Indianapolis Tries To Shape A ‘Grand Bargain’ For Charters, District

Indianapolis Tries To Shape A ‘Grand Bargain’ For Charters, District
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Indianapolis’ fast-growing charter schools could soon have a chance to share buildings with the city’s school district and offer students busing — but with a possible “grand bargain” of giving up some autonomy.
A panel ordered by the state legislature is hurrying to recommend by the end of December how the Indianapolis Public Schools and charter schools could work together to make busing and unused school space open to charters.
It’s the latest battleground in the decades-long fight between charter schools and school districts nationally over who has control of schools and the tax money that supports them. In Indiana, where state leaders strongly support school choice, power has shifted and to charters, which now educate than half of Indianapolis students.
The panel won’t make its final recommendations until Dec. 17, but is leaning toward creating a new governing body to oversee sharing of schools and buses. Last week the panel narrowed its debate to two approaches, both of which give power to charters and take it from the district’s elected school board.
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The first would create a “collaborative compact advisory board” of appointees from the district, mayor and charter schools. The second would create an Indianapolis Education Authority with a mayor-appointed board and new city secretary of education.
The panel’s vote to focus on these two options, rather than letting the district take the lead, drew boos from residents who want an elected board to make decisions, not an appointed one.
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Despite the boos, there’s strong support for expanded busing for charter school students in the city, where charters are not required to pay for buses, and usually don’tto save money for teachers and books. The panel, however, has already rejected offering buses to every student to attend any school, anywhere in the district they want, as too expensive, so there will be limits.
How many students will be affected also depends on another key issue to be resolved — whether all Indianapolis charters would have to opt into the new collective plan. Some of the proposals require participation and others don’t, which looms as a potential fight as the plan is finalized.
The Indianapolis Local Education Alliance will make final recommendations Dec. 17.
Any new plan will likely need approval from a heavily Republican and pro-charter state legislature, whose leanings are a backdrop to the debate.
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But though some shift of assets to charters is now all but certain, gains for those schools won’t come without strings. District schools and charter schools will have to give up some autonomy in return for a piece of the collective pie.
Scott Bess, founder of the successful Purdue Polytechnic charter high schools and of the Charter Innovation Center advocacy group, called that tradeoff a “grand bargain.”
“You’re going to have to have some standardization,” said Bess, who’s watching the panel closely. “That’s the bargain.”
Charter schools’ will likely have to adjust their daily schedules and yearly calendars to fit a broader busing plan that aligns vacation days and school opening and closing times so buses can take than one load of students to school each day.
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And charters that have built their own schools or leased them for years may have to turn those buildings and leases over to the new body, which could then decide to close a school and give the building to another operator.
There’s also debate whether charter schools in the city should even have a choice to be part of a collective plan. Early indications are that the state legislature would not back requiring charter schools to join.
Indianapolis Public Schools Superintendent Aleesia Johnson told the panel last month that if the goal is to make sure all students have transportation, then schools shouldn’t be allowed to opt out.
“If schools are given the option not to participate, and enough schools don’t, then you don’t have a system any ,” she said.
Angela Smith-Jones, Indiana University’s associate vice president for state relations and a member of the panel, also called for mandatory participation for all charter schools.
“Then it’s really solving the problem,” Smith-Jones said at the same meeting. “All schools are actually getting the exact same thing. Seems fair and equitable.”
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Bess,who’s also a member of the Indiana state school board and of the National Association of Charter School Authorizers, wants the panel and state to give schools a choice. He said school leaders are weighing, even as the plans are being developed, whether giving up control for resources makes sense for them.
“The devil is clearly in the details,” said Bess. With school buildings, Bess said, schools have to weigh their own budgets, building debt and repair needs against giving an asset to an outside authority that could delay building upgrades or even shut a school down.
“Local property taxes (could pay) for all those improvements and maintenance and all the things that go with it,” Bess said. “But with that comes this grand bargain that we have to perform academically to a standard that is accepted across the city.”
“As I talk to a lot of charter school leaders, they’re looking at this saying, ‘Man, I don’t know that. I want to give up my full autonomy,’” he said.
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Schools are also weighing whether a central, but standardized busing schedule for all schools might mean giving up early dismissal days or other schedule differences.
“Some schools that I’ve talked to said ‘That’s not worth it to me,’ like ‘I’ll walk away from the money, because my schedule and my autonomy on how I operate is really important to me’,” Bess said. “Other schools said, ‘Oh, wow, you mean I could actually provide transportation for kids, and all I’ve got to do is give up a little bit of my quirky schedule.’”
Tommy Reddicks, CEO of the successful Paramount charter school chainhas opposed any changes to charter school autonomy, including demands from some residents that the state block new charters. He told the panel last week he also opposes forcing charters to be part of a transportation authority.
“Requiring districts or agents to control charter transportation in any mandated form, strips operational independence,” said Reddicks, whose schools do not provide buses to save money. “Mandates that limit charter autonomy violate the very reason the (panel) was created.”
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But there’s a big financial incentive to join – a share of tax dollars the state legislature has already voted to give charters. The legislature voted this spring to give charter schools a share of local property taxes that have traditionally gone to districts starting in 2028, but some state officials have slated that money to go to the new collective busing and building effort — not to individual schools in addition to it.
That legislation, Senate Bill 1, would give charter schools $2,050 per student in local property taxes in 2028, rising to $3,750 per student by 2031.
“In Indianapolis, instead of having (property tax) transfers from IPS (the district) to the charters, that transfer is going to happen through the authority,” said Indiana House Education Committee Chairman Robert Behning.
“(If) you want to have access to that funding, then you need to participate in the authority,” he added.
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Behning said one limit the school district and some other advocacy groups have sought — limiting the number of authorizers that can approve new charter schools in the city — is unlikely to win support from the legislature.
Behning said he would never want only the city mayor’s office to authorize new schools because that would make the ability of new schools to open dependent on who wins the latest mayoral election.
“Whatever happens, we have to make sure that it can’t be changed by the next election,” he said.
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Disclaimer: This news article has been republished exactly as it appeared on its original source, without any modification.
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Author:Patrick O’Donnell
Published on:2025-12-09 23:30:00
Source: www.the74million.org
!function(f,b,e,v,n,t,s){if(f.fbq)return;n=f.fbq=function(){n.callMethod? n.callMethod.apply(n,arguments):n.queue.push(arguments)};if(!f._fbq)f._fbq=n; n.push=n;n.loaded=!0;n.version=’2.0′;n.queue=();t=b.createElement(e);t.async=!0; t.src=v;s=b.getElementsByTagName(e)(0);s.parentNode.insertBefore(t,s)}(window, document,’script’,’https://connect.facebook.net/en_US/fbevents.js’); fbq(‘init’, ‘626037510879173’); // 626037510879173 fbq(‘track’, ‘PageView’);{“@context”:”http://schema.org”,”@type”:”NewsArticle”,”dateCreated”:”2025-12-10T11:41:10+04:00″,”datePublished”:”2025-12-10T11:41:10+04:00″,”dateModified”:”2025-12-10T11:41:10+04:00″,”headline”:”Indianapolis Tries to Shape a u2018Grand Bargainu2019 for Charters, District”,”name”:”Indianapolis Tries to Shape a u2018Grand Bargainu2019 for Charters, District”,”keywords”:[],”url”:”https://uaetodaynews.com/indianapolis-tries-to-shape-a-grand-bargain-for-charters-district-the-74/”,”description”:”Get stories like this delivered straight to your inbox. Sign up for The 74 Newsletter Indianapolisu2019 fast-growing charter schools could soon have a chance to share buildings with the cityu2019s school dist”,”copyrightYear”:”2025″,”articleSection”:”Education”,”articleBody”:”nnn n Get stories like this delivered straight to your inbox. Sign up for The 74 Newslettern n n n nIndianapolisu2019 fast-growing charter schools could soon have a chance to share buildings with the cityu2019s school district and offer more students busing u2014 but with a possibleu00a0u201cgrand bargainu201d of giving up some autonomy.nnnnA panel ordered by the state legislature is hurrying to recommend by the end of December how the Indianapolis Public Schools and charter schools could work together to make busing and unused school space open to charters.nnnnItu2019s the latest battleground in the decades-long fight between charter schools and school districts nationally over who has control of schools and the tax money that supports them. In Indiana, where state leaders strongly support school choice, power has shifted more and more to charters, which now educate more than half of Indianapolis students.nnnnnnnnThe panel wonu2019t make its final recommendations until Dec. 17, but is leaning toward creating a new governing body to oversee sharing of schools and buses. Last week the panel narrowed its debate to two approaches, both of which give more power to charters and take it from the districtu2019s elected school board.nnnnThe first would create a u201ccollaborative compact advisory boardu201d of appointees from the district, mayor and charter schools. The second would create an Indianapolis Education Authority with a mayor-appointed board and new city secretary of education.nnnnRelatedPush for Indiana Schools to Share Buses and Buildings Ramps UpnnnnThe panelu2019s vote to focus on these two options, rather than letting the district take the lead, drew boos from residents who want an elected board to make decisions, not an appointed one.nnnnDespite the boos, thereu2019s strong support for expanded busing for charter school students in the city, where charters are not required to pay for buses, and usually donu2019tto save money for teachers and books. The panel, however, has already rejected offering buses to every student to attend any school, anywhere in the district they want, as too expensive, so there will be limits.nnnnHow many students will be affected also depends on another key issue to be resolved u2014 whether all Indianapolis charters would have to opt into the new collective plan. Some of the proposals require participation and others donu2019t, which looms as a potential fight as the plan is finalized. The Indianapolis Local Education Alliance will make final recommendations Dec. 17. nnnnAny new plan will likely need approval from a heavily Republican and pro-charter state legislature, whose leanings are a backdrop to the debate.nnnnBut though some shift of assets to charters is now all but certain, gains for those schools wonu2019t come without strings. District schools and charter schools will have to give up some autonomy in return for a piece of the collective pie.nnnnScott Bess, founder of the successful Purdue Polytechnic charter high schools and of the Charter Innovation Center advocacy group, called that tradeoff a u201cgrand bargain.u201dnnnnu201cYouu2019re going to have to have some standardization,u201d said Bess, whou2019s watching the panel closely. u201cThatu2019s the bargain.u201dnnnnCharter schoolsu2019 will likely have to adjust their daily schedules and yearly calendars to fit a broader busing plan that aligns vacation days and school opening and closing times so buses can take more than one load of students to school each day.nnnnAnd charters that have built their own schools or leased them for years may have to turn those buildings and leases over to the new body, which could then decide to close a school and give the building to another operator.nnnnThereu2019s also debate whether charter schools in the city should even have a choice to be part of a collective plan. Early indications are that the state legislature would not back requiring charter schools to join.nnnnRelatedTiny Indiana District With Online School Worth Millions Ordered To ClosennnnIndianapolis Public Schools Superintendent Aleesia Johnson told the panel last month that if the goal is to make sure all students have transportation, then schools shouldnu2019t be allowed to opt out.nnnnu201cIf schools are given the option not to participate, and enough schools donu2019t, then you donu2019t have a system anymore,u201d she said.nnnnAngela Smith-Jones, Indiana Universityu2019s associate vice president for state relations and a member of the panel, also called for mandatory participation for all charter schools.nnnnu201cThen itu2019s really solving the problem,u201d Smith-Jones said at the same meeting. u201cAll schools are actually getting the exact same thing. Seems fair and equitable.u201dnnnnBess,whou2019s also a member of the Indiana state school board and of the National Association of Charter School Authorizers, wants the panel and state to give schools a choice. He said school leaders are weighing, even as the plans are being developed, whether giving up control for more resources makes sense for them.nnnnu201cThe devil is clearly in the details,u201d said Bess. With school buildings, Bess said, schools have to weigh their own budgets, building debt and repair needs against giving an asset to an outside authority that could delay building upgrades or even shut a school down.nnnnu201cLocal property taxes (could pay) for all those improvements and maintenance and all the things that go with it,u201d Bess said. u201cBut with that comes this grand bargain that we have to perform academically to a standard that is accepted across the city.u201dnnnnu201cAs I talk to a lot of charter school leaders, theyu2019re looking at this saying, u2018Man, I donu2019t know that. I want to give up my full autonomy,’u201d he said.nnnnSchools are also weighing whether a central, but more standardized busing schedule for all schools might mean giving up early dismissal days or other schedule differences.nnnnu201cSome schools that Iu2019ve talked to said u2018Thatu2019s not worth it to me,u2019 like u2018Iu2019ll walk away from the money, because my schedule and my autonomy on how I operate is really important to meu2019,u201d Bess said. u201cOther schools said, u2018Oh, wow, you mean I could actually provide more transportation for more kids, and all Iu2019ve got to do is give up a little bit of my quirky schedule.u2019u201dnnnnTommy Reddicks, CEO of the successful Paramount charter school chainhas opposed any changes to charter school autonomy, including demands from some residents that the state block new charters. He told the panel last week he also opposes forcing charters to be part of a transportation authority.nnnnu201cRequiring districts or agents to control charter transportation in any mandated form, strips operational independence,u201d said Reddicks, whose schools do not provide buses to save money. u201cMandates that limit charter autonomy violate the very reason the (panel) was created.u201dnnnnBut thereu2019s a big financial incentive to join u2013 a share of tax dollars the state legislature has already voted to give charters. The legislature voted this spring to give charter schools a share of local property taxes that have traditionally gone to districts starting in 2028, but some state officials have slated that money to go to the new collective busing and building effort u2014 not to individual schools in addition to it.nnnnThat legislation, Senate Bill 1, would give charter schools $2,050 per student in local property taxes in 2028, rising to $3,750 per student by 2031.nnnnu201cIn Indianapolis, instead of having (property tax) transfers from IPS (the district) to the charters, that transfer is going to happen through the authority,u201d said Indiana House Education Committee Chairman Robert Behning.nnnnu201c(If) you want to have access to that funding, then you need to participate in the authority,u201d he added.nnnnBehning said one limit the school district and some other advocacy groups have sought u2014 limiting the number of authorizers that can approve new charter schools in the city u2014 is unlikely to win support from the legislature.nnnnBehning said he would never want only the city mayoru2019s office to authorize new schools because that would make the ability of new schools to open dependent on who wins the latest mayoral election. nnnnu201cWhatever happens, we have to make sure that it canu2019t be changed by the next election,u201d he said.nn n n n Did you use this article in your work?
nWeu2019d love to hear how The 74u2019s reporting is helping educators, researchers, and policymakers. Tell us hown n nnn !function(f,b,e,v,n,t,s){if(f.fbq)return;n=f.fbq=function(){n.callMethod?n n.callMethod.apply(n,arguments):n.queue.push(arguments)};if(!f._fbq)f._fbq=n;n n.push=n;n.loaded=!0;n.version=’2.0′;n.queue=();t=b.createElement(e);t.async=!0;n t.src=v;s=b.getElementsByTagName(e)(0);s.parentNode.insertBefore(t,s)}(window,n document,’script’,’https://connect.facebook.net/en_US/fbevents.js’);n fbq(‘init’, ‘626037510879173’); // 626037510879173n fbq(‘track’, ‘PageView’);n nnnnnDisclaimer: This news article has been republished exactly as it appeared on its original source, without any modification. nWe do not take any responsibility for its content, which remains solely the responsibility of the original publisher.nnnnnnAuthor: Patrick Ou2019DonnellnPublished on: 2025-12-09 23:30:00nSource: www.the74million.orgn”,”publisher”:{“@id”:”#Publisher”,”@type”:”Organization”,”name”:”uaetodaynews”,”logo”:{“@type”:”ImageObject”,”url”:”https://uaetodaynews.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/09/images-e1759081190269.png”},”sameAs”:[“https://www.facebook.com/uaetodaynewscom”,”https://www.pinterest.com/uaetodaynews/”,”https://www.instagram.com/uaetoday_news_com/”]},”sourceOrganization”:{“@id”:”#Publisher”},”copyrightHolder”:{“@id”:”#Publisher”},”mainEntityOfPage”:{“@type”:”WebPage”,”@id”:”https://uaetodaynews.com/indianapolis-tries-to-shape-a-grand-bargain-for-charters-district-the-74/”,”breadcrumb”:{“@id”:”#Breadcrumb”}},”author”:{“@type”:”Person”,”name”:”uaetodaynews”,”url”:”https://uaetodaynews.com/author/arabsongmedia-net/”},”image”:{“@type”:”ImageObject”,”url”:”https://i0.wp.com/uaetodaynews.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/12/indianapolis-charter-school-bus-825×495.png?fit=825%2C495&ssl=1″,”width”:1200,”height”:495}}
Disclaimer: This news article has been republished exactly as it appeared on its original source, without any modification.
We do not take any responsibility for its content, which remains solely the responsibility of the original publisher.
Author: uaetodaynews
Published on: 2025-12-10 07:41:00
Source: uaetodaynews.com



