $300,000 loan, which Brewster described as a “tiny, miniscule” fraction of its expenses.

Santa Fe South Developmen­t Corp. reported $4.85 million in revenue and $4.6 million in expenses in 2019, public records show. Nearly all of its revenue comes from Santa Fe South schools.

The schools pay rent to the nonprofit, which in turn manages the schools’ real estate debt and pays for facility upkeep, Brewster said.

Clark questioned whether such a loan is allowable. Oklahoma law forbids public schools from giving their state funds to another district.

Clark described the nonprofit as a “pass-through entity” designed to move school dollars. He also was critical of an unexplaine­d $421,000 management fee that appeared in the nonprofit’s tax forms.

Brewster said attorneys reviewed and approved the terms of the loan. He said Clark never informed Santa Fe South that its financial practices or nonprofit presented legal issues.

Clark disputed that claim in a statement to The Oklahoman.

“Mr. Brewster was present for multiple State Board of Education meetings where concerns about Santa Fe South’s taking-over of Sovereign Community School were addressed by state board members,” Clark said. “These concerns included the lending of money by Santa Fe South to an insolvent Sovereign and when loan documents were requested, they were only provided months later.”

Clark also noted Brewster is both the superinten­dent of Santa Fe South and the president of the nonprofit. Brewster said this arrangemen­t is ideal to ensure the nonprofit is in line with the school’s needs and mission.

He disagreed with comparison­s to Epic Charter Schools, another major charter system that faced an investigat­ive audit.

Epic co-founder David Chaney served as both the school superinten­dent and co-owner of the for-profit company that manages the virtual charter school system. State legislatio­n in 2019 blocked Chaney from continuing in both roles.

Acting as president of a nonprofit is completely different from owning a company that makes money from a school, Brewster said.

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