ATLANTA, Aug. 6 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ — A coalition representing more than 5,000 public virtual charter school students, parents, teachers, and supporters from across Georgia charged the state’s Charter School Commission (Commission) with ignoring state law by refusing to create a funding formula based on sound research and actual costs of public virtual charter schools. As a result, for the third consecutive year, over 6,000 students in Georgia’s public online schools will receive only a fraction of funds the law provides for their education.
Georgia Families for Public Virtual Education released a letter today demanding the Commission immediately reconsider its decision to fund virtual public school students at one-third of the allotment of other public school students. Students at traditional brick-and-mortar public schools and brick-and-mortar charter schools receive an average of $8,800 per pupil. The letter, penned by Georgia attorney Douglas Rosenbloom, requests a meeting with the Commission to review the arbitrary and unexplained decision to fund virtual public school students at less than $3,200.
For the rest of the article, go to Parents to Charter School Commission: Obey the Law on Virtual School Funding

