Charter School Corruption Strikes Again
By Jim Vail
Special to Mychinews.com
Disgraced former UNO dir. Juan Rangel and his equally disgraced sponsor Rahm Emanuel. |
The disgraced UNO Charter Schools once again hit the
headlines this past week after expense accounts revealed that officials racked
up $60,000 restaurant bills and big-time travel expenses.
All on the tax payer’s dime.
The Chicago Sun-Times forced the United Neighborhood
Organization Charter group to open its books and reveal what it was spending
its money on. UNO, like many charter schools, has resisted transparency by
arguing they are a private entity.
Yet when it comes to educating children they are a public
school.
The UNO Charter network mishandled millions of dollars in
public money when it handed big construction contracts to two brothers of a top
UNO officer which forced the director Juan Rangel to resign in disgrace.
Rangel had served as Mayor Rahm Emanuel’s election campaign
manager the first time he ran.
The amazing fact is that while the state has no money
today, House Speaker Mike Madigan helped sponsor a $98 million state grant about
seven years ago to this corrupt charter empire.
UNO has some big friends. They even opened charters in New
Orleans.
UNO and Rangel’s spectacular fall mirrored former Chicago
Public Schools chief Barbara Byrd-Bennett who pleaded guilty to taking kickbacks.
Rangel and Bennett were merely two minority faces helping
the business class dismantle public education and force privatization via
closing schools (Bennett) and creating loosely-regulated charter schools
(Rangel).
When it comes to supporting charter schools, which pay
teachers less, overemphasize testing and are less regulated, both Chicago
dailies have been enthusiastic cheerleaders.
While the Chicago Tribune editorials have always supported
creating more charter schools in the city, the Sun-Times did sound a note of
caution when the charter craze hit the city about 10 years ago.
They warned in an editorial to not give Aspira any charter
schools because the director was called out for awarding his non-profit
organization contracts while he served on the Roberto Clemente High School local
school council.
The Aspira Charter School corruption scandal hit the
headlines about eight years ago when the school was hit with a federal lawsuit
for strip searching its female students.
CPS told the media that it happened because they couldn’t
regulate charter schools like regular public schools.
The former director Jose Rodriguez, who was rumored to be
called the godfather of City Hall during the Daley regime, did the same thing
as Rangel did – rack up high-expense accounts and take regular trips to Puerto
Rico, all on the taxpayers dime.
How’s that for deregulating the schools like we deregulated
Wall Street.
Rodriguez and Rangel made more money as charter directors
than the CEO of the Chicago Public Schools.
That tells you who is more powerful.
Until their corrupt ways hit the mainstream media that was
supposed to shield them.
I am a CPS teacher and wrote for Substance News. I first
started to expose charter school corruption when I interviewed many teachers
and students who told me all about the shenanigans happening. Crazy expense
accounts that had nothing to do with education, a revolving door of teachers
and principals, out-of-control classrooms, etc.
The parents at the first Aspira Charter Middle School that
was supposed to be a regular public school in Albany Park started a blog about
all the problems.
They said the $25 million newly-built school was run by
incompetent administrators where gangs had almost free run of the school and
teachers who questioned their labor practices were literally driven out in
orchestrated witch hunts.
UNO and Aspira played a big role in politics because they
could round up buses filled with voters and agitators. It was pay back to award
them lucrative charters until the gig blew up.