Wednesday, March 09, 2011

Green Dot and Steve Barr Updates



Longtime Oakland teacher Jack Gerson points out: "Two years ago, Steve Barr and his Green Dot charter schools group engineered a hostile takeover of Locke High School, a large public high school in Los Angeles. Despite the opposition of United Teachers of Los Angeles and the LA Unified School District, Barr was able to convince a bare majority of Locke's permanent faculty (37 of 73) to opt for Green Dot."

Barr promptly dismissed the entire staff, forcing them to reapply for their jobs. Over 70 percent were not rehired.

Writing in the Los Angeles Times in August 2008, Ralph E. Shaffer, professor emeritus of history at Cal Poly Pomona, pointed out that Barr wants to make a particular imprint on the curriculum: "In Locke's social studies and history courses, 'students will demonstrate an understanding of. . . and a belief in the values of. . . capitalism.'

 

 

Acc. To the Green Dot website, he is no longer on staff either.

Barr stepped aside this fall as board chairman of Green Dot but remains on the board and on staff. The expense problem had nothing to do with Barr's change of role, said Shane Martin, who replaced Barr as chairman.

 

Green Dot charter schools founder repays group $50,866

The nonprofit's tax return shows that Steve Barr repaid the organization after an internal review found that expenses he had charged were undocumented or unjustified.

http://articles.latimes.com/2009/dec/02/local/la-me-greendot2-2009dec02

  • http://www.latimes.com/media/photo/2009-12/50822991.jpg
Green Dot schools founder Steve Barr greets a student in 2007. Barr said… (Anne Cusack / Los Angeles Times)
December 02, 2009|By Howard Blume
Local charter school founder Steve Barr, a national figure in school reform, has repaid his organization more than $50,000 after an internal review determined that expenses he had charged were undocumented or unjustified.

FOR THE RECORD:
Green Dot: An article in Wednesday's Section A about Green Dot Public Schools founder Steve Barr repaying his charter school organization more than $50,000 in expenses said the issue had surfaced in a post by education blogger Alexander Russo. Another blogger, Ken Libby, had previously posted about Barr's repayment. —

The repayment was disclosed in a tax return filed this year by Green Dot Public Schools, which Barr launched in 1999.
Barr stepped aside this fall as board chairman of Green Dot but remains on the board and on staff. The expense problem had nothing to do with Barr's change of role, said Shane Martin, who replaced Barr as chairman.
Martin said Tuesday that the expenses came to light in an internal review as the rapidly growing nonprofit transitioned from Barr's ad hoc creation to a nonprofit run according to proper accounting standards.
The disallowed costs related to missing receipts and "isolated instances of expenses that were more extravagant than they needed to be for a nonprofit," such as lodging at higher-grade hotels, said Martin, who also heads the school of education at Loyola Marymount University.
"We caught this internally and took decisive action," he said. "Everyone cooperated fully."
Barr's education work has attracted significant notice because of Green Dot's July 2008 takeover of long-struggling Locke High in South Los Angeles. U.S. Education Secretary Arne Duncan has cited Green Dot's approach as one model for the essential turnaround of the nation's high school "dropout factories."
Green Dot's internal review has local implications because the Los Angeles Unified School District is poised to turn over as many as 30 campuses to outside bidders, including Green Dot and other charter organizations. Charters are publicly funded, independently managed schools that are free from some regulations that govern traditional schools.
Martin initially cited attorney-client privilege in saying that Green Dot would not release an audit of Barr's expenses because it was conducted by a law firm. He later said Green Dot would consider releasing it.

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

Green Dot is not a high performing charter school in NYC or in California. Charters are not delivering on their promises. Community schools outperform charters in NYC and nationally.

Tide is turning. Charters lies are being exposed.