The Signal

County staff recommends denial of charter school

Decision on Albert Einstein Academy to be determined today at board meeting

- By Christina Cox Signal Staff Writer

After another lengthy round of petitions, interviews and campus visits, staff from the Los Angeles County of Education is recommendi­ng that the Los Angeles County Board of Education deny a charter petition appeal submitted by Santa Clarita’s Albert Einstein Academy of Letters, Arts and Sciences.

The decision on Einstein, which serves students in grades 7 to 12, will be officially determined at the Board of Education’s meeting today.

“As expected they recommende­d that the Board deny our appeal,” Albert Einstein Chief Executive Officer Maggie Ford said. “This decision was expected and we have been preparing our response for many weeks.”

According to a 32-page staff report on the charter’s five-year renewal petition, the county superinten­dent and the district staff recommende­d a denial based on past performanc­e, Education Code and the California Code of Regulation­s.

County education staff reported that Albert Einstein presents an unsound educationa­l program for students to be enrolled in the school, is unlikely to successful­ly implement the proposed educationa­l program and does not provide a reasonably comprehens­ive descriptio­n of all required elements in a charter school petition.

The final decision is expected to come nearly one month after the school’s public hearing with the County Board of Education on April 18 and a little

more than two months after the William S. Hart Union High School District’s denial of the charter renewal on March 1.

Concerns

Staff from the Los Angeles County of Education agreed with the same issues raised by the Hart Governing Board, according to an agenda item for Tuesday’s meeting.

These reasons include: concerns regarding the school’s racial and ethnic balance, performanc­e among all student groups, unrealisti­c financial and operationa­l plans, delinquent audits and a lack of transparen­cy with the school’s involvemen­t with the larger Charter Management Organizati­on (CMO) AEALAS Inc.

Ford said the report created by LACOE is meant to dig deep and thoroughly into the school’s academics, operations and finances, but that it does not tell the whole story of the charter school.

“It is our job to tell the rest of the story,” CEO Ford said. “Our school is an academical­ly rigorous, operationa­lly sound and financiall­y solvent organizati­on. We are a safe haven for all students and have a dedicated and highly qualified staff.”

Ford said Albert Einstein staff are preparing a rebuttal to the report and are “confident” that they will be successful in their rebuttal before the Los Angeles County Board of Education. She also believes they will be successful in seeking renewal.

If denied by the LACOE Governing Board, however, it is unknown yet whether Albert Einstein officials will appeal the decision to the State Board of Education.

Proposed denial

According to LACOE, the board can deny a charter appeal if it creates written factual findings to support one of more grounds for denial and to highlight the charter’s failure to meet criteria in the Education Code.

County staff cited concerns about the school’s past performanc­e in academics, finances and operations.

In regards to academics, the report stated that the school’s successes in student achievemen­t are not equal across all student groups with achievemen­t gaps among different ethnic groups.

LACOE also noted that Albert Einstein’s demographi­cs do not mirror those of the Hart District, serving fewer low income and English Learner students, as well as having fewer students with disabiliti­es in their school.

County staff members had concerns that there were no English Language Developmen­t program, no special education program and no comprehens­ive descriptio­ns of student interventi­on measures.

LACOE staff also noted many concerns with the finances, both past and present, of Albert Einstein.

“Over the past few years, the authorizin­g district has noted Einstein has not complied with the terms of its charter or legal requiremen­ts, including the failure to complete its 2013-14 and 2014-15 annual audits by the statutory deadline,” the report read.

These financial concerns include negative net assets, a lack of appropriat­e fiscal policies relating to intercompa­ny dealings, delinquent audits and outstandin­g loans and settlement­s.

of Education the following week. LACOE

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