They do sometimes close, but it is a more complicated thing to close a school of right. And charters don't actually want that because they would have to take the kids. Are charters willing and able to take all kids, all year, by right? So far, nope. |
| A lot of predictable hate here for charters. My DC goes to a charter and we love it. It is a fantastic school -- far, far better than any of the public schools in our area. It's actually one of the best schools in the city. We are priced out of the neighborhoods with really good public schools so we are grateful to have the charter-school option. The public schools in our area range from mediocre to horrendous. I'm sure a lot of people will blame charters for making public schools terrible, but, remember, the whole charter movement started because public schools were so terrible. |
Wholly not true. You can find them right here. http://dcpsdatacenter.com/fy18_submitted.html The budget of each school is made available, reviewed and approved by a parent body, in fact. |
Hmmm nice try DC Charter control board ....you must think we are stupid
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Lol! That is neighborhood schools from last year ffs. |
| Wait so the KIPP Ed (runs 16 very small schools) makes more than the DCPS Chancellor?? How does this make sense? |
Perhaps the Chancellor should make more. Take it up with the Council and Mayor. |
Maybe he is more inspiring and has better experience than our (acting) chancellor? |
Right, which is contradicting the idea that there is "there's a ton more financial data anyone can pour through about a charter school than any individual public school." -- there is much more information on any one public school. |
The KIPP DC ED also has 20-year tenure and a whole host of responsibilities that the Chancellor doesn't. Their budget is nearly $130 million dollars a year. Let's consider the size and compensation of other similarly sized nonprofits in DC. Nonprofit boards have a set of legally mandated responsibilities when determining executive compensation or they risk losing their c3 designation. This really is a non-issue and just an example of people not knowing what they are talking about. |
There aren't audited financials for each neighborhood public school. You only have access to the budget as set up by the budget manual, not whether the schools are being under or over funded based on demographics on a macro level. For the past several years DCPS has run a deficit and swept money from OSSE in intergovernmental transfers to get into the black. DCPS is a MESS financially and the "transparency" through LSATs is a joke. |
If DCPS / the city generally ran a tight fiscal ship they would not have to try to rob Peter to Pay Paul, such as the happened with the school HVAC/roofs vs planned ice rink renovations. |
bullsh*t. just because some executives are overpaid does not mean that charter executives should be overpaid. also, charters are PUBLIC institutions, ultimately. their pay should mirror DCPS -- both teachers and admins. 1.2 mil comp for a nonprofit with a budget of 130 mil is obscene. |
Where do you get overpaid from? They're actually paid for a job that is difficult, in a city that is expensive to live in. You want some margarita with that salt? lol |
If you can't see overpaid in those nonprofit salaries, I don't know what to tell you. 1% of your entire org's annual budget going to CEO comp is obscene. Also again, charters are PUBLIC institutions. Charter leaders should not be enriched with private-sector level salaries. |