Business
Audit Exposes Flaws in South Carolina’s Charter School System
A recent audit of South Carolina’s largest charter school authorizer has unveiled significant issues, including wasteful spending and conflicts of interest at the Charter Institute at Erskine. The Legislative Audit Council confirmed that taxpayer funds are being used to support questionable initiatives, including international trips for charter school employees and unapproved financial practices that violate state procurement law.
The findings highlight systemic problems within the charter school framework in South Carolina, particularly the lack of legislative action to close loopholes that have persisted for over seven years. Since the establishment of the Charter Institute at Erskine, as well as the Limestone Charter Association and the still-developing Voorhees University Charter Institute of Learning, the state’s charter school laws have been exploited to create self-serving financial entities. This raises concerns about which financially struggling private colleges may follow suit in seeking similar advantages.
The audit indicates that while charter schools generally perform well across the nation, South Carolina’s system is underperforming. The review does not explicitly criticize the charter schools’ effectiveness but outlines troubling practices regarding transparency and governance that the current legislation fails to address. For instance, state law mandates that charter schools and their governing bodies adhere to the Freedom of Information Act. However, the audit notes that the law is silent on whether private colleges acting as charter authorizers are subject to these requirements.
This oversight stems from the original intent of the law, which was to allow public school districts to authorize charter schools, without anticipating that private institutions would seek the same authority. The provision added in 2012, which permitted a college to become a charter authorizer, was specifically designed for S.C. State University. Legislators did not foresee the emergence of profit-driven management organizations that could exploit this system, leading to a misalignment with the law’s original intent to empower parents and teachers.
The audit further reveals that the charter school law lacks clarity regarding the relationships between charter sponsors, schools, and education management organizations—entities that often manage charter schools for a fee. This gap in legislation allows for profit-seeking intermediaries to divert funds from public schools to private interests, undermining the original mission of charter schools to serve local communities.
Despite these significant findings, the superintendent of the Charter Institute declared the audit a validation of their operations, a statement that many observers find perplexing given the report’s content. The audit spans 89 pages and consistently raises concerns about conflicts of interest and the absence of good governance practices in the management of charter schools.
Senate Education Chairman Greg Hembree has expressed his commitment to reforming the charter school law, stating he began drafting amendments to address these issues immediately after reviewing the audit. This proactive response offers a glimmer of hope that the legislature may take steps to rectify the shortcomings identified by the auditors.
Nevertheless, the fundamental issue remains: South Carolina’s laws permit private colleges to allocate taxpayer funds to charter schools without sufficient oversight or accountability from public officials. This lack of checks and balances leaves the system vulnerable to exploitation, making it essential for lawmakers to prioritize comprehensive reforms.
As South Carolina grapples with these challenges, the emphasis must shift towards establishing a regulatory framework that holds all charter school authorizers accountable, ensuring that public funds are utilized effectively for the benefit of all students. Until significant legislative changes are enacted, the potential for further financial mismanagement and conflict of interest will linger, undermining the integrity of the state’s educational system.
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