INDIANAPOLIS (AP) — The Indiana Department of Education plans to appeal a
court ruling in which it was found to have improperly counted students as
attending five troubled schools taken over by the state when they had
actually transferred elsewhere before the school year began.
Marion County Superior Court Judge Patrick McCarty ruled Dec. 21 that the
state had improperly counted about 1,500 students as being registered at the
four Indianapolis schools. The other school is in Gary.
The ruling was another blow to outgoing State Schools Superintendent Tony
Bennett, who lost his re-election bid in November to Democrat Glenda Ritz.
Bennett had pushed for takeover of the five schools, which now are run by
private groups — two out-of-state companies and an Indianapolis-based
nonprofit.
Department of Education spokeswoman Stephanie Sample said Monday that the
agency intends to appeal the ruling. She told The Times of Munster that the
judgment applies to the section of law governing the entire state, meaning
“it applies beyond just” Indianapolis Public Schools.
In May, the State Board of Education affirmed Bennett’s decision to take
over the five schools, which had been on academic probation for six
consecutive years.
The board’s decision resulted in the schools’ private operators receiving
the highest level of per pupil funding in the state — twice as much as some
districts — for the first six months the school year.
The Indianapolis Star has reported that McCarty’s ruling means more than $6
million in student funding transferred from IPS to the schools’ private
operators should not have been taken away.
Former Gary School Board member Darren Washington told The Times the ruling
could mean that in addition to IPS, the Gary Community School Corp. may see
a refund of at least $2 million, depending on the outcome of the case.
Both the Indianapolis and Gary school districts lost enrollment when the
outside management companies took over the operation of the schools.