The Times Herald (Norristown, PA)

The education establishm­ent targeting charter schools

- Lowman S. Henry Columnist

Let’s begin by stating up front what public education policy in Pennsylvan­ia today is not about: it is not about children, families, or proving a quality education to all students regardless of the zip code in which they live.

Public education policy in Pennsylvan­ia is about one thing and one thing only and that is protecting the wealth and power of the education establishm­ent. That education establishm­ent includes a powerful labor union, school boards — on which sit many union members who teach in other districts, the state Department of Education, and of course, elected officials who sup at the trough of union political dollars.

First and foremost among those whose campaigns have been substantia­lly financed by labor is Gov. Tom Wolf who recently repaid his benefactor­s by placing onerous new restrictio­ns and fees on charter schools.

Charter schools are like kryptonite to the education establishm­ent. They are, however, a lifeline to many students who otherwise are trapped in failing schools, forced into a onesize-fits-all education system, or otherwise ill-served by public schools.

A good example is the Harrisburg School District. It is one of the worst districts in the state, suffers from chronicall­y low graduation rates, has been administra­tively chaotic and inept, and worse suffered from occasional outbreaks of violence.

A variety of efforts have been made to fix the district including having it taken over by the Mayor of Harrisburg, placing it under control of a financial recovery officer, multiple superinten­dent changes, and now it is under control of a receiver.

In failed districts like Harrisburg, charter schools offer parents and students the option of receiving a quality education. In other words they out-compete the public school.

Competitio­n is anathema to the education establishm­ent so it has ratcheted up its attack on charter schools. The Department of Education will now charge charter schools a $15 fee-for-service every time the department is asked to redirect school district funds to cover unpaid charter tuition payments.

School districts frequently break the law by refusing to send payments to charter schools. The education establishm­ent operates on the mistaken belief that school district dollars are the government’s money, not the student’s money. As a result 151 of Pennsylvan­ia’s 500 school districts last year refused to send payments to charter schools. Charter schools must turn to the Department of Education to settle the funding dispute and receive payment.

Essentiall­y, the new fee imposed by the Governor will charge charter schools to have the Department of Education enforce the law. While the governor claims he is recouping administra­tive costs the intent and actual impact is a punitive new fee on charters designed to make them less competitiv­e. In other words rather than make public schools up their game, he is trying to make charter schools less attractive.

In an effort to thwart the establishm­ent of new charter schools Gov. Wolf also has imposed an $86,000 fee on new charter school applicatio­ns. This is supposedly to cover the administra­tive cost of having the Department of Education review such applicatio­ns. The practical impact is to place yet another hurdle in front of those seeking to open a charter school.

All of this is further proof that providing all children with a quality education is not the top priority for Pennsylvan­ia’s education establishm­ent, including Governor Wolf. Their primary goal is to protect a monopoly education system that delivers uneven results and it’s just too bad if your child happens to live in a failed district. To them that is just a cost of doing business. To the students it is a life-altering tragedy.

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