Charter schools
for the unvaccinated
It’s
inevitable. I am anticipating that very soon one of the many shrewd companies in the
“education reform” business will roll out a chain of charter schools for
unvaccinated kids.
Why should parents have to produce proof of immunization before their little darlings are admitted to public school when they have the “freedom of choice” to send them to a school more consistent with their beliefs.
Why should parents have to produce proof of immunization before their little darlings are admitted to public school when they have the “freedom of choice” to send them to a school more consistent with their beliefs.
If
ever there were two “movements” that are destined for merger, it’s the
anti-vaxxer and the "school choice" mobs.
They
are linked by the belief that personal choice, even when it is not justified
by facts, finances or logic, trumps the public interest.
They are also linked by total indifference to the costs and consequences their choices have on everyone else.
They are also linked by total indifference to the costs and consequences their choices have on everyone else.
Each
group claims the moral high ground, flying the banner of “freedom of choice.”
Yet what they really want is the privilege of making their choice without
consequence or cost to themselves. They expect the rest of us to pick up the
tab.
This
is especially obvious in the so-called “school choice” issue that is so hot in
Rhode Island right now. School choice adherents talk as if they don’t already have a choice when in
fact they do. For as long as we have had public schools, we have also had
private and religious schools.
I had Sister Mary Discipline in 3rd grade |
I ended up doing twelve years of hard time under the tutelage of Sisters of St. Joseph and later, the Brothers of the Sacred Heart.
In
those days, the parish school (long since closed) didn’t charge for the lower grades, but long-gone
Sacred Heart Academy in Central Falls did charge a tuition.
Because of my parents’ choice, I ended up paying for tuition out of my earnings from paper routes, bussing tables at local bingo halls and clerking at the corner drugstore.
Because of my parents’ choice, I ended up paying for tuition out of my earnings from paper routes, bussing tables at local bingo halls and clerking at the corner drugstore.
I'm not going to judge my parents’ choice; right or wrong, they made it. And they made it knowing there were going to be costs and
consequences. Mainly to me.
It’s
no different today. Parents still have the same freedom
of choice. They can even choose
to home school their kids. But the real question behind “school choice” is
not the choice itself, but who pays for it.
The
Chariho School District (Charlestown, Richmond and Hopkinton) has been in a
long-running battle with the Kingston Hill Academy (KHA), refusing to pay to
send Chariho students there because Chariho believes KHA cherry-picks students
and sends special needs kids back to Chariho.
Reliable sources have told me
that this has been a long-standing problem at KHA.
Chariho
Superintendent Barry Ricci escalated his battle when he sought new
legislation in the General Assembly that would allow school districts to refuse
to pay charter schools when those charter schools do not meet or exceed the
standard of education provided at Chariho.
This
attempt – which Superintendent Ricci told me in a January 6 e-mail he will
not repeat – stirred
up a firestorm from the “school choice” people, including a number of Charlestown Citizens Alliance people such as CCA Party School Committee member Donna Chambers.
As amazing as it seems, these charter advocates argued with a straight face that their “right to choose” should be honored with taxpayer money, even if it pays for an inferior education. After all, I suppose, “school choice” includes the right to make taxpayers pay for their terrible choices.
Sometimes this "freedom of choice" argument takes an even more bizarre twist. Take, for example, the position of one anti-vaxxer who argued that making vaccinations mandatory is yet another step along the slippery slope that inevitably leads to forced abortion, forced treatment and forced sterilization. I'm not making this up.
As amazing as it seems, these charter advocates argued with a straight face that their “right to choose” should be honored with taxpayer money, even if it pays for an inferior education. After all, I suppose, “school choice” includes the right to make taxpayers pay for their terrible choices.
Sometimes this "freedom of choice" argument takes an even more bizarre twist. Take, for example, the position of one anti-vaxxer who argued that making vaccinations mandatory is yet another step along the slippery slope that inevitably leads to forced abortion, forced treatment and forced sterilization. I'm not making this up.
Chariho’s
fight with Kingston Hill goes back at least to 2009 when, according to a sworn
statement by Superintendent Ricci, KHA’s principal admitted that KHA would not
spend the money to hire a physical therapist and thus would not accept
handicapped students whose education plan included physical therapy.
Later,
Superintendent Ricci noted there is no sworn statement from KHA disputing
his sworn statement. Click here to read the materials Superintendent Ricci submitted to the state.
I think that's Gist on the right. This photo comes from her LinkedIn page. She's outta here soon, heading for OK. |
Gist also appointed
her General Counsel David Abbott to the role of “special visitor” to examine
the validity of Ricci’s charges against KHA with predictable results.
Abbott’s
report, submitted to Gist on October 27, 2014, went badly for Ricci. Click here to read that report.
Abbott
reported no evidence to support the claims Ricci had made of earlier
discrimination by KHA against disabled children, noting that even if he did, “none
of the three allegations is dispositive,” given the age of the incidents.
Abbott reports that he now finds KHA to be in compliance with the law.
Having
lost his fight with Kingston Hill, Superintendent Ricci asked to Chariho School
Committee to add
$53,745 to the upcoming year’s budget to pay for five more kids to go to
Kingston Hill.
There are currently 27 Chariho students at KHA, ten from
Charlestown. Click here for enrollment
breakdowns. The stats show a total of 87 Chariho students enrolled in five
different charter schools; 35 are from Charlestown.
Ricci lost his battle with KHA when charter school fan Deborah Gist
ruled against him and when he couldn’t come up with parents willing to speak up
about KHA discrimination.
But
that is hardly a vindication for KHA – the verdict is not exactly “not
guilty,” but more like “not proven.” Nor is it a vindication of charter
schools.
Public
education is one of the cornerstones of our civil society. We need the best
possible public schools we can create. Charter schools only distract attention
and resources away from that critical mission.
Casting the issue as “school choice” panders to the selfish few who want the rest of us to pay for their personal preferences.
Casting the issue as “school choice” panders to the selfish few who want the rest of us to pay for their personal preferences.
Even
though Gist will be leaving Rhode Island soon to take over as school chief in
Tulsa, Oklahoma, the odds are that Gov. Gina Raimondo will appoint a new state
education commissioner who is even more devoted to expanding charter schools.
I'm anticipating Raimondo will sell "naming rights" to our public schools to all her corporate pals. Why should Alan Shawn Feinstein get all the glory? |
Her running mate, Lieutenant Governor
Dan McKee, has been most famous for his fervent push for “mayoral academy”
charter schools.
Finally, Raimondo has appointed Stefan Pryor to head the state
Commerce Department after Pryor’s
disastrous tenure as Connecticut Education head where he created the conditions that led to charter
school scandals all across the state.
Yes,
I’m afraid charter schools are about to undergo a boom in Rhode Island with
such as cast of characters running the state.
Public
school superintendents have made the point repeatedly that charter schools add
an element of unpredictability that make it hard to create budgets, hire staff
and maintain the proper infrastructure, and to do that knowing that you must
serve all students, including all those who have special needs.
If
“school choice” parents want a school that offers programs that tickle
their fancy, then fine – send your kid there, but with your own money. If you
want a school that doesn’t require you to present proof that your kids have had
all their shots, then fine – send your kids to “Vaxless Academy” but with your
own money, And keep those kids aways from everybody else.