PRESS RELEASES
U.S. Department of Education Awards New York $16.6 Million Grant to Help Create More Charter Schools

FOR RELEASE:
July 16, 2008
Contact: Elaine Quesinberry
or Jo Ann Webb
(202) 401-1576

The U.S. Department of Education's Assistant Deputy Secretary for Innovation and Improvement Doug Mesecar visited the Charter School for Applied Technologies in Buffalo, N.Y., today to present a $16,589,561 Charter School Program grant award to the New York State Education Department and the State University of New York (SUNY). Robert Bennett, chancellor of the New York State Board of Regents, joined Mesecar for the announcement.

New York is one of five states receiving the competitive grants through the Department's Charter Schools Program (CSP), which supports states' efforts to plan, design, implement and disseminate information about charter schools. The other states receiving grants are Oregon, Florida, Utah and Idaho. The CSP funds will be used to increase student achievement and improve the management and governance of charter schools. To create a continuum of K-12 high quality charter schools in New York state, the CSP grant funds will also be used with greater emphasis on secondary charter schools.

"Supporting the growth of new, high quality charter schools is critical to our efforts to improve the educational opportunities for all children," Mesecar said. "With New York's lifting of the cap on the number of charter schools, these CSP funds will be critical to the state's effort to provide more excellent options for parents.

These grants help states create more quality charter schools and increase school choices for parents and their children. State educational agencies with a specific statue authorizing charter schools may apply for funding. In awarding grants, the Department gives preference to states that have demonstrated progress in increasing the number of high-quality schools, that are held accountable for reaching clear and measurable objectives and that give public charter schools a high degree of autonomy over budgets and expenditures.

Charter schools are independent public schools designed and operated by parents, educators, community leaders, education entrepreneurs and others with a contract, or charter, from a public agency, such as a local or state education agency or an institution of higher education. Charter schools are operated free-of-charge to parents and are open to all students. These schools provide parents enhanced educational choices within the public school system. Exempt from many statutory and regulatory requirements, charter schools receive increased flexibility in exchange for increased accountability for improving academic achievement. The first U.S. charter school opened in 1992. Today over 4,000 charter schools serve more than one million students in 40 states and Washington, D.C.

More information about the Public Charter Schools Program is available at http://www.ed.gov/programs/charter/index.html.

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