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OEA to continue fighting for pension security in wake of STRS election

OEA to continue fighting for pension security in wake of STRS election

[May 6, 2023] Ohio Education Association (OEA) President Scott DiMauro released the following statement in response to the announcement Saturday that Portsmouth Education Association member Arthur Lard did not successfully win re-election to the State Teachers Retirement System (STRS) Board:

“The Ohio Education Association thanks Arthur Lard for his unwavering commitment to our pension security and the long-term health of the system for all active, retired and future teachers during his time on the STRS Board.

As the Board moves forward, it is more important than ever that every teacher in Ohio takes an active interest in the work of the STRS Board. STRS must make good on its promise to ensure that every teacher receives a guaranteed pension they can’t outlive, not just for active and retired teachers today but to make sure we can continue to bring excellent educators into the profession in the future to serve Ohio’s students. Risky investment schemes that undermine the future of the pension cannot be tolerated.

STRS faces difficult challenges in the years ahead, including market instability and growing inflation, and the work of the STRS Board will be critical if our pension system is to weather those storms. We wish Pat Davidson the best as he assumes his new responsibilities on the Board. We also look forward to working with all members of the STRS Board to ensure that all members, current and future, have a pension they can count on for the rest of their lives.”

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OEA applauds public education investments in House-passed budget

[April 26, 2023] In response to the Ohio House passing its version of the FY 2024-2025 state budget on Wednesday, Ohio Education Association (OEA) President Scott DiMauro issued the following statement:

“The Ohio Education Association applauds the Ohio House for prioritizing the students of our state in the budget bill passed in that chamber this week. This budget includes significant investments in public schools—including a plan to increase the minimum teacher salary to address growing teacher shortage issues—and it promotes a number of sound public education policies, like repealing the punitive mandatory retention provision of the Third Grade Reading Guarantee while maintaining an emphasis on the importance of literacy for our children. Additionally, this budget proposal makes school breakfast and lunch accessible to more children by having the state cover the difference in the cost between free and reduced-price meals.

More importantly, the House has demonstrated its commitment to working to fully and fairly fund the public schools that serve 90 percent of students in our state. This budget measure increases state funding to public schools by nearly $1 billion over the biennium by ensuring updated data is used in the Fair School Funding Plan (FSFP) formula to determine the actual costs of providing an excellent education to every child while continuing to provide more of the funding necessary to fulfill that promise, when the FSFP is fully implemented. OEA thanks the House for taking this important step forward.

The budget bill now moves to the Senate for consideration, and OEA urges our state Senators to build on the positive momentum of the House’s work and pull back on the proposed expansion of voucher schemes that would amount to near universal eligibility in our state. The Senate must do the right thing for Ohio’s 1.6 million public school students, and OEA looks forward to working with lawmakers from both parties to ensure the best budget bill possible is adopted for the next biennium.

OEA would like to thank House Speaker Jason Stephens, Leader Allison Russo, House Finance Committee Chair Jay Edwards, and Ranking Member Bride Rose Sweeney for their bipartisan efforts to bring the budget to this point. The budget proposal they produced puts Ohio students first and shows that the House supports what Ohioans believe so strongly, that public education matters in our state.”

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Hunger-Free Schools Ohio calls for immediate relief for child hunger crisis

[February 20, 2023] While lawmakers in Ohio’s statehouse continue to discuss potential options for expanding access to nutritious school meals for all children in the state, Ohio parents, educators, and policy experts joined together for a virtual panel discussion Monday morning to push for immediate action. A full recording of Monday’s press event can be found here.

“Every child in Ohio, regardless of where they’re from, what they look like, or how much money their parents make, needs to be able to eat full, nutritionally complete meals at school. Therefore, allowing them to focus on what they’re learning, not on the hunger pangs they’re feeling,” said Ohio Education Association President Scott DiMauro, who hosted Monday’s discussion on behalf of the Hunger-Free Schools Ohio coalition. “Although the pandemic-era federal programs that ensured every Ohio child could receive free meals at school have ended, there is more than enough money in Ohio right now to ensure no student goes without the meals they need.”

“Having meals provided for my child when universal meal programs were in place in Ohio made a huge difference in our lives. Now, every dollar we’re spending on meals is a dollar we can’t spend on the other things we need,” said Megan Thompson, a parent in the Wellington Exempted School District in Lorain County who shared her family’s story during the Hunger-Free Schools Ohio discussion this week.

“Our students are keenly aware of the difference having nutritious school meals makes in their days along with the struggles some of their peers face in trying to pay for those meals,” said Bluffton Middle School Principal Josh Kauffman, whose Allen County students hosted a bake sale to pay off the lunch debts of their classmates. “Unfortunately, there is a stigma around accepting necessary help to access school meals. But that stigma disappears when systems are in place to provide healthy school meals for all.”

“One in six children, and as many as one in four children in certain counties, lives in a household that faces hunger—that’s 413,000 kids across Ohio. School meals play an essential role in alleviating child hunger and improving child wellbeing. We hope lawmakers will prioritize our kids and school nutrition programs in this biennial budget by expanding critical access to school meals,” said Katherine Ungar, a Children’s Defense Fund-Ohio Policy Associate who wrote the “School Meals Support Ohio Student Health and Learning” white paper.

“It has been heartbreaking to see students who are unable to pay for their school lunches turned away from the nutritious food they need. Our dedicated cafeteria staff should never have to serve as both caring food service professionals and hard-hearted debt collectors,” said Daryn Guarino, Director of Food and Nutrition for Alexander Local Schools in Athens County.

“School meals are a basic need for every student to be able to learn and reach their full potential in our classrooms,” agreed Lindy Douglas, Special Programs Coordinator for Alexander Local Schools. “Especially here in rural Appalachia, where our kids already struggle to have a level playing field in so many ways, our kids can’t afford to have our state leaders fail to act on this urgent issue. Ohio lawmakers must act now to make sure every child is fed.”

ABOUT HUNGER-FREE SCHOOLS OHIO
We are a passionate collective representing more than 40 local and statewide anti-hunger, education, food, and nutrition organizations and associations who are working to take hunger off the table, committed to ensuring that every student in Ohio has access to healthy school meals. Learn more at hungerfreeschoolsoh.org

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For Profit Charter School Chains Make Money with Questionable Real Estate and Management Deals

Imagine Schools White Hat Management

Charter schools are once again receiving unwanted scrutiny.  Since its inception over a decade ago, reports of academic failures, management deficiencies and financial improprieties have dogged Ohio’s charter school program.

This time, our attention is drawn to two of the for-profit companies that operate charter school franchises throughout the state.

First, White Hat Management, Ohio’s largest for-profit charter school operator, was recently sued by the governing authorities of ten of its charter schools. Click here to view the complaint.

The lawsuit alleges that White Hat has abused its unfettered control of each of its charter schools by maliciously breaching its fiduciary responsibilities by failing to account for its use of public funds and by using those funds for purposes other than providing for the education of students.

Second, Imagine Schools, Inc., the nation’s largest for-profit operator of charter schools, is the subject of a new study by Policy Matters Ohio.  Report author, Piet Van Lier, paints a picture of a profiteering company that uses questionable leaseback arrangements to further enhance its bottom line at the expense of its students’ educational needs.

The report details how Imagine, through a subsidiary, brokers real estate deals which allow the company to buy a property, then sell it to a real estate investment trust company from which Imagine leases back the property and in turn rents it to an Imagine-run charter school.  This practice enables Imagine to enjoy profits on both the resale of the property and the high rents that it charges to its schools.

The brands offered by White Hat and Imagine have provided little in terms of tangible results – White Hat’s dropout prevention charter schools post a graduation rate of just 14 percent and no Imagine school earned better than a D on the most recent state report card.

Yet, these and other management companies continue to reap a generous bounty from state policies largely sown by White Hat founder, David Brennan.

Mr. Brennan can be credited with the role of the man behind the curtain in shaping the state’s school choice programs.   In addition to generating about three-quarters of a billion dollars in state aid payments for his White Hat enterprise, he has also been wildly successful in securing special protections for White Hat, and other, for-profit operators.

A case-in-point illustration of the fruit of Mr. Brennan’s legislation-influencing labors is a provision under current law that will allow White Hat to fire the lawsuit’s plaintiffs and appoint new, more compliant governing authorities.

The White Hat lawsuit and the Policy Matters’ report have reignited the debate over the appropriateness of allowing for-profit companies to operate charter schools.

However, it is difficult to envision how those who will still argue in support of this marriage of free enterprise and public education can continue to defend the records of White Hat and Imagine.

By Andrew Jewell
Research Development Consultant
Ohio Education Association

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