Charter Schools Issued Grants - Los Angeles Times
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Charter Schools Issued Grants

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Times Staff Writer

Six California charter schools are receiving more than $48 million in grants from a 2002 state bond, the first time that such money has been allocated to pay for construction on campuses of the independent but tax-supported schools.

State Treasurer Phil Angelides was at the Animo Leadership Charter High School in Inglewood on Thursday to announce that the school had received $5 million to fund the construction or purchase of a permanent campus. The school now rents space, which it shares with a law school.

The money was awarded through Proposition 47, which voters approved in November 2002 for modernization and construction of schools and public colleges and universities. The $13-billion bond earmarked almost $100 million for charter schools.

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To receive money from the state, a school also must either take a loan in the same amount from the state -- from money included in the Proposition 47 allocation -- or raise local matching funds.

Steve Barr, Animo’s founder, said the school, whose academically rigorous campus serves mostly students from Spanish-speaking immigrant families in Lennox, is taking a $5-million matching loan and the $5-million grant to procure a permanent high school campus.

“We have seven spots identified: some are open, some are places that we would rehab,†Barr said. The 500-seat school’s first choice, however, is to buy the property from the law school and add facilities there.

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Other charter schools that received grants from the state were Montague Charter Academy in Pacoima ($8.8 million); Orange County High School of the Arts in Santa Ana ($14.3 million); two schools in the Aspire charter organization, in Oakland and Stockton, (a total of $18.5 million); and Wheatland Union High School District’s Academy for Career Education in Yuba County ($1.3 million).

Diane Pritchard, principal of Montague Charter, said she hoped her school would be able to use the money to relieve an overcrowded facility; put students on a longer, one-track school year; and build a primary center of the performing and visual arts for students in grades K-2. The school, which is in its seventh year and serves about 1,250 students, also plans to take a matching loan from the state, Pritchard said, adding that they will set up a capital committee to do some fund-raising.

“We’ve been moving slowly,†Pritchard said. “Now we’re stepping out of the box, and doing different things.â€

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A spokeswoman for the treasurer’s office said that they hope this will not be the final state grants for charter school construction. A $12-billion state education bond on the March ballot includes an additional $300 million that would be allocated for charter school construction.

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