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Whistleblower Lawsuits Against Charter School Operator Highlight Special Education Failures

By Advos

TL;DR

Aspire Public Schools faces whistleblower lawsuits that could expose legal vulnerabilities and damage its reputation as an equity champion in charter education.

Two former educators allege Aspire Public Schools retaliated against them after they reported failures to provide legally required support for students with disabilities.

These lawsuits aim to protect vulnerable students by ensuring schools meet legal obligations and create safe learning environments for all children.

A KQED investigation reveals whistleblower cases against Aspire Public Schools highlighting systemic failures in special education services at Berkley Maynard Academy.

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Whistleblower Lawsuits Against Charter School Operator Highlight Special Education Failures

A recent KQED investigation has brought attention to two whistleblower retaliation lawsuits against Berkley Maynard Academy, a North Oakland charter school operated by Aspire Public Schools. The cases, handled by attorney Elana Jacobs of Winer Burritt Scott & Jacobs LLP, center on allegations that school administrators retaliated against educators who raised concerns about failures to provide legally required support for students with disabilities.

The lawsuits involve former assistant principal Iris Velasco and former teacher Maryann Doudna, who allege they were punished after speaking up about systemic lapses in special education services, unsafe learning conditions, and noncompliance with state and federal law. Both educators say they raised concerns to protect students—particularly those with Individualized Education Programs (IEPs), English learners, and students from low-income families.

"Educators are often the first to recognize when schools fail to meet their legal obligations to students," said Jacobs. "When they speak up, they're doing so to protect children's educational rights, not to make trouble." According to the lawsuits and reporting, teachers and staff described a campus culture where concerns about students with disabilities were ignored or dismissed, leading to worsening classroom conditions, staff turnover, and students not receiving mandated services.

Velasco alleges she was terminated shortly after filing a whistleblower complaint, while Doudna says she felt forced to leave after repeated pleas for help went unanswered. "Whistleblowers like Iris and Maryann came forward because they saw systemic failures harming the students who need the most support," Jacobs said. "Without brave educators willing to raise these concerns, these violations would stay hidden and vulnerable students would continue to suffer."

The implications of these cases extend beyond individual employment disputes. Jacobs emphasized that retaliation against educators has consequences far beyond the workplace. "This isn't just a workplace dispute, it's about kids with disabilities, English learners, and low-income families whose rights are being ignored," she said. "If whistleblowers are silenced, families lose their strongest allies inside the system."

The article also raises broader questions about oversight and accountability in charter schools. "Charter schools are public schools, and they must be held to the same legal standards as any district when it comes to special education compliance and student safety," Jacobs noted. "Aspire markets itself as a champion for equity, but these lawsuits tell a very different story." The full KQED investigation can be found at https://www.kqed.org.

Jacobs says her clients hope their cases prompt meaningful change. "Our clients came forward not just to seek justice for themselves, but to ensure these practices stop so future students and teachers aren't harmed," she said. "We want to encourage a culture where teachers and administrators can speak up about noncompliance and unsafe learning environments without fear of punishment." The lawsuits against Aspire Public Schools are ongoing, with Aspire denying the allegations.

Curated from 24-7 Press Release

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Advos

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