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Report: Charter enrollment increases spending in traditional schools

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LOWELL — Adding more national attention to the statewide fight over charter schools, a new report from a conservative New York-based think tank concludes that charter-school enrollment actually increases per-pupil spending for traditional school districts.

Ballot Question 2, which would allow for up to 12 charter schools or expansions every year, has drawn a heated battle that’s racked up over $18 million in spending from both proponents and opponents combined.

At the heart of the costly battle is money itself.

Opponents of the measure, which include the Save Our Public Schools campaign, argue that charter schools take money away from traditional school districts.

Sending districts are reimbursed through a complex formula in which money for each student follows a child to their charter school.

Yet, a new Manhattan Institute report contends that while charter-school enrollment reduces the net amount of Chapter 70 state aid that districts receive, it increases per-pupil spending in the 10 districts with the largest number of charter-school students.

“It is not false that charter enrollments cost district schools over $400 million a year,” said Max Eden, author of the report.

But after the state’s “unique reimbursement” — which he argued was one of the most generous reimbursement plans in the nation — districts are getting paid a significant amount of money for students they no longer teach.

“They are left with more to spend on the number of students they serve, even if they have less money to spend overall,” Eden said.

The report hits at an argument that bolsters the pro-charter school stance — that districts keep getting paid for a student that’s simply not there.

The state reimburses the full cost of a student’s tuition by 100 percent the first year the student leaves, and 25 percent for five years after that.

Those reimbursements aren’t always fully funded. Even so, Eden said, it still causes an increase in the per-pupil amount.

The report uses fiscal 2016 numbers from the Massachusetts Teachers Association website that detail charter-school payments and the number of children sent to charter schools, according to Eden.

That analysis includes Lowell, which had 1,490 charter-school students in fiscal 2016.

After state reimbursement, the district paid roughly $14.8 million in charter-school costs. In fiscal 2017, Lowell is projected to pay nearly $17 million.

Eden calculated his own per-pupil spending amounts both before charter-school enrollment and after enrollment, concluding that Lowell’s per-pupil amount increased from $12,045 to $12,269 due to charter enrollment.

Across the top 10 districts, Eden found that per-pupil spending increased by roughly $85 million.

Yet, as school officials may argue — and what the report also mentions — is that a technical per-pupil increase still doesn’t erase the challenge of students lost to charter schools.

Districts may still have to fund materials or resources for an entire classroom even though just one or two students might have left.

Save Our Public Schools argued that the report was bought and paid for by the “same Wall Street billionaires” who are funding Question 2.

In a statement, the campaign said the institute “quarrels” with state data that show 231 districts will lose over $450 million to charter schools this year.

“Right-wing think tanks can fiddle with the numbers all they want, but Merrimack Valley parents and educators see the impact of this financial drain in classrooms every day,” the campaign said in a statement. “Schools without librarians, larger class sizes, school buses eliminated, and other serious cuts.”

In a statement, state Executive Office of Education spokeswoman Laura Rigas said the office would review the final report when it becomes available.

But she said it appears to be consistent with the office’s own analysis that per-pupil spending has gone up in districts with the most charter-school students.

Beyond the numbers, the report is the latest example of a statewide question that has attracted plenty of attention out of state.

In spending efforts on both sides, $11 million has come from outside the state.

Families for Excellent Schools, a nonprofit based in New York, has given nearly $6 million to the group fighting for charter-school expansion, Great Schools Massachusetts.

And beyond the Manhattan Institute, which has published previous reports supportive of charter schools, the issue has attracted attention from other out-of-state groups such as the Center for Education Reform.

Follow Amelia on Twitter and Tout @AmeliaPakHarvey.