Shuttered Online Charter Being Sued by State of Ohio
        
        
        
			- By Dian Schaffhauser
- 05/22/18
An online  charter in Ohio that was closed earlier this year is being sued by the state's  auditor on charges of fraud. ECOT, the "electronic classroom of  tomorrow," a charter school based in Columbus, was sponsored and suspended  by the Educational Service Center of Lake Erie West (ESCLEW) in Toledo at the end of  last year.
The school  was founded in 2000 and by 2015 had a student enrollment of 14,453, making it  the state's largest charter. By 2016, while ECOT had the "single-largest  graduating high school class" in the country, it also had the worst  failure rate. As the New York Times reported, "for every 100 students who  graduate on time, 80 do not."
Now, Ohio  State Auditor Dave Yost is pursuing fraud charges against virtual school officials, seeking repayment  of $250,000  —  just a fraction of what the school generated for founder William  Lager and his company, Altair Learning Management. Lager is accused of  funneling state money paid for school operations to a number of for-profit  companies that he controls. For example, the Times stated, "in the 2014  fiscal year, the last year for which federal tax filings were available, the school  paid the companies  associated with Mr. Lager nearly $23 million, or about one-fifth of the nearly  $115 million in government funds it took in."
In the  latest set of charges, according to the auditor's office, ECOT administrators  inflated the amount of time it claimed its students were engaged in learning.
ECOT was  accused of reporting data on how long student computers were turned on whether  or not they were being used for school work, in order to pump up the amount of  money it was paid from state coffers. Yost also accused Department of Education  officials of not doing enough "to stop it."
Audit  staff received a break in the case, which was already under investigation, when  an employee of the school contacted the auditor's office, saying he had  information showing how the school was manipulating data to increase its  funding.
Among the auditors' findings: Nearly all of the data on time  ECOT submitted to state education officials to support its claims for funding  came from ActivTrak (unaffiliated with Altair Learning), an employee monitoring program that  records all activity on a computer, including which websites, documents or  programs a user accesses and for how long. ECOT failed to include this data in  what it submitted to ODE. What it did report was a spreadsheet detailing an  engagement date, start time, end time and duration in seconds. What it didn't  provide was detailed information about the program, application or website a  student was spending his or her time using.
In one  extreme example, the school reported that a particular student had 8,857.89  hours of ActivTrak time during fiscal year 2017. That's nearly 98 hours more  than what's possible in a year. (One year is equal to 8,760 hours.)
Yet, with  the exception of "a minor variance," the Ohio Department of Education  expressed no concerns about ECOT's claims for time usage. Despite a state  mandate describing how student learning should be tracked, the department paid  the school for 81.5 percent of its request for funding without the necessary  documentation.
"With  the level of incompetence displayed by both the school and ODE, the regulator,  it's amazing that any money went to education whatsoever," Auditor Yost  said in a public statement. "The Department of Education did not require  proof that the students were engaged in learning, and ECOT was more than happy  to oblige in providing watered-down information that the department  inexplicably accepted, even though they knew more-detailed information was  available."
The  $250,000 being sought in recovery by the state auditor is linked to political  advertising supporting ECOT that ran in 2017 through a media company paid via a  circuitous route by other companies controlled by Altair Learning. A spokesman  for the school told a reporter at that time that public funds were being used  to fund the advertising, and Yost sent a letter to ECOT demanding that the  school "cease using tax dollars" for that purpose.
"We  believe those who controlled the purse strings at ECOT and its affiliated  businesses were trying to find a way to disguise the fact ECOT was using tax  dollars for an improper purpose because we were asking questions,"  explained Yost. "ECOT's spokesman said they were using tax dollars for the  political advertisements and, after a protracted battle to subpoena records, we  believe ECOT used tax dollars for the political advertisements by funneling the  money through its various companies."
The  auditor's office has also referred its audit findings and documentation to the  U.S. Attorney and the county prosecutor for potential criminal prosecution.
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
            
        
        
                
                    About the Author
                    
                
                    
                    Dian Schaffhauser is a former senior contributing editor for 1105 Media's education publications THE Journal, Campus Technology and Spaces4Learning.