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Friday, 08/24/2012 8:23:55 AM

Friday, August 24, 2012 8:23:55 AM

Post# of 328
Louisiana Thinks Funding School Run By ‘Apostle And Prophet’ Is Somehow Constitutional
http://wonkette.com/481709/louisiana-thinks-funding-school-run-by-apostle-and-prophet-is-somehow-constitutional#more-481709

Louisiana’s exciting experiment in public-school vouchers is steaming forward, providing parents and children with educational excellence and traditional values, hooray! But that’s not all! It’s also an excellent lesson in how the free market can improve education, by taking taxpayer funds from the wasteful public schools and handing it to efficient private schools run by religious loons, just the way Real America wants. Among the 119 voucher schools approved so far is New Orleans’ Light City Christian Academy, founded and run by Apostle Leonard Lucas.

The state’s voucher program will be sending this gentleman, who “walks in the fullness of his calling and wears the mantle of an Apostle and Prophet,” some $364,000 to educate 80 students. You know it’s a good school because it has an educational philosophy and everything!

The Academy is a close-knit school embracing a community concept wherein the “whold” child is attended to spiritually, morally and intellectually.

Parents of whold children should find this an exciting opportunity! Strangely enough, some people are skeptical about Light City Christian Academy’s claims to educational excellence. This may be because they Hate Jesus. On the other hand, it could also have something to do with these bloggers’ observations that Apostle Lucas operates some two dozen nonprofit organizations, several of which seem to be … well, maybe just a little scammy, what with the Louisiana Secretary of State listing them as “Not in Good Standing.”

Or maybe it’s just math: Light City Christian Academy claims “a 90% success rate of our graduates continuing higher studies in Universities across the state,” but with total K-12 enrollments from 2008 to today ranging between only 35 and 53 students a year, this may not be an overwhelming record of achievement:

What does this actually mean? 90% of its dozen or so graduates have taken at least one college course in Louisiana?

The good news for Apostle Lucas is that, going forward, his school simply needs to achieve “at least a state-issued grade of D-minus” to continue to accept school vouchers. That kind of competition should make the godless government schools improve their performance!

After Delaying Release Of Voucher Documents, Louisiana To Send Taxpayer Funds To ‘Prophet’
http://tpmmuckraker.talkingpointsmemo.com/2012/08/louisiana_school_vouchers_prophet.php
Casey Michel August 23, 2012, 9:04 AM 7548

Louisiana Superintendent John White, the public face of the state’s massive and much-maligned school voucher system, has been hammered both locally and nationally for his announced slate of school standards. Editorials, educators, and legislators have criticized the program, and the latest news — St. John the Baptist parish (the equivalent of a county) announced on Tuesday it could lose up to $2 million due to the program — only serves to emphasize the controversy.

In an attempt to assuage criticism, White said his department would finally release documents detailing the vetting process that the 119 voucher schools — 99 percent of which are religious — endured prior to their approval. He won’t, however, release the documents until September — one month after many of the students have begun studying at their new schools.

Claiming “a deliberative process privilege,” White’s department was able to delay the release. Department of Education officials claimed that the documents in question — namely, those that displayed the measures taken to judge which schools would receive the 5,600 approved voucher students — were not matters of public record.

The Associated Press filed an initial request for the documents nearly ten weeks ago, but DOE spokesperson Barry Landry informed reporters that the documents would be withheld because the department carried a concern in “providing outdated information that may cause confusion to parents who are trying to make decisions around their participation in the program.”

James Gill, columnist with New Orleans’ Times-Picayune, noted that he believes the approved schools likely received little to no vetting whatsoever. “Evidently the Louisiana education department hasn’t heard that ‘Don’t confuse them with the facts’ is supposed to be a joke,” wrote Gill. http://www.nola.com/opinions/index.ssf/2012/08/odds_are_no_process_existed_fo.html

Gill also noted that another DOE spokesperson, who had cited a desire to avoid “ridicule or criticism” as the impetus for withholding the documents, was effectively rebutted by White’s willingness to open the documents in September.

Indeed, criticism of the voucher system — which the Louisiana Supreme Court failed to block last Thursday — seems likely to increase once the documents are released. After initial tales of schools teaching antediluvian creationism and methods for preparing for the Rapture — including at least one school that discriminates based on religion and sexual orientation — it was reported that the Light City Christian Academy, located in New Orleans, had been approved for 80 students this fall, raking approximately $364,000 in state funds.

The school is not the only Christian institution that will be receiving state monies, but it is, thus far, the only one helmed by a man who says he “wears the mantle of an Apostle and Prophet.” Apostle Leonard Lucas, a one-term state representative, has been the subject of recent profilings for his charitable ventures, many of which are listed as “Not in Good Standing” by the Louisiana Secretary of State.

Should Light City meet the minimum voucher standards over the first year — that is, if they receive at least a state-issued grade of D-minus — they are eligible for an additional 83 students, which, if granted, would jump the K-12 school’s size approximately 400 percent from its 2011-12 total.

White has hinted that he may begin tightening standards going forward, especially in regards to schools approved in the future. However, there’s no indication that there will be any further action taken in stemming the flow of public funds to any of the current schools — meaning that Apostle Lucas’s academy is set to see a six-figure sum from Louisiana taxpayers in turn for offering the self-proclaimed prophet’s “vision” to the students.

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