Thanks to 91³Ô¹Ï’s successful advocacy efforts, Georgia charter schools are one step closer to receiving a significant increase in facilities funding this year. The Georgia Senate released its version of the state’s FY23 budget on Wednesday morning. The budget includes the addition of $3 million new dollars to the Charter School Facility Grant fund. This brings the grant fund total up to $7.5 million—which is enough to provide all eligible charter schools a grant award of $75,000 per year to help offset facility costs. This represents an increase of $25,000 over last year’s per school grant awards. A recently passed House version of the budget contained the same facilities funding boost. Â
The budget is slated for a vote in the Senate on Friday. It will then head to a conference committee for finalization.
House Bill 1215
Georgia’s Senate Education and Youth Committee is expected to consider 91³Ô¹Ï’s 2022 charter bill early next week. The Georgia House approved House Bill 1215 with a vote of 113 to 45 on Thursday, Feb. 24.
House Bill 1215 is sponsored by state Rep. Brad Thomas. The charter legislation does four things:Â
1) it refines the state’s charter school definition to better distinguish charter schools from charter systems, College and Career Academies and other school choice models in the state;
2) it prevents local districts from prohibiting students from transferring to charter schools during the school year;Â
3) it closes a loophole in the funding calculation for local charter schools by basing funding on collected (versus budgeted) local revenue.Â
4) it removes the performance audit requirement for virtual state charter schools.