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[BRC-NEWS] R i p - O f f s a n d R e s i s t a n c e

j w
Tue, 08 Jul 2003 23:12:07 -0700

P r i v a t i z a t i o n  : 
R i p  -  O f f s   a n d   R e s i s t a n c e


Business Goes to School The For-Profit Corporate Drive to Run
Public Schools

By Barbara Miner


In September 1990, ABC’s “Good Morning America” was broadcast
from South Pointe Elementary School in Dade County, Florida.
The news peg was the first day of school at what was to be a
new and glorious era in education: for-profit, private
companies running public schools.


South Pointe was run by the for-profit Education Alternatives,
Inc. (EAI), the first for-profit private firm under contract to
run a public school and, at the time, a darling of the movement
to privatize schools.


John Golle, head of EAI, boasted that his company could run
public schools for the same amount of money, improve
achievement and still make a profit. “There’s so much fat in
the schools that even a blind man without his cane would find
the way,” he told Forbes magazine in 1992.


EAI’s rhetoric never matched the educational and financial
reality, however. EAI soon found it couldn’t run public schools
for less than the districts it contracted with, and its
promises of academic improvement proved elusive.


By the spring of 2000, EAI was in the midst of a corporate and
educational meltdown. The company, which changed its name to
Tesseract Group Inc., was millions in debt, got kicked off the
Nasdaq when its stock price tumbled to pennies a share, and
couldn’t even afford the postage to mail report cards home to
parents at one of its remaining charter schools in Arizona.
Today, the company is in bankruptcy.


EAI’s experience notwithstanding, other private contractors are
lining up to run public schools, claiming they can improve
educational performance while turning a profit.


Introducing The Emo’s
For decades, public schools have purchased any number of
products and services from private companies — whether textbook
companies or bus companies providing transportation. But in the
last decade, privatization took on a new meaning, as for-profit
companies hoped to get involved in education at a higher and
qualitatively different level. Their goal: to run schools or
entire school districts — from the hiring of teachers to the
development of curricula and the teaching of students. In the
process, they plan to compete with publicly run schools and
redefine the very definition of public education.


(The growth of for-profit companies running public schools is
an essential but not exclusive component in the education
privatization movement. Another aspect is the funneling of
public dollars directly to private schools, including religious
schools, through taxpayer-supported vouchers. The future of
that privatization effort now depends on the U.S. Supreme
Court, which will hear oral arguments this February in Zelman
v. Simmons-Harris on whether a Cleveland voucher program
violates the separation of church and state; a ruling is
expected in early summer. )


The Wall Street term for private companies that wish to manage
public schools is Educational Management Organizations (EMOs.)
Proponents of privatization say that if you like HMOs, as many
on Wall Street do, you’ll love EMOs. The industry’s backers are
fond of comparing public education to the healthcare industry
of 25 years ago, before the nationwide ascendancy of HMOs.


“Education today, like healthcare 30 years ago, is a vast,
highly localized industry ripe for change,” Mary Tanner,
managing director of Lehman Brothers, told a 1996 Education
Industry Conference in New York City. “The emergence of HMOs
and hospital management companies created enormous
opportunities for investors. We believe the same pattern will
occur in education.”


In the last year, for-profit school management companies in the
United States have consolidated themselves into a number of key
players, including:


• Edison Schools, Inc., based in New York City. Formed in 1992,
Edison is by far the biggest and most important player in the
field. It currently runs 136 schools serving 75,000 students in
22 states and the District of Columbia. In July, Edison
acquired LearnNow, a privately held company. Edison is the only
publicly held company among the major for-profit education
management companies. Key investors have included Microsoft
co-founder Paul Allen ($71 million through his Vulcan Ventures
in 1999), J.P. Morgan Chase & Co., and Investor AB, a Swedish
holding company.
• Chancellor Beacon Academies, formed by the merger in January
2002 of Beacon Education Management of Westborough,
Massachusetts and Miami-based Chancellor Academies, Inc. The
new company, the second largest for-profit school management
company in the United States, serves about 19,000 students on
46 campuses in eight states and the District of Columbia.
• Mosaica Education Inc., of San Rafael, California. Mosaica is
running 22 schools this year in 11 states; in June it took over
the struggling Advantage Schools Inc.
• National Heritage Academies, Grand Rapids, Michigan. National
Heritage, with 28 schools in 2001-2002, operates mostly in
Michigan and North Carolina. It emphasizes moral values and
character education in a setting that opponents claim is thinly
veiled religious education.

Many investors speak bullishly of Edison and the other
for-profit school management companies, extolling the ability
of the marketplace to unleash creativity and innovation. Others
are more cautious. The big unknown question is whether
for-profit companies will prove they can make money in the K-12
education market, which has an estimated potential value of
$350 billion.


Even industry leader Edison has been forced to bluntly
acknowledge its unprofitability. In filings with the Securities
and Exchange Commission, Edison has repeatedly noted, “We have
not yet demonstrated that public schools can be profitably
managed by private companies and we are not certain when we
will become profitable, if at all.”


Reading The Bottom Line
Fundamentally, privatization is about money, not educational
reform. Indeed, the various reforms touted by for-profit
companies — a longer school day and school year, intensive
teacher training and reliance on technology — are reforms
advocated by many public school educators.


Edison notes in its press materials that its school design “is
the product of the thought, discussion, observations and ideas
of educators from all walks of school life” — using the kind of
vague, idealistic language for which public schools are often
criticized.


So far, say Edison’s critics, it has not delivered the goods.
“Edison has promised ‘innovative curricula’ that would
revolutionize education,” says Gerald Bracey, an education
researcher and author of The War Against America’s Public
Schools: Privatizing Schools, Commercializing Education. “But,
discovering that curricula cannot be developed easily, it had
to fall back on existing curricula developed by orthodox
educators. Edison students spend almost 50 percent more time in
class each year than regular public school students and Edison
emphasizes testing. Yet Edison students do not [perform] better
than regular public education students. Edison vowed its
schools could cost no more than regular public schools, but
this promise, too, has been broken.”


In several high-profile districts, Edison has been plagued by
controversy and faces mounting opposition. For example:


• In New York City, the company last spring lost a
community/parental vote on whether the company should manage
five New York schools. The vote was doubly embarrassing because
it came in a city where Edison is headquartered, and because it
was the parents who rejected Edison. (This is the only instance
where Edison’s future has been decided by the votes of parents,
not politicians.)
• In Wichita, Kansas, the school board is debating whether to
end its contracts with four Edison schools in the district,
which each cost $250,000 more than comparable district schools.
Strong sentiment for canceling the contract exists in at least
two of the schools. At one school, Ingalls-Edison, enrollment
dropped from a high of 722 in 1997 to 426 this year, while more
than half of the teaching staff left after the end of the last
school year. Edison says the teachers left because they did not
like the company’s longer school year. But a number of the
teachers say they were driven out by intolerable working
conditions, with one teacher telling the Wichita Eagle, “The
work environment was horrifically hostile. I never knew where I
stood.” In addition, the school’s principal and assistant
principal were removed this December after it was found that
school personnel improperly helped students on standardized
tests.
• In Dallas, the school board forced Edison to renegotiate its
five-year contract when it was found that Edison would have
otherwise received $20 million more than the actual cost of
running its seven schools.
• In San Francisco, parents and school board members revoked
Edison’s charter when test scores showed that the school’s
performance was the absolute worst among the city’s schools.
Under political pressure, the state was forced to step in and
grant Edison an independent charter so the school could keep
going. The San Francisco battle also highlighted issues of
whether Edison has genuine parental support, after it hired a
professional organizing and marketing company, Digital
Campaigns, to generate support among parents. Digital
Campaigns, for example, boasted on its website that Edison was
able to attract only five parents’ signatures on a petition
until Digital Campaigns stepped in to help. Caroline Grannan, a
San Francisco public school parent and co-founder of Parents
Advocating School Accountability, says, “It’s impossible to
know how many ‘happy parents’ would be speaking up without the
professional organizing operation.”
• In Philadelphia, Edison is attempting to secure a six-year
$101 million consulting contract and a separate deal to run as
many as 45 of the district’s schools. The company has the
backing of Governor Mark Schweiker, a Republican who pushed
through a plan this December to allow the state’s takeover of
the district. But Edison has run into stiff and ongoing
community resistance.

“What has turned many in the community against Edison is not
only that the company’s sweeping claims of success do not stand
up to scrutiny,” notes Paul Socolar, editor of the grassroots
publication Philadelphia Public School Notebook, “but also that
Edison intends to extract a large profit from a school district
that is already profoundly underfunded.”


Overall, the district plans to turn as many as 60 of its 264
schools over to for-profit management. Chancellor Beacon
Academies, has also announced that it will seek out contracts
in Philadelphia.


Below Average
One of the biggest controversies in all of the districts where
it operates involves whether Edison’s schools actually perform
better than public schools. Edison says yes, but the company’s
performance indicates otherwise. And not just in San Francisco,
where test scores were so low.
Dallas Superintendent Mike Moses told The American School Board
Journal this December that “we looked at their seven schools
against seven comparable schools, and truthfully, Edison’s
performance was not superior.”


A recent study conducted for the National Education Association
by Western Michigan University researcher Gary Miron found that
Edison schools are performing the same as or slightly worse
overall than comparable public schools. U.S. Representative
Chaka Fattah, D-Pennsylvania, reviewed Edison’s claims of
improved achievement this fall and found that “the overwhelming
majority of Edison schools perform poorly and in many cases are
faring worse than some Philadelphia schools.”


Edison disputes such reports as political sniping, but has yet
to definitively refute them. The RAND Corporation, an
independent research group, has been hired by Edison to analyze
the company’s academic achievement, but that report will not be
completed until 2003 or 2004.


Fundamentally, however, the main complaints against Edison are
two fold. First, say critics, in an era of strapped public
school budgets, money should not be siphoned from education in
order to provide shareholder profits. Second, say privatization
opponents, public education should serve and be run by the
public, especially teachers and parents, while for-profit
companies are controlled by shareholders and private investors
whose main aim is making money and whose decisions are not
subject to public oversight. (Edison did not respond to
requests for comment for this article.)


Given such concerns, one might ask why a school district would
contract with for-profit companies.


At least in part the answer lies in the intensive lobbying and
political connections of privatization advocates.


Another part of the answer lies in the belief that there are
quick fixes that will improve schools, especially in
underfunded urban districts. School districts are sometimes
open to privatization because officials are tired of fighting
taxpayers and state legislators for the increased money they
know is essential to get the job done and are equally tired of
being blamed for failures they believe are beyond their
control.


“In spite of their drawbacks, privatization schemes will likely
continue to attract urban school districts facing chronic
underfunding and a dramatic increase in the number of
desperately poor children with exceptional educational needs,”
says Alex Molnar, a professor at Arizona State University and
author of Giving Kids the Business: The Commercialization of
America’s Schools. “So many of the variables that might help
these children succeed seem outside of the school district’s
control that it is, no doubt, tempting to hand the burden of
being ‘accountable’ to someone else.”


Back To Business ABC’s
Ultimately, the for-profit industry’s future depends at least
as much on its ability to generate profits as on its
educational record. So far, even that record is dismal. Most of
the companies making money off of education have done so by
focusing on a specific niche — such as selling reading
programs, computer software or tutoring and test-prep programs.
No educational management company has shown an ongoing ability
to make money.


That’s one reason all eyes are on Edison. “If Edison makes it,
it will open the floodgates,” Jack Clegg, CEO of Nobel Learning
Communities Inc., told Business Week this past July.


So far, however, Edison has been bleeding red ink. Some of the
most dismal summaries come from its own reports to the SEC. In
a report filed on November 14, Edison noted that since the
company’s inception, it has lost more than $233.5 million. Nor
are the balance sheets dramatically improving. In the quarter
ending in September, it lost more than $18 million.


“We have incurred substantial net losses in every fiscal period
since we began operations and expect losses to continue into
the future,” Edison admitted in the SEC filing.


For years, Edison has projected profits in the near future —
not so soon as to get caught empty-handed, but soon enough to
calm potentially worried investors. But the target date for
profitability keeps receding into the future.


As early as May 1996, Edison Chair of the Board Benno Schmidt
said it would be about three years before the company would
likely make a profit. In June 1997, Schmidt and Edison founder
Chris Whittle reaffirmed Edison could be profitable in about
two years when the company would have 50 to 70 schools. But by
July 2001, Whittle seemed to beg off any expectations by
projecting that Edison would begin to turn a profit only in
2005, when the company expects to have 250,000 pupils.


The Privatization Calculus
Edison faces its biggest test in Philadelphia, where it hopes
to get a multimillion-dollar contract to run as many as 45
schools. In the short term, such a contract would keep enough
cash flowing in to satisfy investors and keep stock prices from
plummeting. (Edison went public in November 1999 at a starting
price of about $18 a share. At the beginning of 2002, its stock
was basically flat, selling between $17 and $19 a share.)


Even if it gets what it wants out of Philadelphia, in the long
run the problems facing Edison are the same that forced
Tesseract/EAI into bankruptcy. Despite perceptions, there is
little “fat” in urban public school budgets. Nor are there any
“silver bullets” that will magically improve schools.


Because education is a labor-intensive industry, there are only
two ways to make money: cut wages or cut services. (A variation
on “cut wages” is hiring younger, lower-paid staff. A variation
on “cut services” is controlling student admissions so that
more-difficult-to-educate students are discouraged from
applying.) Like Tesseract, Edison has been plagued by charges
that it saves money by hiring less-experienced teachers and
that it does not adequately serve special education students.


And when Edison announced this fall that its plan for
Philadelphia included cutting the costs of support staff, it
was following a pattern established by EAI. When EAI went into
its first multischool contract in Baltimore in 1992, one of the
first things it did was replace $10-an-hour, unionized
paraprofessional workers with $7-an-hour “interns” who did not
receive benefits.


That doesn’t mean, however, that some people didn’t make a lot
of money off of EAI. Likewise, some people are in line to make
millions off of Edison.


EAI founder and CEO Golle, ever the shrewd business operator,
knew when to make his move. In the fall of 1993, over a
two-month period when EAI’s stock was riding high, Golle took
advantage of stock options to make a net gain of approximately
$1.75 million on sales of 50,000 shares of EAI common stock.


Edison founder Chris Whittle may also have been smart enough to
get some of his money out while the getting was good. On one
day last March, some 650,000 shares held indirectly by Whittle
were sold for more than $15 million. According to a proxy
statement filed this fall, Whittle still owns 3.7 million
shares of Edison’s publicly-traded stock, and he and his
associates have options on an additional 4.4 million shares.


More important than Golle and Whittle are investors who
continue to be optimistic about their ability to extract
enormous profits from the under-funded public schools. The
for-profit education privatization movement is not likely to go
away just because the companies are not yet making profits. A
lot of people with a lot of money are in this for the long run.

Barbara Miner is managing editor of Rethinking Schools, an
education reform journal based in Milwaukee, Wisconsin.
 



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