New York Flex Charter High School


CHARTER SCHOOL FAVORING VIRTUAL INSTRUCTION PULLS BACK, September 29, 2010, City Limits (NY) 
Upper East Side — A proposed charter school favoring a combination of classroom learning and virtual instruction, and having ties to a for-profit company with links to a top state education official, has abandoned its push to win state approval this year, City Limits has learned…

City Limits reported last week on the unclear nature of NY Flex's relationship to K12 Classroom LLC, a publicly traded firm that provides curriculum, and the uncertainties around what process would govern the school's charter application given that Board of Regents Chancellor Merryl Tisch is married to the brother of K12's chairman.
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PEDAGOGY AND PROFITS: CHARTER SCHOOL BID RAISES QUESTIONS, September 21, 2010, City Limits Magazine (NYC, NY)
Upper East Side — A new charter high school proposed for Manhattan has close ties to a for-profit curriculum provider with family links to the chair of the state board that will decide on the school's application…

At the proposed New York Flex Charter High School, a company called K12 Classroom LLC will supply the curriculum to support that model, along with other services. The involvement of K12—whose chairman, Andrew H. Tisch, is the brother-in-law of New York State Regents Chancellor Merryl Tisch—could be a test of the state's new charter-schools law, passed in late May, which forbids for-profit charter school management. At the very least, the proposal raises questions about what kind of educational approaches are fair game for New York's charter schools.

Andrew Tisch is a longtime philanthropist with ongoing education and civic interests. He led Lorillard Tobacco during the 1990s—appearing on its behalf during infamous 1994 Congressional hearings, where he testified that he did not believe cigarettes cause cancer. Tisch currently serves as co-chairman of the board of his family business, the Loews Corporation, which has interests in insurance, hotels, natural gas pipelines and a Texas-based offshore oil-drilling company, among other ventures.

K12, founded in 1999 and traded on the New York Stock Exchange, is the "nation's premier provider of online curriculum," Jeff Kwitowski, company spokesperson, tells City Limits. K12 classes are conducted on line, some in real time ("synchronous") and others in self-paced and self-directed modes… Company documents show 2009 revenue of $316 million…

The NY Flex board is led by private investor Salvatore Vasi (formerly of Merrill Lynch and Bear Sterns), real estate advisor and business developer Michael Cohen and attorney Victor Geraci. Roger Griffith, an associate conservator of sculpture at MOMA, and Roberto Gutierrez, who once headed communications at Notre Dame University and has worked with the for-profit entity Edison Schools, complete the board…

K12's participation is crucial, according to Gutierrez. "They are the premier provider of this kind of technology," he says. "We are counting on an organization that has a strong reputation nationally to guide us."

He dismissed questions about the involvement of a for-profit company in a charter school venture. For-profit or not-for-profit, he says, "everybody gets paid."

But the nature of K12's planned involvement is murky…

That [charter approval] process culminates in recommendations to the State Regents–headed by the K12 board chair's sister-in-law, Chancellor Merryl Tisch. Merryl Tisch, a personal friend of Chancellor Klein and the Mayor, is married to Andrew's brother James, the president and CEO of Loews Corp. Andrew Tisch's first wife was Merryl's sister…

"Chancellor Tisch must have knowledge that her brother-in-law is the chairman of the K12 board," says City Council education committee chair Robert Jackson. "If she doesn't know, someone has to bring it to her attention. If she does know, that is a possible conflict of interest. She needs to bring it forward to the Conflicts of Interest Board and explain the situation and/or recuse herself from voting" on the NY Flex application.

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