City Nears Charter Cap as 17 More Schools Win Approval

SchoolBook | Oct 8, 2014

A State University of New York committee charged with overseeing charter schools authorized 17 more charter schools to open in New York City over the next two years, 14 of them operated by the city's largest and in many respects most controversial network, the Success Academy.

The other three schools will be run by Achievement First, another large charter network based in Connecticut. 

The unanimous vote on Wednesday marked a new phase in the remarkable growth of charter schools in New York City, which has a total of 197 privately-run publicly funded charters. There are two authorities now overseeing charters, SUNY and the state Board of Regents. SUNY can approve only one more for the city, while the Board of Regents could authorize 27 more; nine are currently under review.

Supporters of charters are expected to push state lawmakers to lift or abolish the cap on charters next year.

Joseph Belluck, who chairs the charter school committee for the SUNY Board of Trustees, said he wanted to explore new ways to monitor the large charter networks now that they are running so many more schools. Success will have 50 charters by the fall of 2016 and Achievement First will have 12.

"For example, with students with special needs, maybe they should be providing in one of their schools classrooms and services that mirror what the district would offer," said Belluck. "So we are just at the beginning of looking at this."

Susan Miller Barker, who heads the SUNY Charter Schools Institute, agreed. She said it's time charter networks think more like school districts as they look at their overall populations and demographics.

Both of their comments were in response to the vocal criticism of charters coming from City Council members and activists.

A group of 10 City Council members had urged SUNY to delay Wednesday's vote, citing concerns about harsh disciplinary practices, student attrition and a low percentage of children with the most severe special needs in both networks. Several parents also pointed to data showing four Success charters that opened last year were more than 20 percent under their enrollment targets, in violation of SUNY's charter rules.

"Maybe we should pause before we open more schools," said Brooklyn parent Brook Dunne Parker.

Barker said she reached out to both networks about concerns, particularly that that they do not replace departing students which critics claimed helps keep test scores high. Achievement First already has a policy of backfilling in every grade, Barker said, and leaders at Success agreed to fill empty seats for children in kindergarten through fourth grade; previously, it only replaced students through third grade.

Opponents of charters weren't satisfied, however. Zakiyah Ansarai, advocacy director for the Alliance for Quality Education, said the trustees should have considered the impact more charters will have on regular district schools, because they often share the same buildings. A new state law requires the city to continue this practice or pay rent for charters to go elsewhere.

"No matter how you cut it, it's less money in traditional public schools that were already being starved," she stated.

Where the schools will be sited is an entirely other question.

Charters are huge political issue in New York. Mayor Bill de Blasio has criticized Success network founder Eva Moskowitz in the past. Unlike former Mayor Michael Bloomberg, whose administration supported applications to open more charters, and promised free space inside public school buildings, the de Blasio administration did not weigh in on Wednesday's vote. 

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