Public Money Is Fueling an Explosion of Private Schools. States Often Don’t Care How They’re Run.

A decade ago, the state of Florida stripped a teacher of her license for sexual abuse of a 16-year-old boy. Last year, she opened a private school there with ease.
Reported by 1 outlet — ProPublica. See all sources ↓
A decade ago, the state of Florida stripped a teacher of her license for sexual abuse of a 16-year-old boy. Last year, she opened a private school there with ease. Her name and photo were on her new school’s website and details of her case were easy to find with an online search. The state also knew that a transplanted Midwesterner had been fired from her Cincinnati charter school, following felony charges related to misuse of public funds, and had been banned from teaching or running schools in Ohio.
Read the full report at ProPublica ↗
Why it matters
A world story we're tracking; its significance and source trust firm up as more outlets confirm it.
- What's the story?
- A decade ago, the state of Florida stripped a teacher of her license for sexual abuse of a 16-year-old boy. Last year, she opened a private school there with ease.
- How widely is it covered?
- 1 outlet, average source rating 9.0/10.
- When was it last updated?
- 10m ago.
How outlets are framing the same story
Here's how each outlet is covering the story — compare their headlines and timing at a glance.
- Coverage card1 outlet1CoverageScouting report
Public Money Is Fueling an Explosion of Private Schools. States Often Don’t Care How They’re Run.
Sources1TypeCoverageProPublica