The state's education leaders now say charter schools, like other public schools, must disclose what they pay their employees. But some leaders of the charter movement say they disagree.
Vinroot |
"I don't want Sally to know what Jimmy got paid," Vinroot said. "It would create disruption within our school."
As Superintendent Heath Morrison noted when I mentioned that argument, Charlotte-Mecklenburg Schools also has a number of teachers who receive merit-based bonuses, which we've reported every year. It may or may not create tension among colleagues, but it tells the public more about how those pilot systems are playing out, at a time when performance pay is one of the biggest public policy issues in education.
Terrill |
"I believe that the data shows a high level of fiscal responsibility and a stewardship of public tax dollars. We have tried to provide salaries that are high enough to recruit and retain an excellent faculty and staff," wrote Terrill, who is presumably the administrator listed at $115,360 a year. "Pine Lake is a model for openness and transparency," he added, citing the school's compliance with the state's Open Meetings Law.
Baker Mitchell, a Wilmington charter school operator who serves on the N.C. Charter School Advisory Board, has been blogging against disclosure since I raised the issue in March.
Mitchell |
This week he suggested that test scores should provide what taxpayers need to know about their investment in charter schools.
"We frequently measure costs in terms such as dollars per gallon of milk, or dollars per foot of fence," Mitchell writes. "We don’t need to how much the farmer pays his helpers or how much the fence contractor pays his carpenters – we want to know the final cost of the product. Similarly, we should ask, 'How much are we paying for each test passed by the students of a school or district?' What is the taxpayer’s cost per successful test? Individual salaries give no information whatsoever about how well students are being taught."
And in a comment on an Observer charter-salary story, Mitchell noted that private vendors get public money from traditional public schools: "Pearson, Inc. receives hundreds of millions of taxpayer dollars for their student testing software. Thomas Bus Company received hundreds of millions for their school buses. McGraw-Hill receives hundreds of millions of taxpayer dollars for textbooks. Duke Power, Xerox, Apple, Microsoft, etc. all receive huge amounts of taxpayer money. Why would invading the privacy of their workers' personal salary information help improve their products?"
Mitchell, Terrill and Vinroot are omitting a key point: Charter schools agree to abide by the state's open meetings and public records laws when they accept the public money. That law protects many parts of personnel files for employees of school districts, the state, cities and counties -- there's no specific protection for employees of charter boards -- but it says that names, salaries and many other specific items remain a public record.
It's possible that these folks told state officials when they accepted their charters that they'd only follow the parts of the law they agreed with, but I doubt it. The boom in charters means those schools are starting to get the kind of scrutiny other public schools receive, and that can be uncomfortable. (The Observer doesn't cover Mitchell's schools, but his Roger Bacon Academy charter management company has faced public questions about enrollment, personnel decisions and an investigation by the U.S. Department of Education.)