An AJC columnist asked the state Department of Education to check figures from Herb Garrett, Executive Director of the Georgia School Superintendents Association, that the proposed charter school law would have the state send much more money per student to charter schools than to public schools. The DoE confirmed it. We can’t afford to have public schools sucked dry for Atlanta-picked charter schools. And yes, this is another ALEC boondoggle.
Maureen Downey wrote for the AJC today, Under new law, state will send more funds per child to state charter schools than local systems
Given this funding disparity, though, it would make far more sense now for aspiring charter schools to seek state approval rather than local.
We need the state to fund public schools determined by local school boards; we don’t need the state rigging the system to divert public school funds to Atlanta-chosen charter schools.
The Democratic primary ballot had an opinion item about charter schools:
Democratic Party Question 1: Should the Georgia Constitution be amended to allow the state to override locally elected school boards’ decisions when it comes to the creation of charter schools in your county or city?
Democratic voters said by 56% they don’t want the charter school law.
However, that primary question was non-binding. The real charter school referendum will be on the November general election ballot. Here’s yet another reason to vote it down.
-jsq