SBOE vetoes three proposed charter chains

Deregulation | Charter Schools
Date Posted: 9/11/2020 | Author: Mark Wiggins
The State Board of Education (SBOE) formally vetoed three applications to operate new charter school chains in Texas on Friday. The Texas Education Agency (TEA) had recommended eight new charter chains for approval at this week's SBOE meeting.
The board has veto authority over new charter school operators. Members voted to veto Heritage Classical Academy in Houston and Rocketship Public Schools in Fort Worth. The board tentatively approved CLEAR Public Charter School in San Marcos at Thursday's meeting, but reversed course and voted to formally veto the application Friday morning.
The board narrowly approved five of the eight charter chains recommended by TEA: Brillante Academy in McAllen, Doral Academy of Texas in Buda, Learn4Life Austin, Prelude Preparatory Charter School in San Antonio, and Royal Public Schools in San Antonio.
ATPE joined with numerous public education organizations this week in asking the board to veto all of the proposed new charter chains while Texas faces a $4.6 billion budget shortfall due to the economic recession driven by the COVID-19 pandemic and the volatile oil and gas market. This echoes a request ATPE and public education organizations made earlier this year to the commissioner of education to place a moratorium on charter chain expansions, which do not have to be approved by the SBOE.
CONVERSATION
RECOMMENDED FOR YOU

04/25/2025
Teach the Vote’s Week in Review: April 25, 2025
Contact your state senator to push for action on HB 2. Plus: Make a plan to vote in May 3 local elections, where school matters might be on your ballot. Early voting is underway.

04/25/2025
Texas Senate sends private school voucher bill to the governor as other education bills move through the process
This week in the Senate, committees heard bills dealing with student rights, Holocaust education, and educator misconduct, along with a vague electioneering bill.

04/25/2025
Texas lawmakers move vouchers near the finish line with school finance only halfway through the process
In the words of Davy Crockett, the “party handcuff” finally broke the public education blockade against vouchers in Texas.