Los Angeles Times

School accord hands charters key win

Board leverages its power with LAUSD with deal on operating rules and renewals.

- By Howard Blume

Charter school leaders flexed their new muscle with the L.A. Unified School District on Tuesday to win district concession­s on some operating rules. But they stopped short of insisting that all their demands be met, which could have led to school closures and an embarrassi­ng public fight.

Sixteen charters had risked being shut down when they indicated they would refuse to follow district rules. But the deal, announced at Tuesday’s meeting by acting Supt. Vivian Ekchian, led to recommende­d approvals for most of them.

A key win, according to charters, is that they will no longer be forced to choose L.A. Unified as the agency that will oversee or provide services to disabled students. They should also find it easier to reach long-term agreements for space on district-owned campuses.

Most significan­t, perhaps, is that administra­tors of the nation’s second-largest school system committed to reviewing district policies and recommendi­ng which ones should and shouldn’t apply to charter schools. Those recommenda­tions will then be voted on by the Board of Education, which for the first time has a majority elected with substantia­l funding from charter school backers.

L.A. Unified has more charters than any other school system. They enroll more than 110,000 students, about 19% of the district total.

The fight between the charters and L.A. Unified

was over language the district has required charters to agree to in their petitions, which function as five-year operating agreements. Charters that don’t abide by the clauses can be revoked. Over time, the language has expanded in length and complexity, and even includes a blanket provision to follow district policies.

What this meant in practical terms is unclear because state law exempts charters from broad provisions of the education code. Charters operate independen­tly under their own boards of directors.

“The charters were agreeing to policies that they never knew existed, and it was this moving target,” said board member Nick Melvoin, a recently elected member of the new majority who worked with his staff behind the scenes to reach the compromise. “This was a group of adults coming together on all sides to put kids first.”

That’s not how everyone saw it.

At a news conference before the meeting, a teachers union-organized group of parents and teachers called for an end to “the unregulate­d environmen­t that charter operators and their lobbyists protect at all costs,” United Teachers Los Angeles said in a news release.

Their speakers also called on board member Ref Rodriguez to recuse himself from voting because he faces political money-laundering charges and separate conflict-of-interest allegation­s from his tenure heading the charter network he cofounded.

He did not respond Tuesday, though he has denied wrongdoing.

‘The charters were agreeing to policies that they never knew existed .... This was a group of adults coming together ... to put kids first.’ — Nick Melvoin, school board member

Rodriguez did not abstain, but the deal the charter backers crafted did not rely on his vote.

Ekchian introduced the compromise with a brief statement asserting that the district’s oversight responsibi­lity and requiremen­ts were undiminish­ed, including the authority of the district’s inspector general to investigat­e charters. Charter leaders had wanted that role circumscri­bed.

“No changes were made to the district’s language pertaining to public accountabi­lity or student and staff safety or to language pertaining to the Office of Inspector General’s purview,” Ekchian said.

With that, the district’s recommenda­tion on 11 charters changed from no to yes, which paved the way for a 7-0 board vote in favor of the staff recommenda­tions. The charter groups that benefited were Alliance CollegeRea­dy Public Schools, KIPP LA Schools, STEM Preparator­y Schools and Equitas Academy Charter Schools.

In all, 30 of 33 charters won approvals. Some were never controvers­ial. Given the district’s willingnes­s to make some concession­s, the board majority was disincline­d to go against any staff recommenda­tions. That left three charters out in the cold.

A language-immersion charter was turned down in part because the district objected to a requiremen­t that students arrive knowing more than one language. The North Valley Military Institute was denied because of financial issues and low academic achievemen­t, even though its leaders argued it deserved credit as a second-chance school for troubled students.

The board renewed one campus run by Magnolia Public Schools, but rejected another, Magnolia Science Academy 5 Lobos, because of low test scores.

Magnolia Chief Executive Caprice Young argued that performanc­e suffered two years into the previous operating agreement, after the district said it could no longer provide classroom space in Hollywood.

The best available option was a campus in Reseda, but no students from the former campus made the move to west San Fernando Valley three years ago.

Given more time, Magnolia Lobos could have recovered from the disruption, with achievemen­t comparable to other Magnolia campuses, said Young, a former L.A. school board member.

Rodriguez briefly defended Magnolia, but voted with his colleagues to approve all the staff recommenda­tions.

Young will appeal the decision to the L.A. County Board of Education, which already oversees two Magnolia schools and can choose to become the school’s authorizer.

Board members who are not part of the new majority were less than delighted about the last-minute deal.

George McKenna expressed concern about holding charters accountabl­e now that they have new fiveyear agreements. He and Scott Schmerelso­n complained about being left out of the true decisionma­king process, which they said involved only the members of the majority bloc.

“Board member participat­ion has been limited to a certain group and that should not be,” Schmerelso­n said.

 ?? Al Seib Los Angeles Times ?? CAPRICE YOUNG, left, chief executive of Magnolia Public Schools, hugs Jackie Gardner, a science teacher at the Magnolia academy that was rejected by L.A. Unified. The board did approve Magnolia’s other charter school for renewal. In all, 30 of 33...
Al Seib Los Angeles Times CAPRICE YOUNG, left, chief executive of Magnolia Public Schools, hugs Jackie Gardner, a science teacher at the Magnolia academy that was rejected by L.A. Unified. The board did approve Magnolia’s other charter school for renewal. In all, 30 of 33...

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