Upon reading of the $9.4 million or so in federal money coming to Rhode Island for the purpose of expanding charter schools, I couldn't help but wonder about the strings that must be attached even to such a piddling sum, by current government standards.
Reviewing the U.S. Dept. of Education's onlne materials related to the program, I couldn't find any explicit strings, though. That leaves a cynic like me with general complaints about big government. Charter schools are popular among Americans, and by offering even a little bit of money toward their growth, the feds begin to insinuate themselves into their operation. (Specific office holders may also be interested in purchasing some cover for the billions of dollars that they've been devoting to preventing local school districts' having to reform in ways, during this recession, that might affect unionized labor.)
It's probable that many people involved in such initiatives, right up to Secretary of Education Arne Duncan and the president himself, honestly wish to improve public education and see charter schools as a mechanism for that purpose. Politicians and bureaucrats are no doubt sincere in their good intentions for a great number of big government programs. What they have to learn, though, is that good intentions are only as valuable as the individuals who hold them, and centralizing American life will ultimately give power to people more intent on exploitation.
Federal.Money
No place benefits more from federal largess than Alaska, where the Republican governor decries "intrusive" Obama administration policies, officials sue to overturn the health care legislation and Sen. Lisa Murkowski (R), voted against the stimulus bill. Alaska has received $3,145 per capita in federal stimulus dollars as of May -- the MOST in the nation,Alaskans identify the federal government and pork-barrel spending as the ENEMY, though the state was built by both
ALASKA THE SOCIALIST EAXPERIMENT...is republican owned