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Ed board approves charter commission members

The following is a press release from the Maine State Board of Education

AUGUSTA – The Maine State Board of Education has appointed four members to the State Charter School Commission, opening a path for the approval of charter schools in Maine.

The Commission will help shape public charter schools in Maine, the 41st state to adopt legislation to allow them. Maine’s law allows the Commission to authorize up to 10 public charter schools statewide during the law’s first 10 years. Local school boards can authorize additional public charter schools that don’t count toward the Commission’s 10-school limit.

The State Board approved:

The four will join two State Board members previously approved by their colleagues: James A. Banks, Sr., and Jana Lapoint. Marilyn Temple Tardy, a State Board member who was previously appointed to the Commission, resigned recently. The State Board will appoint a third person from its own ranks, as called for in the state law establishing charter schools.

The Commission will hold its first meeting Jan. 10, from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. in Augusta.

In Maine, public charter schools will be governed and operated independently of the traditional public school system and are to be publicly funded. They have more flexibility than traditional public schools over decisions concerning curriculum and instruction, scheduling, staffing and finance. Public charter schools, however, are accountable to the terms of the contracts, or charters, which authorize their existence and the academic standards to which all other public schools are accountable.

For more information about the state charter school comission, visit: www.maine.gov/education/charterschools/commission.html.

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