Superintendent tells it like it is in opposing charter school amendment
by Don McKee
Columnist
Aug 17, 2012 | 2642 views | 12 12 comments | 10 10 recommendations | email to a friend | print
Don McKee
Don McKee
slideshow
State schools Superintendent John Barge goes to the head of the class for his decision to oppose the proposed constitutional amendment empowering the state to override local school boards’ rejection of charter school applications.

Barge said that until all the state’s public schools are on a full 180-day schedule and teachers regain “full pay for a full school year, we should not redirect one more dollar away from Georgia’s local school districts — much less an additional $430 million in state funds, which is what it would cost to add seven new state charter schools per year over the next five years (the annual average of the Charter Commission that would be revived if the amendment passes).” Currently, he said, 121 of the state’s 180 school systems are on shortened schedules and 4,400 teachers have lost their jobs in the past four years.

“I cannot support the creation of a new and costly state bureaucracy that takes away local control of schools and unnecessarily duplicates the good work already being done by the local districts, the Georgia Department of Education and the state Board of Education,” Barge said. “What’s more, this constitutional amendment would direct taxpayer dollars into the pockets of out-of-state, for-profit charter school companies whose schools perform no better than traditional public schools and locally approved charter schools (and worse, in some cases).”

Those were fighting words to Barge’s fellow Republican backers of the proposed amendment, starting with Gov. Nathan Deal who issued a statement saying he stands with two-thirds of the General Assembly that voted for the constitutional amendment and a companion bill. Note: These are the same folks who brought us the TSPLOST.

The Washington-based Center for Education Reform, a pro-charter school group, issued a news release accusing Barge of reneging on support for the amendment and caving “to those representing the failed status quo.” On the other side of the fence, Georgia Association of Educators president Calvine Rollins praised Barge for “standing up for Georgia’s 1.6 million kids and against” the proposed amendment.

Denying that he reneged, Barge pointed out that existing state law already allows charter school applicants to appeal denials by local school boards. The problem with the proposed amendment is that it would allow the state to override applications denied by local boards. Granted, turf protection may come into play but, again, there is an appeal route. That’s sufficient.

Once again the creative legislative framers of ballot questions have fixed it so uninformed voters will find this question on the Nov. 6 ballot: “Shall the Constitution of Georgia be amended to allow state or local approval of public charter schools upon the request of local communities?” That oh-so innocuous question gives no clue to the true intention of the proposed amendment — to give the state authority to override local school boards on charter schools. It evades the true meaning of the proposed amendment.

That, my friends, is why the people’s trust in elected officials is at an all-time low — and sinking.

dmckee9613@aol.com
Comments
(12)
Comments-icon Post a Comment
GAPublicSchools
|
August 19, 2012
Thanks for your article Mr. McKee. I cannot agree with you more. There are many facts about charter schools that the public is not aware of. People should do their homework and not just listen to proponents or opponents of Charter Schools. For instance, someone told me that teachers at Charter Schools do not have to be certified. Georgia's Public School teachers have to meet certification qualifications every 5 years by the Georgia Professional Standards Commission. If a complaint is brought against a public school teacher, it is investigated by the GPSC and if needed a teacher's certificate is revoked. So, if you agree or do not agree … do your homework. I think that the facts that John Barge presented are right on base!
HS for Charter
|
August 19, 2012
Everyone is always using Charter's test scores as a response to their argument about the funding. Let's take a look at how Charter's operating budget compares to public schools if the argument is funding. From what I hear, Charter's can do the same job (and many times a better job) with a smaller budget AND A SMALLER CLASS SIZE! This year, my district increased their class size to 35! 35 kids??? Are you kidding me? Who can effectively teach a class of 35? I am more than positive that there could have been other creative budgeting measures taken than to increase class size. There always is.
K Teacher
|
August 26, 2012
The goal is to cut funding so deeply that THIS is the result you get. Can't you see that? It's all a part of the plan to strip funding for public schools. The goal is to make the public schools look bad so you will want an alternative. We should be demanding that the state properly fund public schools as promised.
Charter Mom
|
August 18, 2012
How is Dr. Barge wrong? Let me count the ways: 1. We are NOT talking about the same pot of money. Money that goes toward state-created charter schools is NOT money that would otherwise go to regular school boards. 2. Per student, charter schools do more (or the same, as some charge) with LESS money. 3. This is how appeals work in America. Cases go from local courts and can be appealed all the way up to the Superior Court. This is not new or subversive. In fact, to tell charter school they should appeal to the very people who so vehemently oppose them is ridiculous and doomed to failure. Appeal does not mean guaranteed reversal, either; it means someone else looks at it and decides "yes" or "no". 4. Georgia school are not known for their "good work" -- actually, we're known for lagging behind the rest of the nation and the rest of the world. That is not to say no one can go to school in Georgia and end up a success. It does imply that our schools are not a one-size-fits-all solution to each child. Taking away the rights of parents to exercise their options is Anti-Parent -- and THAT is why the parents of charter school students are furious.
Charter Smarter?
|
August 17, 2012
What I would like to know is how the schools plan to change and actually start educating children. Charter schools may not be the answer, but what is the solution? And another thing, how do the children who go to Charter schools so on the tests they have to take? Do they score higher than the kids in the "regular" schools? Wish someone would tell me.
I agree
|
August 17, 2012
Dr. Barge is right. This is another move towards increasing the size and expense of Government by Republicans. No conservative should favor this constitutional amendment that creates more bureaucracy to fund a separate school system costing millions to GA tax payers. NO ONE in Cobb County should favor this. With QBE we are already supporting schools around the state. The state took 70 million additional dollars from Cobb schools last year and this will certainly increase to fund more government. Even if your children do not attend public schools, this will adversely affect property values in Cobb. The answer is not more government. I'm no fan of he CCSB but favor LOCAL control.
I disagree
|
August 17, 2012
It is not their money. Money should follow student. If charters are doing better job and enrolling students then they should have the money. This is a big lie that they say public school system is losing money. The reality is that they loose students and they should adjust their budget to the new number. Or they should give a high quality education so that they don't loose students.

Unfortunately the reason they oppose to this amendment is not money but not the quality of education. Those parents who go to charter school are extremely happy that they have the choice and they will no longer be harassed by school systems if this amendment pass. They want to keep the statue quo. We should not let them do that. Georgia is doing so poorly and this guys are still trying to keep the statue quo. TOO LATE. This amendment will pass. The future of our children will be much brighter.
Off Balance
|
August 17, 2012
The wording of the question confuses me. How do I vote to stand with John Barge???

I gather "NO" is the vote to support John' views.
anonymous
|
August 18, 2012
Vote No if you agree with Barge
Go, Barge, GO!
|
August 18, 2012
Off Balance, that is correct - a big fat NO!

Thank you, Dr. Barge, for taking a stand and using COMMON SENSE over a political affiliation. While I support charter schools as part of the education mix, there is NO NEED for yet ANOTHER layer of government to approve and fund charter schools. This is already done by local BOEs and the state BOE. This, folks, is politics at its worst. Confuse the masses with an 'innocent' sounding question on the ballot that will be the nail in the coffin for our already-struggling public school systems. This does nothing but erode local control and hand it over to the Gold Dome, where appointed - and not elected - officials will suck more of our tax dollars away from our counties.

Vote NO in November!
Nick D
|
August 18, 2012
It's hilarious that you all say that Charter schools and passage of this amendment call for bigger government - how is that? Charter Schools are PRIVATELY run public schools - no government involvement once the school is established. They have proven to be more successful, and less expensive per student than the public schools they compete with. What's not to like? As far as the current route with charters, without a state board - it's like letting McDonald's approve any new hamburger restaurants in their county - not gonna happen. Cherokee County turned down Cherokee Charter 4-5 times before the state intervened. The competition resulted in STEM academies in our county - again, what's not to like?
HS for Charter
|
August 19, 2012
Why does the vote confuse you? It is simple, the state has the ultimate decision on approving charters. To me it implies that the state has to step in and parent because the local school boards are not playing fair.
*We welcome your comments on the stories and issues of the day and seek to provide a forum for the community to voice opinions. All comments are subject to moderator approval before being made visible on the website but are not edited. The use of profanity, obscene and vulgar language, hate speech, and racial slurs is strictly prohibited. Advertisements, promotions, and spam will also be rejected. Please read our terms of service for full guides