Are you having trouble wrapping your head about the fact that schools are being sold and leased and called “a huge new category” for private real estate investment."
I am having a lot of trouble about that. Schools are now being used as a profit in the real estate field. What's more the company that bought them is called
Entertainment Properties Trust. It specializes in "megaplex movie theatres and entertainment retail centers". Sounds like just what schools need, to be owned by a company that specializes in entertainment.
Imagine Schools Sell Five SchoolsThe company (NYSE: EPR) purchased five new charter schools from Imagine Schools Inc. of Arlington, Va., at a cost of $44 million and agreed to finance expansion of two others at a cost of $4 million. Entertainment Properties Trust, which is based in Kansas City, will lease the five new schools back to Imagine Schools, a leading operator of public charter schools.
Entertainment Properties Trust’s portfolio now includes 27 charter schools that Imagine Schools operates in nine states and the District of Columbia.
“We are excited to add to our public charter school portfolio and enthusiastic about the prospects of Imagine and this investment category,” Entertainment Properties Trust CEO David Brain said in a release.
In an interview, Brain said the Imagine Schools transaction announced Friday fulfilled Entertainment Properties’ 2007 commitment to make at least $200 million worth of acquisitions from Imagine. It also increases Entertainment Properties’ footprint in what Brain called “a huge new category” for private real estate investment.
“Public charter schools are now a 4 or 5 percent slice of a couple trillion dollar public education real estate market,” Brain said.
There's a problem though. Imagine Schools claims to be a non-profit, but it is not. It has not been accepted as non-profit though it has tried for years.
Here is more about
about EPT's involvement in buying schools that were once considered public.Heretofore, new public schools have been financed almost exclusively through school-bond issues, he said. But Brain said the move to “decentralize and debureaucratize public education” is creating an increasing number of charter schools, which aren’t as cost-efficiently financed through bond issues.
The five new charter schools purchased by Entertainment Properties contain more than 357,000 square feet of educational space and have an enrollment in excess of 2,600 students. All of the Imagine schools owned by Entertainment Properties are governed by a triple-net master lease with a 25-year primary term.
NOW we see the future. Schools being closed as public schools, opening again as charters, then becoming subject to the whims and fancies of those who specialize in real estate investment.
Imagine Charters have had many problems, and yet they continue to profit that CMO led by Dennis Bakke of the famous Fellowship.
Who profits from for-profit charter schools in Florida?"For-profit charter schools--or at least, charters run by for-profit corporations--are alive and kicking in Florida. Imagine Schools, the country's largest charter school operator headquartered in Virginia, already runs 18 charter schools in the state. On November 12, 2008, the company withdrew applications for 15 new charter schools in the face of recommendations for denial--though they plan on pursuing them later.
In the state of Florida, charter schools have more than one way of getting authorization. They first seek approval from the local school board. If their request is denied, they can appeal to the Florida Department of Education Charter School Appeal Commission, where they often have better luck. Before, if that still didn't work, they could get approval from Jeb Bush's 2006 brainchild, the Florida Schools of Excellence Commission, which had the authority (and a seemingly unquenchable desire) to authorize charter schools in most state school districts. In December of 2008, the First Florida District Court of Appeal struck down the statute authorizing the commission as unconstitutional, so for the moment, that recourse is no longer available."
...But it is not only in Florida that there have been objections to, and problems with, Imagine Schools. In Texas and Nevada, concerns have been raised about Imagine Schools' finances and complex real estate deals that have led to the charters spending up to 40% of their entire publicly funded budget on rent to for-profit companies, including Imagine's real estate arm, Schoolhouse Finance, leaving them with tight budgets for necessary materials like textbooks. In the interest of comparison, many other charter schools spend in the neighborhood of 14% of their public funding on building rent. The real estate deals, where the charter run by Imagine leases the building from Schoolhouse Finance, who then sells the property to a real estate investment trust who then leases it back to Schoolhouse at a lower rate than what the charter pays, have proven very lucrative for owners and investors in the two companies. Former Imagine School principals who inquired into the real estate expenditures were subsequently fired. But, naturally, they have also drawn sharp criticism from boards of education.
Schools for profit. It is happening quickly.