Original aim was to add choice for same money.
What is going on with charter schools? Their justifying principle was fairly simple: they would receive funding for each pupil of no more or less than the state pays for each pupil in its own schools. Private enterprise, usually a charitable trust, would provide the foundation capital, the buildings and grounds as it saw fit, and establish a school that could offer a different character of education that could match state schools' results.
First, as the charter schools were starting to appear on the landscape over the summer, we learned one of them was using its establishment grant from the taxpayer to buy Northland farmland for its site, another began using its grant for radio and newspaper advertisements. There is nothing wrong with schools paying to promote themselves to prospective parents, as long as they do it out of private funds. State schools would not use their state funding for commercial advertising and nor should the charters.
What is this "establishment grant" anyway? Is it additional to the funding per pupil? Education Minister Hekia Parata said it was up to the schools to decide how to spend their establishment grant and that it was already clear $18.95 million allocated to them for establishment costs would not be enough. The sums were set before the Government knew what type of schools might be approved. It all begs the question, exactly how much foundation capital are the charters contributing themselves?
As if those discoveries were not disturbing enough, when the first charter schools opened this month we found two of them, in Northland, trying to send their pupils to nearby state schools for some subjects. That was not in the plan. If a charter school is going to take money for pupils' complete education, then "subcontract" part of its obligation to state schools, what is the point? The taxpayer could cut out the middle man.