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Will Ohio Flunk Failing Charter Schools?

State school superintendent Richard Ross and Gov. Kasich at a Cleveland charter school this year

The head of the Office of School Choice in Ohio resigned over the weekend, after he admitted he had left some failing grades out of several charter school evaluations. 

Critics question whether David Hansen was purposely “scrubbing” the grades to make charter sponsors look good.  State Impact Ohio’s Mark reports on the status of legislation that would crack down on bad charter schools.


The state legislature appeared ready to agree on a bill to eliminate failing charter schools by going after the authorizers who sponsor them.  Democrats called the legislation too weak but both of the Republican dominated chambers approved similar bills. Then legislators tabled House Bill 2 saying it needed more study. 

U.S. Senator Sherrod Brown, a Democrat, said that left charter school oversight too lax in Ohio.   He added an amendment to the federal education bill that allows public inspection of for-profit charter school companies. 

“It didn’t go as far as I wanted but it was a recognition by my colleagues that for-profit charter schools are a problem.  We need to deal with it sooner or later because the states have simply failed to do it.”   

Republican State Senator Peggy Lehner doesn’t argue with that.

“Until we actually pass legislation that significantly reforms the charter school laws in Ohio we have failed.”  

As chairman of the Senate Education committee, Lehner spent months on a Senate bill to clean up Ohio charter schools, which Stanford University has rated some of the worst in the nation.

Sherrod Brown lays the blame for Ohio’s lack of oversight on legislators who receive large campaign donations from charter company owners. But he also pointed the finger at the Kasich administration’s Department of Education.  While Governor John Kasich has been an outspoken supporter of charters, this year he called for stricter controls.  And Ohio’s School Superintendent Richard Ross echoed his boss.

“We believe that there needs to be some changes in the community school law.  We advocated for what came out of the executive budget and we still see that need and it continues to be there. 

Lehner is also confident the House and Senate will eventually work out a new law.

“And I’ll continue to push very vigorously to see that that happens because I think that legislation will go a long way towards fixing the problems with Ohio’s charter schools.”  

The CEO of the Cleveland Municipal School District, Eric Gordon, says at least they’re talking about it.

“The House has really prohibited conversation around charter reform.  Now the House was in defensive posture.  So not only is the pressure growing but it’s the first time we’ve actually seen the House have to respond to a reform package instead of being able to prohibit the conversation at all.” 

And now the scandal over the alleged scrubbing of charter grades may put additional pressure on the legislature.