Editorial: Charter-school profiteers

May 25, 2016 (Salt Lake Tribune)

According to a report from the Utah Foundation released last month, Utah charters collect about 10 percent less per student than regular public schools, but they have cost advantages, too. They have fewer non-English speakers and economically-disadvantaged students. Add in the public schools’ requirements to provide busing, to build inefficient rural schools and to provide such things as gang-prevention services, and the cost difference virtually disappears. Looking at test scores, charters track pretty closely to public schools on average.

In other words, there is no evidence the free-market capitalism allowed in Utah’s charter school system is providing better results for students.

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