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KCSD board talks charter school reform

Will vote on resolution next week

MILL HALL — Charter school reform has been a hot topic in many school districts — including Keystone Central — for the past several years.

On Thursday night at the Keystone Central school board’s work session, the board discussed a resolution calling for charter school reform. If adopted next week, the resolution would be signed by school board president Boise “Bo” Miller and sent to Harrisburg and Pennsylvania Gov. Tom Wolf.

“I think it’s important for the board of directors to look at charter school reform and to support the proposal that’s out there because of what it does for the district,” said KCSD superintendent Jacquelyn Martin.

The resolution will go to a vote at next week’s school board meeting.

“I think this resolution shows people in Harrisburg that we are behind this … at the very least we can pass this resolution to send the message to the legislators down there,” said board member Jeff Johnston.

According to Martin, it is imperative that legislators know the significance of charter school reform.

“I did meet with Rep. Stephanie Borowicz. We wanted her to make sure that she had a solid understanding of the funding and what I call ‘voodoo math.’ It does not make a lot of sense but when you really nail down how those figures are calculated, it’s very unfair in many different ways,” Martin said.

Next week’s voting session will begin at 6:30 p.m. in the Central Mountain Auditorium.

The resolution reads as follows:

WHEREAS, the average Pennsylvania school district spends millions of dollars in taxpayer money annually in mandatory payments to brick-and-mortar and cyber charter schools; and these payments are calculated in a manner which requires districts to send more money to charter schools than is needed to operate their programs and places a significant financial burden on districts’ resources and taxpayers; and

WHEREAS, the current charter school funding formula was established in 1997 under the state’s Charter School Law and has not been changed in the 23 years since it was first created; and the formula for regular education programs is unfair because it is based on a school district’s expenditures and not what it actually costs to educate a child in the charter school; and

WHEREAS, the calculation for charter special education tuition is unfair because it is also based on the special education expenditures of the school district rather than the charter school; and although the General Assembly revised the special education funding formula in 2014 to more accurately target special education resources for students identified with high, medium and low needs, this formula was applied only to school districts and not to charter schools; and

WHEREAS, because the tuition rate calculations are based on the school district’s expenses, they create wide discrepancies in the amount of tuition paid by different districts for the same charter school education and result in drastic overpayments to charter schools; and these discrepancies in tuition rates for regular education students can vary by almost $13,000 per student and by $39,000 for special education students; and

WHEREAS, the latest data from the PA Department of Education (PDE) shows that in 2017-18, total charter school tuition payments (cyber and brick-and-mortar) were more than $1.8 billion, with $519 million of that total paid by districts for tuition to cyber charter schools; and

WHEREAS, further analysis of PDE data shows that in 2014-15, school districts paid charter schools more than $100 million for special education services in excess of what charter schools reported spending on special education; and

WHEREAS, the costs of charter schools for school districts continue to grow significantly each year; and on a statewide basis are the most identified source of pressure on school district budgets; and

WHEREAS, the need for significant charter school funding reform is urgent; and school districts are struggling to keep up with growing charter costs and are forced to raise taxes and cut staffing, programs and services for their own students in order to pay millions of dollars to charter schools.

NOW, THEREFORE BE IT RESOLVED that the Keystone Central School Board calls upon the General Assembly to meaningfully revise the existing flawed charter school funding systems for regular and special education to ensure that school districts and taxpayers are no longer overpaying these schools or reimbursing for costs the charter schools do not incur. We, along with the Pennsylvania School Boards Association, are advocating for substantial change.

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