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ProPublica: NY State Official Raises Alarm on Charter Schools — And Gets Ignored
Every negative story on charters school scams helps a bit. Just like the Teach for America (Campaign Against Teach for America is Working) exposures have hurt their recruitment efforts, eventually some scandal or outrage will be so great there will be such serious calls for reforms and restrictions even the political scum that support charters will start running away.
A top official in the New York State
Comptroller’s Office has urged regulators to require more transparency
on charter-school finances. The response has been, well, nonexistent.
by Marian Wang ProPublica, Dec. 16, 2014, 3:13 p.m.
New York State's First
Deputy Comptroller Pete Grannis, shown in April 2010, has contacted
regulatory agencies and the mayor's office about charter-school finances
and says he has gotten "no response whatsoever." (Mike Groll/AP Images)Add another voice to those warning about the lack of financial
oversight for charter schools. One of New York state's top fiscal
monitors told ProPublica that audits by his office have found "practices
that are questionable at best, illegal at worst" at some charter
schools. Pete Grannis, New York State's First Deputy Comptroller, contacted
ProPublica after reading our story last week about how some charter
schools have turned over nearly all their public funds
and significant control to private, often for-profit firms that handle
their day-to-day operations. The arrangements can limit the ability of
auditors and charter-school regulators to follow how public money is
spent – especially when the firms refuse to divulge financial details
when asked.
Such setups are a real problem, Grannis said. And the way
he sees it, there's a very simple solution. As a condition for agreeing
to approve a new charter school or renew an existing one, charter
regulators could require schools and their management companies to agree
to provide any and all financial records related to the school. "Clearly, the need for fiscal oversight of charter schools has intensified," he wrote in a letter to New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio
last week. "Put schools on notice that relevant financial records
cannot be shielded from oversight bodies of state and local governmental
entities." It's a plea that Grannis has made before. Last year, he sent a similar letter to the state's major charter-school regulators – New York City's Department of Education, the New York State Education Department, and the State University of New York. He never heard back from any of them. "No response whatsoever,"
Grannis said. Not even, he added, a "'Thank you for your letter, we'll
look into it.' That would have been the normal bureaucratic response." We contacted all three of these agencies and the mayor's office for comment. None of them got back to us. The charter-school debate in New York, as elsewhere, is politically
fraught. De Blasio's cautious stance on charters has put him at odds with New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo, whose financial backers include some big-dollar charter-school supporters. The state comptroller's office has faced repeated lawsuits from charter groups and operators challenging its authority to audit charter schools. To Grannis, though, his efforts aren't about politics. His office is
"agnostic on charters," as he put it. His office also audits the
finances of traditional public-school districts, he pointed out. "We're the fiscal monitors. We watch over the use or misuse of public
funds," Grannis said. "This isn't meant to be anti-charter. Our job is
not to be pro or anti." Grannis has not yet gotten a response from the mayor's office about the letter he sent last week. As to the charter-school regulators who got his letter the year
before? He's still puzzled why they wouldn't be more interested in a
possible fix, or why the charter regulators never bothered to respond. "I honestly don't know," Grannis said. He said he's going to send another round of letters to them. Related coverage: Read about how some charter schools "sweep" nearly all their public dollars directly into private firms, or our piece on how a chain of charter schools is channeling millions of public education dollars to for-profit companies controlled by the schools' founder. If you have information about charter schools and their profits or oversight — or any other tips — email us at charters@propublica.org.
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