Horizon Science Academy, this blog is not by the Gulen Movement as the blog Horizon Parents is. We are ex- teachers, parents of ex - students and concerned citizens of Horizon Science Academy. There are 122 US Gulen Charter schools run by foreign nationals who are replacing GOOD American teachers with fake h1-b Visas. The Gulen Movement is without a doubt behind these schools. Lets share our stories about the Concept Schools.
Concept Schools, Gulen Charter Schools Midwest operations
Saturday, December 31, 2016
Monday, November 7, 2016
Sunday, October 30, 2016
Thursday, October 27, 2016
Scores of Horizon Science Academy - Concept Schools piss poor
Gulen "Inspired" schools always claim to be "high performing"
http://magnoliascienceacademy.blogspot.com/2016/09/magnolia-science-academy-claims-to-be.html
Tuesday, October 11, 2016
Gulen Charter Schools in Ohio stealing millions from US taxpayers
http://wkbn.com/2016/10/11/turkish-government-links-youngstown-charter-school-to-terrorism/
YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio (WKBN) – Over 100 charter schools across the country, including one in Youngstown, could have ties to an international Islamic religious movement, according to an attorney hired by the Government of Turkey.
Attorney Robert Amsterdam came to Columbus on Tuesday. He says Horizon Science Academy and others like it are being used to funnel money to groups opposed to Turkey’s government.
The Turkish government has gone a step further, calling them terrorists.
“We found, really, a tremendous pattern of abuse going on in the United States and what makes the U.S. somewhat unique is that it’s taxpayer money,” Amsterdam said.
Turkey says the religious movement is behind the failed coup attempt that killed 300 people earlier this year.
Read @robertamsterdam's take on the Gülen movement's secretive nature & its role in a failed coup in Turkey:http://www.forbes.com/sites/realspin/2016/08/11/to-understand-turkeys-alleged-coup-plotter-look-to-his-u-s-schools/#38927e996dcc …
In his teachings, Cleric Fathulleh Gulen has said that “studying physics, mathematics and chemistry is worshiping God.”
Concept Schools, a charter schools management company, runs Horizon Science Academy.
Concept’s co-founder, Salim Ucan, appeared in a 2014 documentary about the Gulen movement, and says the schools are based on the desire to serve others.
“All our schools are located in urban environments. So we serve predominantly minority students and predominantly students who are coming from economically disadvantaged families,” he said in the documentary.
Concept Schools denies the allegations and says they’ve never been proven. It released the following statement in response to Amsterdam’s talk on Tuesday:
Today’s press conference held by a teachers’ union-affiliated group and a foreign agent, made numerous false allegations against the public charter schools managed by non-profit Concept Schools.The last time this group made such allegations about Concept Schools, state education officials and the Auditor of State’s office found them to be incorrect and false. We expect the same will occur with these latest allegations.Sadly, these false allegations undermine the hard work and success of our students, many of whom already face serious challenges.
Buckeye Community Hope Foundation is the sponsor for the nine charter schools that Concept currently operates in Ohio. Its associate director of the education division, Jennifer Robison, says they have never seen any indication of misconduct in relation to the schools.
On Tuesday, Attorney Amsterdam said one way Concept Schools takes advantage of the system is through its real estate company, “New Plan Learning.”
“Schools in Ohio, often under the New Horizons moniker, essentially pay double and triple the market rent, moving the money into the movement itself,” he said.
One of New Plan’s companies bought the Horizon Science Academy building in 2010, the year the school opened, for $550,000. Three years later, the company sold it to New Horizon for $980,000.
All of New Horizon’s money comes from state and federal grants.
"The Gülen movement is a global organization thriving on American taxpayer money," says @robertamsterdam#AuditGulen @OhioAuditor
Robison says the purchase was above board.
MORE NEWS ON HORIZON SCIENCE ACADEMIES - GULEN CHARTER SCHOOLS
http://www.wcpo.com/news/state/state-ohio/lawyer-for-turkey-refers-ohio-charter-schools-to-authorities
http://www.dispatch.com/content/stories/local/2016/10/11/charter-school-chain-fleecing-taxpayers-attorneys-for-the-turkish-government-alleged.html
http://abcnews.go.com/International/wireStory/lawyer-turkey-refers-ohio-charter-schools-auditor-42724827
http://nbc4i.com/2016/10/11/lawyer-for-turkish-government-refers-ohio-charter-schools-to-auditor/
Attorney for Republic of Turkey assists Ohio Americans with justice against Gulen charter schools.
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — A lawyer for the Turkish government hired to investigate publicly funded U.S. charter schools started by the followers of a reclusive Muslim cleric living in Pennsylvania is filing a formal complaint with Ohio's auditor.
Attorney Robert Amsterdam announced the complaint Tuesday, alleging that a network of Ohio charter schools has engaged in improper relationships with its management company and landlord, with their business subsidiaries and with each other.
The complaint also asserts that Horizon Science Academies and Noble Academies have ties to Fethullah Gulen (feh-TOO'-lah goo-LEHN'), a political foe of Turkish President Recep Erdogan (REH'-jehp UR'-doh-wahn). Erdogan's government alleges Gulen was the mastermind of a July 15 coup attempt in Turkey.
A message seeking comment from the Chicago-based Concept Schools, which manage the Horizon and Noble academies, was not immediately returned.
The complaint asks Republican Auditor Dave Yost to investigate alleged "abusive property deals and leasing arrangements" made possible by close affiliations between Concept Schools and its affiliated vendors.
https://apnews.com/79108a6029e844959e1a063daea70913
Thursday, August 4, 2016
Thursday, July 28, 2016
Sunday, June 12, 2016
Sunday, May 8, 2016
Concept Schools raided by the FBI freeze on Government bonds and grants ongoing investigation
Weeks after being raided by federal authorities, Concept Schools asked the U.S. Department of Education for about $340,000 for its
Horizon Science Academy-Southwest Chicago Charter School, 5401 S. Western Ave. It got the money. Leslie Adkins / Sun-Times
Des Plaines-based Concept Schools applied for and was awarded a nearly $340,000
federal grant for a new school on the Southwest Side despite being under investigation over allegations the clout-heavy charter-school operator was involved in defrauding a federal grant program, a Chicago Sun-Times investigation has found.
Concept — whose privately run, publicly financed schools include four campuses in
Chicago — applied to the U.S. Department of Education for the money five weeks after the FBI and other federal agencies raided Concept locations across the Midwest on June 4, 2014.
Those 19 locations included its headquarters and Chicago Math and Science Academy
in Rogers Park, the Sun-Times has reported.
The Department of Education approved the grant last year for Concept’s Horizon Science Academy-Southwest Chicago Charter School, 5401 S. Western Ave., awarding nearly all the money Concept asked for — $337,138 over three years. Concept had asked for more than $343,000 over two years, noting that most of the students at the school come from low-income families.
They were to receive about $200,000 of that last year, though an Education Department spokeswoman said Friday the money is now on hold.
In its grant application, Concept said the money would cover expenses including textbooks for 450 students, furniture, laptops and printers for administrators, supplies and travel to conferences.
Concept didn’t mention the raids — carried out as part of what an FBI spokeswoman told the Sun-Times remains an ongoing investigation. But the charter operator did mention its board of directors included a Cook County circuit judge, Dominique Ross, and that its advisory board included G.A. Finch, former chief of staff to Cook County Board President Toni Preckwinkle.
Finch, a lawyer in private practice, said Concept vice president Salim Ucan offered him a spot on the advisory panel four or five years ago.
“I was asked to be on it and never heard anything further,” Finch said Friday.
The Department of Education awarded the money even though the agency’s own inspector general’s office was involved in the investigation.
Geoffrey Wood, a special agent with that office, filed the “application for a search warrant” that convinced a federal judge in Chicago to approve the June 2014 raids, which sought records concerning Concept’s involvement in the government’s “E-Rate” program. That program provides money to extend Internet access to schools serving low-income students.
According to a sworn statement from Wood, Concept violated government open-bidding rules by steering more than $5 million in grant money to companies with insider ties to the charter operator. Those “related vendors” did work for Concept under the E-Rate program, according to Wood.
Catherine Grant, a spokeswoman for the Department of Education’s Office of Inspector General, said Friday, “Our investigation is ongoing, and, per our policy, we do not discuss our ongoing work.”
Asked whether the inspector general’s office let other agency officials know it was looking into Concept, Grant said, “It is our normal practice to inform the department when we open an investigation.”
Dorie Nolt, the Department of Education’s press secretary, said Friday: “We are monitoring this situation, and we have restricted Concept charter schools’ access to federal grant funds. As we learn more details about this matter, we will take additional steps, as necessary.”
She would not say when the agency moved to freeze the grant to Concept.
All that Concept officials would say was that they were “gratified” and “proud” to win the grant, “awarded to only five schools in 2015,” according to a company spokesman.
Founded in 1999 by Turkish immigrants, Concept is one of several charter chains nationwide with ties to Fethullah Gulen, an influential Muslim cleric from Turkey who has lived for years in Pennsylvania. After falling out with Turkey’s leader, he faces charges of trying to overthrow the government.
From Des Plaines, Concept oversees more than 30 campuses in seven states, including four schools in Chicago with a total of about 2,200 students.
Its Chicago Math and Science Academy and Horizon Science Academy-Southwest Chicago Charter School were awarded their charters by the Chicago Board of Education, which provides most of their funding.
Two other Concept campuses in Chicago were granted charters by the Illinois State Charter School Commission, which ordered CPS to fund them over Chicago school officials’ objections.
Concept has close ties with political figures including Illinois House Speaker Michael Madigan, D-Chicago, who visited the Rogers Park campus and filmed a video testimonial.
|
Saturday, April 30, 2016
Thursday, April 28, 2016
Tuesday, April 19, 2016
Supreme court looks at tax-exempt status of firm attached to lease of Horizon Science Academy
http://www.dispatch.com/content/stories/local/2016/04/19/court-to-decide-if-company-that-leases-property-to-charter-schools-is-subject-to-taxes.html
The Ohio Supreme Court will decide if a company that owns and leases property to publicly funded charter schools should have to pay taxes.
Ohio Tax Commissioner Joseph Testa and the Ohio Board of Tax Appeals ruled that a company, 250 Shoup Mill LLC, owes local taxes on property it leases to Horizon Science Academy, a public charter school in Dayton.
Before the high court today, an attorney for 250 Shoup Mill countered that it is a nonprofit, tax-exempt entity and should not have to pay taxes. The company is a subsidiary of New Plan Learning, which owns properties it leases to 11 New Horizon schools in Ohio, including two in Columbus.
The Dayton charter school pays 250 Shoup Mill $33,000 a month, or $396,000 a year, to lease its property. The lease money comes from Ohio taxpayers through the Ohio Department of Education, which funds both public and charter schools.
Testa's office concluded that while the charter school was exempt from taxation in 2010, 250 Shoup Mill was not. Testa's office denied the group's application for a tax exemption, a decision affirmed by the Ohio Board of Tax Appeals.
"This has all the hallmarks of a commercial lease, including annual increases in those payments that happen by the virtue of the passage of time and penalties for default," said Melissa Baldwin, an assistant attorney general representing Testa's office.
M. Charles Collins, an attorney representing 250 Shoup Mill, said the company qualifies for the tax exemption as a charitable and educational entity even though it collects rent but does not operate the school and has no "expectation, intent or desire to profit from this."
Chief Justice Maureen O'Connor questioned Collins about how it would be appropriate for taxpayers to pay $33,000-a-month lease for a charter school building valued at about $3 million that at the end of the lease would still be owned by a private company.
However the decision goes, it won't matter going forward because in 2011 the General Assembly slipped a provision into the state budget expanding the tax exemption to cover charter school property owners like 250 Shoup Mill, in addition to school operators.
Monday, March 28, 2016
Wednesday, March 16, 2016
Saturday, February 20, 2016
Gulen Charter Schools Congressman Grijalva request formal investigation of Schools
1511 Longworth HOB
Washington, DC 20515
ph (202) 225-2435
fax (202) 225-1541
PLEASE CALL CONGRESSMAN GRIJALVA'S OFFICE
Washington, DC 20515
ph (202) 225-2435
fax (202) 225-1541
PLEASE CALL CONGRESSMAN GRIJALVA'S OFFICE
http://grijalva.house.gov/about-raul/
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)