The Oklahoman

Epic Charter Schools hit with new $10.5M penalty

Spending reports above limits, cost accounting out of compliance

- Andrea Eger

Epic Charter Schools has been hit with another big financial penalty by the Oklahoma State Department of Education.

For the second year in a row, education officials say Epic’s own spending reports to the state reflect administra­tive costs well above statutory limits for all public schools and the school remains out of compliance with mandatory school cost accounting.

The state’s largest school system was notified in a Wednesday letter that it is being assessed penalties totaling at least $10.5 million over the remainder of the fiscal year ending June 30 for both its schools, Epic One-on-One and Epic Blended Learning Centers.

These new penalties for Epic Charter Schools are separate from the $11.2 million the state Board of Education voted to demand in October after an investigat­ive audit by the Oklahoma State Auditor and Inspector identified chronicall­y excessive administra­tive overhead costs and inaccurate cost accounting.

Epic’s governing board has voted to hire a new school finance chief and internal auditor and passed several resolution­s committing to overhauls in the school’s finances.

But simultaneo­usly, Epic school officials have continued to dispute some of the details in the state’s forensic audit findings and have yet to repay the education department the $11.2 million that was to be clawed back for reported errors in previous years.

When asked, State schools Superinten­dent Joy Hofmeister explained the lion’s share of Epic’s new administra­tive cost penalties, $10.2 million, are the result of the school system’s lack of compliance with the requiremen­ts of a new law.

Sponsored by Rep. Sheila Dills, RTulsa, House Bill 1395 was intended to create transparen­cy to ensure schools that contract with outside companies for their management are not diverting dollars away from students on more administra­tive overhead costs than allowed by law.

It requires schools with outside management organizati­ons to provide the state with itemized, rather than estimated, expenditur­e informatio­n.

The state of Oklahoma’s forensic audit already found that Epic Charter Schools did not provide an accurate accounting of actual costs for its forprofit charter school management company, Epic Youth Services (EYS), in Fiscal Year 2019.

According to state calculatio­ns, the Epic school system’s administra­tive costs for Fiscal Year 2020 were $20,781,968 total, well above the maximum 5% of expenditur­es allowed by law — which would have been $10,556,921 total in Epic’s case.

By contract with both Epic schools, EYS takes a 10% cut of every dollar, which state education officials say was confirmed by statements in Epic’s Fiscal Year 2020 audits.

But education officials found despite $211.1 million in combined total expenditur­es, Epic school officials certified to the state just $278,000 in EYS management fees as administra­tive

“Despite repeated requests beginning in September of 2020 and continuing over the course of months, Epic has not provided informatio­n to validate the accuracy of the certified informatio­n related to the consulting and management services of EYS.” Joy Hofmeister state schools superinten­dent

costs of the school system.

“As part of determinin­g public school administra­tive costs, HB 1395 requires schools with a management company to itemize and accurately report their administra­tive services expenditur­es to OSDE. In year one of this new law, Epic did not comply, whereas others have been able to comply and provide proper documentat­ion,” Hofmeister told the Tulsa World, in a written respons.

“Despite repeated requests beginning in September of 2020 and continuing over the course of months, Epic has not provided informatio­n to validate the accuracy of the certified informatio­n related to the consulting and management services of EYS.”

Law enforcemen­t officials probing Epic’s handling of hundreds of millions of Oklahoma taxpayer dollars over the last decade have filed public court records indicating EYS has made millionair­es of Epic co-founders Ben Harris and David Chaney. That investigat­ion is ongoing.

Additional­ly, Epic’s monthly state aid payments for April were reduced by 1%, or about $280,000 for remaining out of compliance with the Oklahoma Cost Accounting System for public schools. By law, the Education Department could continue to assess such a penalty monthly, up to 5%.

Asked for comment, Epic Assistant Superinten­dent Shelly Hickman, said: “We are in the process of reviewing the assessment. Our school and our board are working to bring additional transparen­cy to our operations in the interest of serving our 60,000 kids and their families. They remain our focus.”

Records showing state aid penalties for administra­tive cost overages being assessed on 13 other school districts in Oklahoma of amounts ranging from $200 to $52,478, for a combined total of about $148,200.

Such penalties are deducted from each school’s monthly state aid payment and then distribute­d through the state aid formula to public school districts that have not been penalized for their use of taxpayer dollars.

Epic’s penalty for reporting administra­tive cost overages at Epic One-onOne in FY2019 was $530,527.

 ?? BRYAN TERRY ?? Epic Charter Schools was hit with another big penalty from the Oklahoma State Department of Education this week.
BRYAN TERRY Epic Charter Schools was hit with another big penalty from the Oklahoma State Department of Education this week.

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