We don’t oppose charter schools, but we do urge voters to say “No” to the proposed amendment to Georgia’s Constitution that would create a legal way for the state to circumvent local school boards to create and fund charter schools.
While we have some concerns about the implications to local decision-making when it comes to schools, the strongest argument against Amendment One is simply that the state can’t afford it.
Given that Georgia’s existing public schools are so pitifully underfunded, we find it unconscionable to ask voters to divert precious tax dollars to benefit a relative few.
So-called “austerity cuts” and other reductions have sliced away state support for K-12 education for a decade. Georgia Department of Education figures put the total funding formula shortfall at $5.7 billion.
Yet big numbers make for sterile statistics. What do years of state cuts in support look like? They meant 2 of 3 Georgia districts cut school days. In the 2011-2012 school year, Chattooga County students were in class only 144 days, a full 36 days shy of the 180-day benchmark. Three other of Georgia’s 180 public school districts likewise fell short of even 150 days of class time.
And while many pupils statewide were in school fewer days, there were fewer teachers to go around, too. The number of teacher contracts in Georgia public schools has dropped by 8,500 since the 2008-2009 school year, even as the number of students increased, according to a new report by the Georgia Budget and Policy Institute. A predictable result is that class sizes grew, and some programs have been reduced or dropped altogether.
Amendment supporters argue that per-pupil education spending is actually up in Georgia in recent years. Yet, the cited increases have been more than negated by inflation’s fiscal bite.
Such an intolerably inadequate situation damages the schools charged with educating 9 of 10 Georgia children. It makes a mockery of the state constitution’s plain requirement that, “The provision of an adequate public education for the citizens shall be a primary obligation of the State of Georgia.”
It’s against this beyond-bare-bones funding that state lawmakers are asking voters to constitutionally empower an appointed commission to approve state-chartered schools that would, somehow, be financed by the same cash-strapped government.
It’s no wonder then, and to his great credit nevertheless, that State School Superintendent John Barge bucked the state’s leadership in opposing the charter schools amendment. In a letter, Barge wrote that, “I fully support charter schools, but I do not believe we should divert scarce state dollars to create a new government agency when our schools are suffering.” We couldn’t agree more.
The fact that the state’s signature education initiative at this point in time is opposed by the Republican elected official in charge of statewide K-12 public schooling is a big point for voters to remember Tuesday. Unlike many lawmakers who’re backing Amendment One, Barge is a career educator who’s seen schools from the inside out, and from the classroom up. His counsel seems wise and prudent on this issue.
Voters should also remember that this election is not about charter schools as a concept. Not when most of the 110 charters in Georgia operate under the umbrella of local school districts. As Barge put it, “I want the citizens of Georgia to know that our local school districts are receiving and approving high quality charter applications to serve Georgia’s students.”
That’s held true locally. Thirteen charters operate in DeKalb County. The district’s website even notes that two unused schools in DeKalb “are available for use by start-up charter schools.” Atlanta Public Schools likewise rosters 13 charter schools approved by the district.
And when local districts have denied charter proposals, their reasoning often was apparently sound. The old state charter commission itself declined 76 percent of applications that had previously been turned down by local districts.
Georgia thus doesn’t seem to need the big-foot authority of an appointed state high commission that could overrule the intent of locally elected school boards.
All of which is not to discount the often-valid public sentiment driving the charter schools movement. Innovative charter schools can be a valuable tactic in the quest for educational improvement, but they are not the entire answer.
Too many of Georgia’s 1.63 million public school students are stuck in inadequate, or even failing schools. That’s an unacceptable situation. We need better results for all kids, not just those whose parents are motivated enough to seek out the charter option.
Andre Jackson, for the Editorial Board
38 comments Add your comment
Vashtai
November 5th, 2012
1:05 pm
All you “Vote Yes” people must be part of the 1%, who are the richest.
GATreeLover
November 5th, 2012
12:22 pm
I think something every voter should do is take at look at the financials posted on their school district’s website – most districts do this, but I’m not sure it’s required by law. In Cherokee County, if you add up the “administrative costs” (not including salaries – but literally just the budgeted items to run the district office) and then divide that by the number of schools CCSD oversees – it’s about $12,000 or so per school. Now, if you look at the Cherokee Charter Academy’s “administrative costs” that is paid to Charter Schools USA – for ONE school it is (drum roll please….) $900,000 per year! Hmmm…. do voters in GA really think that pulling in a private company to “manage” a school that has shown no measurable improvement (we were promised drastic achievements over CCSD schools) is REALLY concerned about kids? Look south to Florida – every mistake they are making in education, we are repeating. If the GA government funneled that $900,000 into CCSD, I imagine we would have a 180 day school year, with lower class sizes, and higher number of qualified teachers. Instead, our politicians are supporting their claims with “this will fix GA education” – no, it won’t. Again – see the situation in Florida. Their charters, that are run by these same private companies that are itching to get across the border, are performing no better, or in most cases significantly worse, than their public schools. Do. The. Math. Look at your local district and do some simple addition and division, then decide if you really want to turn that amount of money over to a private company that, from what I can see, does not care much about achievement, but only about collecting money.
EDITORIAL: Vote “No” on Amendment One | Georgia Budget and Policy Institute
November 5th, 2012
10:21 am
[...] GBPI data from recently released education report Survey Says: Trouble for Schools is cited in this article on charter school Amendment 1; read full article here. [...]
Road Scholar
November 5th, 2012
9:54 am
I am still amazed at the inability of most Georgians, esp conservatives , to think logically. This bill does not outlaw Charter Schools or their benefits. It should leave the decisions concerning charter schools in the hands of the local school board, made up of elected reps, and not place more control into and unelected board of appointees. Haven’t conservatives been railing about less government and government efficiency and effectiveness? Haven’t conservatives been screaming for TERM LIMITS? This amendment provides another layer of government diluting the School Boards role.
If you don’t like your school boards actions….VOTE THEM OUT!!! t
Term limits…another conservative whine!
Darryl White
November 5th, 2012
1:22 am
Why I am voting “NO” on the Charter School Amendment:
I am not against charter schools. Nor am I against this amendment because my wife is pursuing a career as a teacher. And I don’t object to for-profit or private schools. I just don’t believe in getting charged twice for the same product. That’s why I don’t want the state to take more income tax dollars to pay for another school in the hope that it will do better than the school I’m already paying for with my property tax dollars. It’s a poor substitute for real school choice and education competition.
jaypat
November 5th, 2012
12:23 am
What Mary Elizabeth said.
This is a part of a process to turn back the clock at least a century, to 1912. Look a who is funding this enterprise. That should tell anyone who cares to know what this is about.
If this amendment passes, it will be the beginning of the end for public education in Georgia. Vote NO on this amendment and tell everyone you know to vote against it too.
ECC
November 4th, 2012
9:43 pm
This amendment is not to support the chartering of LOCAL/PUBLIC charter schools but to divert our
tax money and education funds toward FOR PROFIT CO’s which will have to answer to NOONE on how they spend the $$$ on OUR children or to PAY THEIR SELF APPOINTED CEO’s!
This is Mrs. Norman Maine
November 4th, 2012
9:10 pm
Vote no? Done!
Lynn43
November 4th, 2012
9:02 pm
No! Schools are not doing the same thing year after year. To say this only shows that you know absolutely nothing about what goes on in schools. Also, those who think that we are not underfunded have not had to work everyday to see that a school budget balances. The unfunded mandates from state and federal government falls on the local system to see that they are met. Energy bills go up-no extra money for that. Transportation cost skyrocket, and the state reduces the amount they contribute every year. It once was in the 30% range (a few years ago), but now it is below 20%. The local system has to see that every child has access to transportation no matter the cost.
People keep pushing us to integrate more technology. Even accreditation is linked to the amount offered. Do you really know just how much it cost to offer a little technology much less as much as the public thinks we should? I could go on and on, but if you have not had to deal with tax assessments and tax digest, austerity cuts, decreases in transportation funds, and all the other accounts that make up a school budget, then please educate yourself before you criticize.
When dealing with a charter school management company 3 years ago, a question was asked of
the company representative, “if you can save a little money from the operation of this school you are wanting to operate here, can you use the saved money to help fund a school in another state which is in trouble?” The answer was “yes”. Now, do you want a for profit management company taking money allotted for your child’s education and sending it to another state to fund another student’s education.
There are way too many loopholes and before we give a political committee the freedom to do as they please, we need to close these loopholes.
Vote NO to Amendment 1 and the farther destruction of public schools.
gsmith
November 4th, 2012
8:27 pm
im american i believe in the free market , im smart enough to realize that our schools are failing and they will continue to fail because they do the same things year after year and never change!! VOTE YES FOR HOPE AND CHANGE !!!