WEAC Challenges Legality of "Virtual" Charter School
WEAC has filed a lawsuit challenging the legality of the Northern Ozaukee
School District's "virtual" charter school, the Wisconsin
Virtual Academy (WIVA).
The complaint, filed in Ozaukee County Circuit Court on January 7,
2004, contends the district violates state law by enrolling nonresident
students, WEAC General Counsel Bruce Meredith said.
WIVA, operated by the for-profit K12 Inc., of Virginia, provides curriculum
and computers to students in their homes. Parents serve as primary instructors
for WIVA students.
"Further, the lawsuit challenges the legality of providing public
education without a qualified teacher," Meredith said.
"WEAC is not challenging the right of parents to educate their
children at home," he said. "WEAC is challenging the ability
to charge other districts and their taxpayers for this home schooling
as if these children were educated in a regular classroom."
WIVA expects to receive approximately $5,500 from the state for each
student attending WIVA who is not a resident of the Northern Ozaukee
School District. Almost all of WIVA's students are believed to come
from outside the district, Meredith said.
This money will be deducted from the amounts allocated to the home
districts of the students attending WIVA. WIVA thus will take money
from other school districts, he said.
"This will likely reduce overall educational quality and result
in higher local property taxes. In addition, state taxpayers will be
required to subsidize a private, out-of-state corporation by paying
WIVA substantially more than its actual costs," he said.
"WEAC supports effective virtual education as long as the state
ensures that our children receive a real education and taxpayers are
charged a fair price," Meredith said. "The current legislation
did not contemplate subsidized home schooling such as WIVA. As a result,
providers such as K12 Inc. can use loopholes to get state funds and
provide our children with virtually nothing. This is not fair to Wisconsin
taxpayers or our children."
Stan Johnson: The facts about non-instrumentality
charter schools
Posted January 12, 2004