Friday, October 21, 2016
Visibility canceled
Update: the Vikings football game was cancelled, so No on 2 sign-holding
is cancelled -- thanks to everyone who showed up. The event will be
rescheduled.
Friday, October 7, 2016
The facts behind the letter...
A frustrated charter school lobbyist mailed a letter to the Courier
this week filled with misinformation, after learning that Wareham is one
of over 165 school committees opposing Question 2. In contrast to his
pitch, here are some facts:
*Charter schools are publicly funded, but are not public. Yes, they serve the public, like a bank or insurance company. Their budgets include public subsidies, as Towneplace Suites does. However, it is not accurate to state that charters are public when they spend money with little public oversight, no public accountability, and when they select their student body by omission.
*Charter schools are publicly funded, but are not public. Yes, they serve the public, like a bank or insurance company. Their budgets include public subsidies, as Towneplace Suites does. However, it is not accurate to state that charters are public when they spend money with little public oversight, no public accountability, and when they select their student body by omission.
*Charter schools trigger a tiny, temporary bump in a narrow type of
public school funding in some communities. These bridging payments
underfunded by the state last a year. The long-term result is less
funding for public education. When a house burns down, the insurance
check may increase the owner's bank account. That doesn't make it a
good way to plan a budget.
*Charter schools claim that more choice is always an improvement. However, they have not offered any new ideas in 7 years, according to the Department of Education, and oppose requirements that they hire qualified teachers or educate all students in a community. It does the children of Wareham and Massachusetts no service to allow a "choice" of an inferior education, with taxpayers footing the bill.
*Charter schools claim that more choice is always an improvement. However, they have not offered any new ideas in 7 years, according to the Department of Education, and oppose requirements that they hire qualified teachers or educate all students in a community. It does the children of Wareham and Massachusetts no service to allow a "choice" of an inferior education, with taxpayers footing the bill.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)