Pennsylvania charter school state reports

State House Passes Meaningful.

State House Passes Meaningful Charter School Reform

On July 7, 2023, the Pennsylvania House of Representatives, in a bipartisan vote, approved House Bill 1422, which signifies the most substantial reforms to the state’s Charter School Law since the creation of cyber charter schools in 2002. This bill builds upon previous attempts to reform charter school law over the past two decades.

Under the current funding structure, school districts are spending more than one billion dollars on cyber charter school tuition based on a flawed funding formula that does not take into account the lower costs of providing a virtual education and uses a one-size-fits-all approach to funding special education students. These overpayments allow cyber charter schools to spend millions of taxpayer dollars on advertising and sponsoring public events and force school districts to raise local property taxes.

Cyber charter schools, despite being public schools, are not subject to the same level of accountability and transparency as school districts. The management companies, which run many of the state’s cyber charter schools, are not subject to any of the state laws that would allow taxpayers to see how their money is being spent.

Key highlights of HB 1422 include:

Fiscal responsibility & funding reform

The Keystone Center for Charter Change urges the Senate to take up this vital issue and get it to the governor’s desk for the benefit of Pennsylvania’s students and taxpayers.