Feds
Spent $3.3 Billion Fueling Charter Schools but No One Knows What It’s Really
Bought
(Madison,
WI)–The federal government has spent more than $3.3 billion over the past two
decades creating and fueling the charter school industry, according to a new financial
analysis and reporters’ guide by the Center for Media and Democracy (CMD). (The
new guide can be downloaded below.)
Despite
the huge sums spent so far, the federal government maintains no comprehensive
list of the charter schools that have received and spent these funds or even a
full list of the private or quasi-public entities that have been approved by
states to “authorize” charters that receive federal funds.
And despite drawing
repeated criticism from the Office of the Inspector General for suspected waste
and inadequate financial controls within the federal Charter Schools
Program—designed to create, expand, and replicate charter schools—the U.S.
Department of Education (ED) is poised to increase its funding by 48% in FY
2016.
As
a result of lax oversight on the federal level, combined with many state laws
that hide charter finances from the public eye, taxpayers are left in the dark about
how much federal money each charter school has received and what has been
wasted or spent to enrich charter school administrators and for-profit
corporations who get lucrative outsourcing contracts from charters, behind
closed doors.
“The
Department of Education is pushing for an unprecedented expansion of charter
schools while paying lip service to accountability, but independent audit
materials show that the Department’s lofty rhetoric is simply not backed up by
its actions,” noted Jonas Persson, a writer for the Center for Media and
Democracy, a national watchdog group that publishes PRWatch.org,
ALECexposed.org, and SourceWatch.org, adding, “the lack of tough financial
controls and the lack of public access to information about how charters are spending
federal tax dollars has almost inevitably led to enormous fraud and waste.”
CMD’s
guide, “New Documents Show How Taxpayer Money Is Wasted by Charter
Schools—Stringent Controls Urgently Needed as Charter Funding Faces Huge
Increase,” analyzes materials obtained from open records requests about
independent audits of how states interact with charter school authorizers and
charter schools.
These
documents, along with the earlier Inspector General report, reveal systemic
barriers to common sense financial controls. Revealing quotes from those audit
materials, highlighted in CMD’s report, show that too often states have had
untrained staff doing unsystematic reviews of authorizers and charter schools
while lacking statutory authority and adequate funding to fully assess how
federal money is being spent by charters.
In
many instances, states have no idea how charter schools actually spent federal
monies and they have no systematic way of obtaining that information or making
sure it is accurate.
Meanwhile,
charter school advocates within state agencies and private entities have sought
to prevent strong financial controls and reporting systems backed up by
government oversight.
“It
is astonishing that the federal government has spent more than $3 billion
dollars directly on charter schools and is poised to commit another $350
million on their expansion this year, even though charters have failed to
perform better than traditional public schools overall and have performed far
worse when it comes to fraud and waste,” noted Lisa Graves, CMD’s Executive
Director.
She
added: “This result is not surprising since many charter school advocates have
pushed to create a system that allows charters to get federal funds without
federal controls on how that money is spent–but it should not be acceptable for
so much of taxpayers’ money to be spent this way, with no requirement that the
public be told how much money each and every charter school receives, how much
each spends on high-paid charter executives, how much money makes it to the
classroom, and how much is outsourced to for-profit firms.”
In
CMD’s view, “There is no doubt that American school children and American
taxpayers are getting short-changed by the charter school system that is
siphoning money away from traditional public schools.”
Download
a copy of CMD’s full
report.