Home » Santa Clarita News » Hart District Officials Reject Apollo Charter With 5-0 Vote

Hart District Officials Reject Apollo Charter With 5-0 Vote

Hart District board members denied a petition for the Apollo Charter School with a 5-0 vote Wednesday at their board meeting.

The petition was first discussed at a Dec. 18 board meeting, when school co-founder Johnny Jin presented the application.


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ORIGINAL STORY By Ashley Soley-Cerro Tue, 12/18/2012 – 4:19pm
“The proposal itself was well put together — they put a lot of work into it. The issue was that they had no familiarity with our community,” said Joe Messina, who was promoted to president of the Hart District School Board during the meeting. 

The idea behind charter schools is that if parents and community members think students are not getting a proper education they can step in, but only one of the four members that presented the proposal lived in Santa Clarita, Messina said. 

Johnny Jin, cofounder of Apollo Charter School, has lived in Santa Clarita for two years, and will serve as the school’s executive director if it’s approved.

Jin is confident that Apollo will be able to reach its targeted community through outreach and location, and was open to the board’s advice. 

Before the meeting, Apollo had organized outreach efforts at the Valencia mall and local hotels, but this was not an ideal way to meet students from low-income families, Messina said. 

Now, Jin said, they will focus on using a direct mail campaign to target certain demographics and go door to door at local mobile homes and apartments with applications, if the school is approved. 

“They’re right — going to a mall or hotel is not the right place, which is why we cancelled these events. So we’ll try a different, more hands on strategy,” Jin said. 

Board member Gloria Mercado-Fortine echoed Messina’s concerns and thought the stated goals may have been too broad. 

“If they say they’re going to address English learners, they need a plan to do that and they did not (have one),” she said. “They need to do their homework better. I’m glad they’ll teach Mandarin but are they going to teach that or are they going to teach students English? They need to go back and relook at their plans.”

If approved, Apollo aims to open its doors Fall 2014, in Canyon Country or Newhall. 

If it is not approved they can move onto the county board then state boards, Messina said. 

The Hart District School Board receives one or two requests to open a charter school in Santa Clarita every year, Messina said. 

The district has approved four, two of which are independent study geared towards high risk students, said Vicki Engbrecht, Hart District assistant superintendent and educational supervisor. 

“We have a unique community here and they weren’t fully aware of that,” Messina said. “I see a need for them in certain situations but I was not convinced this time around, maybe if they had their pulse on the community, if they knew where the children they’re trying to serve were.”


Hart District Officials Reject Apollo Charter With 5-0 Vote

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About Perry Smith

Perry Smith is a print and broadcast journalist who has won several awards for his focused, hyperlocal community coverage in several different regions of the country. In addition to five years of experience covering the Santa Clarita Valley, Smith, a San Fernando Valley native, has worked in newspapers and news websites in Los Angeles, the Northwest, the Central Valley and the South, before coming to KHTS in 2012. To contact Smith, email him at Perry@hometownstation.com.