Gold!
There’s gold in them thar schools!
Don’t believe me?
When you drive by an inner city school, it
doesn’t exactly look like the Taj Mahal. Does it? Even relatively upscale suburban schools
wouldn’t be mistaken for a house on MTV Cribs. And some of those
fly-by night charter schools look more like prisons than Shangri-La.
But I’ve got it
on good authority that there’s $1.3 trillion available for
someone who knows how to take it.
That someone is
Harold Levy, an expert on how to
get rich through school privatization.
The former chancellor of the New York City School System has begun a second career managing an
investment company.
“For-profit education is one of the largest U.S. investment markets, currently topping $1.3 trillion in value,” according to
the Website for one of his master classes for rich investors.
Wooo-weee! That’s a lot of money!
To put it in context, that’s more than 10 times the
amount the federal government spends on education per year. And it’s all yummy profit!
So how do you get your hands on some of those delicious taxpayer greenbacks?
You gotta’ invest.
No! I don’t mean increase education budgets for traditional public schools that
can barely make ends meet! I mean invest in shiny
new charter schools.
Here’s how it works.
Lend money to a for-profit company to build a new charter school. If
you do it just right, you’re almost guaranteed to double or triple your
money in seven years.
You’ll want to take advantage of the
New Markets Tax Credit (NMTC), which began in 2000 at the end of President
Bill Clinton’s administration. This will give you a whooping
39 percent tax credit. But here’s the best part,
since it’s money you’re lending, you also get interest on it! And if that weren’t enough, you can
piggyback all kinds of additional federal tax credits on top of that – things like historic preservation or job creation or Brownfield’s credits.
That doesn’t sound legal, does it? But it is!
In case that has you feeling queasy, you can
hide what you’re doing by funneling the whole thing through a large non-profit organization like the
Gates Foundation. They’ll be more than happy to help. They’ve done it for so many before you anyway.
However, make sure you whisk this money through something called a
Community Development Entity (CDE). The federal website explains this can be either a “
domestic corporation or partnership.” And it must have “a primary mission of serving LICs [Low Income Communities].”
(Snicker!)
Here’s the best part. A CDE isn’t required to release information
about who its donors are or how much they’re spending. So on paper the
CDE – not you – gives the money to the non-profit, which, in turn, loans
the money to a charter management organization. It’s like money
laundering. No one can tell where the funds came from and thus it’s easy
to escape from federal regulations or any appearance of wrongdoing.
There is a catch, however. You’re probably going to need a
substantial amount of capital to put forward – at least a million bucks
or so. No bank’s going to waste its time with only a few hundred thou.
This method is perfect for those who are already wealthy and want to increase their wealth or
hedge fund managers out to boost their clients’ portfolios.
But maybe you just aren’t into the whole hedge fund game. Maybe you’re not the banking and investing type.
You can still make oodles of cash off public schools through
real estate.
Here’s what you do – buy up cheap inner city properties that can be
renovated or repurposed for charter schools. Then when a school
privatization firm wants to set up shop in an impoverished city like
Philadelphia,
Chicago or
Detroit, it needs someone like you to open the door.
You’ll get to charge the charter corporation rent and – get this –
that’s not price capped! You can charge whatever you want! As long as
you’ve got a good spot and no one else is trying to beat you to it,
charter corporations are willing to pay bookoo bucks to get their
money-making enterprises rolling!
A good rule of thumb comes from privatization expert
Charter Schools USA, which recommends rental costs not exceed
20 percent of a school’s budget.
However, there are plenty of examples of charter schools paying 25, 30
even up to 43 percent of their money just on rental costs!
Ca-Ching!
And if you really want to boost the bottom line, open a charter
school, yourself! That way you can both rent out the real estate and pay
for it!
Think about it. Who sets the rental price? You do. Who pays the rental price? You do. So you can pay yourself
WHATEVER YOU WANT! And where does the money come from? The taxpayers!
Doesn’t sound legal does it? But it is!
According to the
Miami Herald, which conducted an
in-depth investigation
into these practices, many of the highest rents are charged by
landlords with ties to the management companies running the schools.
Property records show at least 56 charter schools in Miami-Dade and
Broward counties sitting on land whose owners are tied to management
companies.
Of course there are
so many other ways
to set things up like this with a charter school. Unlike most
traditional public schools, charters contract with for-profit companies
for everything from curriculum development to construction. So there are
many opportunities for creative investors to figure out how to both set the price and pay it
TO THEMSELVES!
Moreover, every state has different laws about charter schools so
check for loopholes.
You’ll find ‘em!
Just don’t forget to set up that CDE to hide your shady dealings from
the public. After all, if taxpayers could easily see how you’re sucking
up their hard-earned money that they thought was going to help school
children (
Tee-hee!) they wouldn’t be happy.
And if you’re reading this from somewhere outside of the USA, don’t
despair. You, too, can make a ton of money off school privatization in
the United States. It’s like the Statue of Liberty says – wealthy
foreign nationals welcome! (
Or something like that.)
Since the
Immigration Act of 1990,
investors have been allowed to purchase visas for their families by
investing in U.S. corporations. Just stash some cash into a
hotel, ski resort or charter school and –
voilà! – Move directly to
GO and collect way more than $200!
It’s called the
EB-5 visa for Immigrant Investors. For the low price of at least $1 million -or $500,000 to a rural or high unemployment neighborhood — you can
get visas for the whole family.
Sounds like some crazy new loophole – right? It isn’t. It’s been
around for decades. Every year, the federal government hands out
10,000 of these visas. So while
Syrian refugee children drown seeking asylum, wealthy foreign nationals get an express ticket to the US of A.
You might be thinking, ‘That gets me into the country, but where do I
cash in?’ Easy. You now have a stake in a U.S. charter school and have
access to all the same easy money as native-born investors.
It’s an incredibly lucrative model even for those more interested in the Prophet than profit.
Just look at
Gulen charter schools.
It’s the largest single charter school network in the country. More
than 150 schools in Texas, Ohio, Illinois and other cities are funded by
Turkish investors following an Islamic nationalist named
Fetullaf Gülen. These schools are part of a “worldwide religious, social and nationalistic movement in his name,” according to the
New York Times.
Be warned. Many of these schools are
under investigation
for using U.S. taxpayer dollars meant to educate U.S. children in
non-educational or otherwise shady ways. Some of this tax revenue has
allegedly been spent on
political and religious causes championed by the Prophet Gülen.
Other funds have gone to controversial educational practices. For
instance, instead of hiring local teachers, the chain is infamous for
shipping in Turkish educators to the United States. As if it wouldn’t be
cheaper to hire locals! And guess where the money comes from to pay for
these Turkish teachers’ visas? That’s right – from the charter school’s
funding!
Still. Even with
a few setbacks,
there’s never been a better time to invest in the privatization of
public education. Sure there are financial, behavioral and educational
scandals at charter schools throughout the country being discovered everyday. But fortune favors the brave!
Money is just hanging on the tree waiting to be plucked. It’s hard to
walk into a charter school and not come out with pockets fit to
bursting with cold, hard cash.
In fact, the only folks not making bank in this whole scheme are the teachers!
Don’t be one of them.
Teachers at charter schools – where unionizing is often prohibited –
take home even less than those working at traditional public schools. And those traditional educators aren’t getting rich, either.
A new report by the
Center for American Progress argues that U.S. teachers usually have bad starting pay and are
unlikely to see major salary gains even after several years of teaching.
Growth in teacher salaries is especially bad when comparing the U.S. to other developed countries:
“The bottom line is that mid- and late-career teachers are not
earning what they deserve, nor are they able to gain the salaries that
support a middle-class existence,” the report concluded.
There appears to be a golden rule in education: the less you actually help students learn, the more money you get to take home.
Perhaps if public schools were kept out of private hands where profit
is the overwhelming motivation for everything you do, things would be
different. But thank goodness that isn’t happening!
Someday people may wake up and demand more for their tax dollars and for their children. But until then…
There’s gold in them thar schools!
Don’t be a sap. Don’t be a teacher. Don’t help children. Invest in a fly-by-night charter school and get rich!