bulletin-charter-schools-v-1-850×510.jpg

The BulletinDecember 6, 2024

The imminent return of charter schools

bulletin-charter-schools-v-1-850×510.jpg

Without political consensus across the parliament, are we at risk of playing ‘ping pong’ with education? Stewart Sowman-Lund explains for The Bulletin.

To receive The Bulletin in full each weekday, sign up here.

Charter schools are on the way (again)

The return of charter schools is just around the corner, with associate education minister David Seymour confirming yesterday that five new schools will open in the new year (on top of the one already announced). As The Press reported, it includes a second for Canterbury – Christchurch North College, to cater for children disengaged from the mainstream education system – while three will open in Auckland. It includes a French school, Ecole Francaise Internationale, and the Busy school, part of an Australian chain.

Seymour has been a long time proponent for charter schools, having shepherded them into existence a first time as part of the John Key government. They were ultimately scrapped by Labour, with the 12 existing charter schools transitioned into state integrated schools. Seymour led a protest against the closures through Auckland Central at the time. But it was only a matter of time before they returned and ultimately it was a key tenet of Act’s election campaign and inked into the coalition agreement with National.

Back up a bit, what’s all this?

If you’ve heard the words “charter school” but don’t really know what means, don’t worry. The Spinoff’s Shanti Mathias prepared this helpful explainer earlier in the year. In short, charter schools, like standard state schools, are funded by the government and free for New Zealand citizens and permanent residents to attend. However, explained Mathias, while state schools must follow a standard New Zealand curriculum, employ qualified teachers, be governed by a school board and be held accountable to the Crown with their role determined by legislation, charter schools have more flexibility. That includes total discretion with how to use provided funding and the ability to set their own curriculum (so long as they still achieve set learning objectives). Yes, that means they’re exempt from the government’s own phone in schools ban.

There are valid arguments on both sides of the debate. Advocates endorse the less fixed options that come from being a charter school, while those opposed say it would be better to raise funding across the board – more on that below.

Politics at play

The road to charter schools return has been paved with some potholes. Labour has already promised to ditch the scheme yet again should it be elected in 2026, potentially meaning these new schools could last just a couple of years before being shuttered. “Labour has got rid of these before, and we will get rid of them again, because they are bad for young people and bad for their learning,” former education minister Jan Tinetti told Q+A. “We will be looking at legal advice around that, but we will get rid of charter schools.” In much the same way both sides of the aisle criticise one another for undoing each other’s infrastructure projects, you’d have to wonder whether re-undoing an education programme is the most worthwhile political move.

In comments to Newsroom back in 2017, at the same time the last Labour government was looking to ditch charter schools, advocate Alwyn Poole criticised those in power for playing “political ping pong” when it came to education. “Someone stands up in parliament and says ‘we will shut them’ – but there are now 420 children that are in our schools. If you talked about shutting down 420 children in state schools, you’d have people on the street with pickets”.

This time around, Poole has had his four applications for new charter schools rejected, reported Stuff’s Steve Kilgallon. He has argued the process for selection was unfair and is considering launching a judicial review.

Privatisation by stealth?

In an interesting piece for The Conversation, a pair of university education professors considered whether the current coalition government was rapidly moving to allow private business interests in public education. That included, they said, the move to reintroduce charter schools. “International experiences with charter schools… demonstrate how they survive or fail at the whims of private funders who can withdraw at any time,” the experts said. They also argued that updates to the New Zealand curriculum, including structure approaches to literacy and maths, will mean schools having to dip into their own budgets to access private resources or train up staff. “Instead, New Zealand needs to be investing in public education for everyone, leaving private education and resources to those who want to pay for it themselves,” the professors argued.

Earlier this year, teachers unions criticised the government for a lack of investment in staff while $153m was being funnelled into charter schools. That money could pay a further 700 full time teacher aides to make “a huge difference in the classroom for ākonga and their teachers,” said Liam Rutherford, a teacher and executive member of NZEI Te Riu Roa. The Post Primary Teachers’ Association has cheekily launched its own online campaign with the domain name “charterschools.co.nz” arguing against the government’s reintroduction of charter schools and also claiming it is designed to “privatise the public education system”.

Keep going!
Image: Getty Images
Image: Getty Images

The BulletinDecember 5, 2024

Fireworks in scrutiny week as Health boss accused of ‘cooking the books’

Image: Getty Images
Image: Getty Images

A Labour MP has been warned her comments could be defamatory, explains Stewart Sowman-Lund for The Bulletin.

To receive The Bulletin in full each weekday, sign up here.

‘Tell that to the nurses’

Parliament’s “scrutiny week” has maintained its high drama level, with a tense six-hour grilling yesterday of Health NZ’s commissioner Lester Levy. As Stuff’s Bridie Witton reported, Levy’s claim that there had been “no cuts” to the health system attracted mocking remarks from opposition MPs, with Labour’s Ingrid Leary saying: “tell that to the nurses, tell the national public health service”. Levy responded: “I think there’s a line being drawn between reducing staff and a cut”. Newsroom Pro’s Jonathan Milne reported yesterday (paywalled) that Levy had backed down after attempting to retrospectively include $135 million of anticipated redundancies in the 2023/24 finances, even though the staff wouldn’t actually be laid off until now, the following financial year. It’s been reported that the auditor-general intervened and made changes to Health NZ’s draft financial statements.

Cooking the books?

Labour’s Ayesha Verrall accused Levy of “cooking the books” to make the deficit look worse in order to justify cuts to the health system. Levy said he resented that remark and asked for an apology. “The books are not good. There’s serious under-performance, financial performance,” Levy acknowledged. 1News’ Benedict Collins reported Levy as saying the comments by Verrall “could be considered to be defamatory”, though the MP has stood by her remark. “I think the envelope is being pushed here on what legitimate treatment of the accounts are,” Verrall said.

The true state of Health NZ’s books was revealed on Tuesday with a $722 million deficit for 2023-24. Chief executive Margie Apa, speaking to Morning Report, said the forecast deficit for the current financial year was $1.1 billion dollars – lower than the feared $1.7bn previously announced but still a sizeable hole. The health boss confirmed the bulk of its deficit was down to funding nursing staff. “We have a $797 million in personnel costs that are greater than budget. Now not all of that is nursing, we did recruit more in other areas as well,” she said. As a result, Health NZ has extended its cost-cutting drive by another year through until 2027 when it hopes to reach surplus.

The battle for beds

During the lengthy session, Levy did promise to reveal how he intended to reset the public health system, but wouldn’t put a timeframe on it, reported The Post’s Rachel Thomas. He expected the health agency to make a serious “dent” in waiting room times within two years. That will be a challenge. In the Herald today, Michael Morrah speaks with an emergency physician at Auckland Hospital who claims the lack of beds for patients is the worst it has ever been. “We know that there is potential preventable mortality if we get flow through our hospital system better,” said Peter Jones. The government wants to have 95% of patients either admitted to a ward, discharged, or transferred to another hospital within six hours of arriving at an emergency room. Jones said getting to 80% would be the “inflection point” – but that right now we are “nowhere near” meeting that.

‘Genuine stress’

As if enough attention wasn’t already on health sector, thousands of nurses also walked off the job in protest over pay and staffing issues earlier in the week. The Post has a good overview of the issues raised by those participating in the strike – everything from wards being overrun, a lack of free parking and cutbacks on food for patients. In an interview with the Pacific Media Network, former Te Whatu Ora chair Rob Campbell said there was “genuine distress” among healthcare professionals at the moment. “I know that the Pacific teams are all being restructured, yet again,” said Campbell. “They’ve had several goes at them, both in the head office and on the ground and so the wrong people are facing the stress and the difficulty of this.”