The way the city funds our schools structurally underfunds educational operations for DC Public Schools (DCPS) relative to the charter sector to the tune of $40 million to $50 million a year.
That claim may surprise you because the DC charter sector — which has accumulated $500 million in net assets that grow by $40 million or $50 million a year and is consistently deemed by national charter advocates to enjoy among the most hospitable regulatory environments in the nation — ceaselessly claims to be a victim. The opposite is true.
Matthew Frumin is a DC attorney, former advisory neighborhood commissioner and community activist.
Rather than addressing this issue, the deputy mayor for education has been exploring changes to the Uniform Per Student Funding Formula (UPSFF) — the primary vehicle for funding schools — and DCPS has been looking into how it distributes funds among its schools. As the mayor formulates her budget though, her first move should be to address the structural underfunding of DCPS operations.
Read More