Milwaukee Voucher School Dropped from Program for Safety Issues
The Department of Public Instruction dropped a Milwaukee
school from the voucher program Thursday (January 27, 2005) amid safety
concerns. The Academic Solutions Center for Learning, one of the city's
largest voucher schools, is the third school in seven months to be ordered
out of the program, which allows taxpayer money to be spent in private
schools with little accountability.
The Milwaukee Journal Sentinel reported that police were called to
the school Monday because of student fighting. When they arrived, police
discovered no teachers in the school building. The teachers were protesting
the fact that they had not been paid, and without their supervision,
a group of students started a fight.
During the police investigation, another fight broke out that involved
more than 100 students, the newspaper reported. That fight took more
than an hour to quell, and police ticketed about a dozen people for
disorderly conduct.
According to the Journal Sentinel story, Monday's incident was the
sixth time since late November that police were called to the school
because of violence.
A new state law in place since 2004 allows DPI to drop schools from
the voucher program because of safety concerns. Academic Solutions is
the first school to be ordered out of the program for that reason. Two
other schools, Alex's Academy of Excellence and Mandella School of Math
and Science, were dropped because of financial mismanagement and violations
of program regulations.
Academic Solutions has been in hot water with DPI before. In November,
DPI withheld a $1.3 million voucher payment to the school because of
discrepancies between the school's reported enrollment and attendance
reports. School officials originally reported that they had enrolled
more than 700 voucher-eligible students, but an audit later confirmed
that only about 500 students were actually attending the school.
The DPI action to drop the school came on the same day the state Assembly
voted to expand the voucher program by raising its enrollment cap. Enrollment
in the voucher program is limited to 15% of students in the Milwaukee
Public Schools system, or about 15,000. The bill passed by the Assembly
raises the cap by 1,500 to 16,500. Voucher enrollment for 2004-05 is
about 14,700 students.
The bill must be passed by the state Senate and signed by Governor
Doyle before becoming law. The Senate is expected to vote on the proposal
February 8, but the governor warned that even if the Senate passes the
bill, he would veto it. He called the measure "an extreme, uncompromising
stance to create a crisis that will cost Milwaukee property taxpayers
$4 million and taxpayers all across the state another $4.9 million."
"For too long, Assembly Republicans have worried too much about
the interests of those who want to expand the voucher program instead
of working to solve the significant challenges facing all of Milwaukee's
schools," Doyle said.
WEAC President Stan Johnson called on lawmakers to develop legislation
to benefit all of Milwaukee's children, not just those who attend voucher
schools.
"Milwaukee children deserve a great education, not experiments,"
Johnson said. "The cap on enrollment in the voucher program is
needed because it is an experiment."
"The voucher program is unaccountable to the public, even though
it receives $87 million a year in tax dollars. Voucher schools should
be held to the same standards as public schools. Voucher school students
should be required to take the same tests so we can see if the public
is getting its money's worth."
Johnson urged WEAC members to visit the OnWEAC
Cyberlobby to contact their state senators about the issue.
Resource page on private school
vouchers
Posted January 28, 2005