Per Pupil Charter Funding Skyrockets
Amid all the Voucher concern, keep an eye on Ohio's $1.3 billion failing Charter School sector
It’s difficult to say that a $1.3 billion state program can go under the radar, but lately it seems that Ohio’s charter school industry has done just that, thanks in large part to the absolute explosion of taxpayer funded subsidies given to wealthy private school parents.
And while the state’s largest taxpayer ripoff ever — in excess of $200 million plus — happened as the result of the infamous ECOT scandal (the state is only going after about $100 million of the $200 million plus that I calculated because they just didn’t do the forensic audit of years prior to the couple prior to the school shutting down), the per pupil funding explosion in Ohio’s charter schools has been equally remarkable.
The amount of money the state sends, on average, to Ohio’s charter schools is now more than what 129 Ohio School Districts SPEND per equivalent pupil, including all locally raised property and/or income taxes.
That’s right.
Ohio now provides Ohio’s Charter Schools (all but 5 of which rated in the bottom 25% of all schools nationally) more money on average than 1 in 5 Ohio school districts spend per equivalent pupil, including all their local property tax money.
I’ve included a list of all the school districts that spend less per equivalent pupil than Charter Schools receive on average in state aid.
That’s quite a list, don’t you think?
This explains how Ohio’s charter schools now get nearly $1.3 billion in state aid while having fewer students than they had in the 2013-2014 school year, I suppose. That year — the record for number of charter school students — had about $300 million less going to charters despite having about 1,000 more students than today.
This is why it’s critical to keep our eyes on all the privatization efforts, not just the shiniest one in front of us.
Because if there’s one thing I’ve learned in about 25 years of following, analyzing and writing Ohio education policy, it’s that there is nothing more certain than Ohio Republican elected officials taking tax dollars out of the hands of our 1.4 million public school students and instead stuffing the bank accounts of political contributing profiteers and wealthy private school parents.
It is. Inevitable.
Organize and vote accordingly.
I was employed at the Ohio Department of Education from 1988-2017. The legislators ignored the supreme court ruling. see below:
DeRolph v. State was a landmark Ohio Supreme Court case that ruled Ohio's school funding system unconstitutional in 1997. The case challenged the constitutionality of the state's funding system, which relied heavily on property taxes. The court ruled that the system failed to provide adequate resources for quality education across the state.
Key points
The case was originally filed in 1991.
The court issued four decisions between 1997 and 2002.
The court declared an end to the litigation in 2003.
The court ruled that the system violated the Thorough and Efficient Clause of the Ohio Constitution.
The court directed the state to find a remedy.
The court stayed the ruling for one year to allow the General Assembly to create a new school financing system.
Impact
The General Assembly has changed Ohio's school funding system several times since the litigation, but the underlying problems with the system remain.
Question: What is the easiest source for amounts taken from public schools and given to which private schools? Does the State keep records or must we get from each separate School District? I'm eager to nip this in the bud!