Latest News and Comment from Education

Wednesday, September 23, 2015

Reform bill would indirectly help schools keep equipment | The Columbus Dispatch

Reform bill would indirectly help schools keep equipment | The Columbus Dispatch:

Reform bill would indirectly help schools keep equipment




The big charter-school reform bill pending in the Ohio House would take steps toward curbing for-profit charter operators from keeping furniture and equipment bought with taxpayer money.
But it doesn’t directly address the issue.
The Ohio Supreme Court ruled last week that White Hat Management Co., run by Akron industrialist and major GOP donor David Brennan, owns the classroom equipment bought under terms of its contract. Ten of White Hat’s former schools had sued, arguing that the company violated its financial duty to the schools.
“The legislature has enacted statutes that take a laissez-faire attitude toward operators of community schools,” Justice Judith Ann Lanzinger wrote in her majority opinion.
State legislators hope to change that with House Bill 2, a package of wide-ranging reforms of Ohio’s heavily criticized charter-school laws. Although the bill does not specifically address for-profit operators owning taxpayer-funded equipment, supporters say some provisions will make such agreements far less likely.
The bill would require operators and boards to specify property ownership in all new and renewed contracts. The bill also would ensure that fiscal officers are independent of operators, and it would require more transparency from those serving on charter boards.
“If you’re an independent board, and you’re putting everything you own and don’t own down in writing ahead of time, you’re much more likely to make a decision that is not going to result in a bad outcome,” said Chad Aldis of the Thomas B. Fordham Institute, which supports school choice and sponsors 11 charter schools in Ohio.
House Republicans also note that House Bill 2 would repeal a law that allows management companies to overrule the governing board; the change would strengthen the board’s control when it crafts operator contracts.
Sen. Peggy Lehner, R-Kettering and chairwoman of the Senate Education Committee, agrees that the bill “goes a long way” toward addressing future ownership of furniture and equipment. “But I am open to explore whether that goes far enough.”
The House returns to session next week and is expected to send House Bill 2 to a conference committee, where the House and Senate work out final changes.
“The court very appropriately decided that there wasn’t enough protection in the Ohio law to prevent the sort of mischief that has gone on,” Lehner said. “That has been the premise of House Bill 2 all along,”
Lehner said she is exploring more-direct language that would no longer allow an operator to take possession of furniture and Reform bill would indirectly help schools keep equipment | The Columbus Dispatch: