© 2025 88.9 KETR
Public Radio for Northeast Texas
Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations
88.9 KETR's 50-Year Milestone is here! Support local journalism, public media, and the free press with your contribution today.

It's Showdown Time In Dallas Over A Charter School

Imagine it’s class time. Today’s civics lesson? How to turn a city zoning case turn into a political fight over education.

At the corner of Illinois and Vernon Avenues sits Uplift Pinnacle’s campus for kindergarteners through fifth graders. The charter operation wants to build a middle and high school five miles south, at Camp Wisdom and Interstate 35.

“It’s a simple zoning case on a piece of land that’s been abandoned for 30 years,” says YasminBhatia, CEO of Uplift Education. The growing north Texas charter operation has at least 17 campuses. 

 “Uplift wants to develop it into a secondary school site,” Bhatia continues, “and invest $10 million in in the southern sector where there’s a whole “grow south” campaign right now going on.”

Hold on, says Joyce Foreman, Dallas school board member whose district includes the site in question. The student migration to charters has cost the Dallas Independent School District about $10 million in state education funds.

“There’s an over-proliferation of charter schools in one concentrated area,” Foreman says.

Nearly 30,000 Dallas kids are in charters who could be enrolled in schools in the Dallas Independent School District.

“But 12 thousand of those children,” Foreman adds, “are concentrated in one area. And that’s in my district.”

Foreman says enough. City staff already approved Uplift Education’s plan. Foreman urged the city council to reconsider. So the vote got delayed. Bhatia says that leaves charter parents out of the picture.

“It worries me,” Bhatia says, “that because a particular individual does not like the choice people are making, instead of making the alternative be more attractive, it’s - let’s take their choice away.”

Foreman remembers when Dallas closed a dozen schools a few years back, many in the south. Low enrollment in tough economic times was the reason.

“I hear us using the debate about choice,” reasons Foreman.”Well, if the public schools as we know them are closed and it’s only charters in one particular area, then what choice would the people have?”

Foreman took her arguments to a packed Paradise Missionary Baptist Church meeting last Friday. It’s near the proposed Uplift Pinnacle site. Only it wasn’t an exclusively anti-charter crowd. Joshua Lewis, has three kids. His 10 and 11 year olds attend charter school.

“They were in DISD two years ago. I wasn’t very happy with the progress they made. And since I put them in the Uplift school they’ve made a lot of progress. So if it ain’t broke don’t fix it,” Lewis said.

His five year old is in a Dallas elementary and he calls Rosemont a great school.

On the other hand, Catina Ford moved her two kids to charters.

“And they weren’t learning,” Ford says. “My son came home, told me they played and would take naps all day. And when I moved him back to DISD he was behind, and I was not ok with that.”

Her children are now doing fine in Dallas schools, she says.

Experiences are mixed, just like the schools. In 2015, many Uplift campuses not only met state standards, but earned all seven distinctions from Texas. Uplift Pinnacle, though, didn’t even meet the state standard. The Dallas ISD school next to the proposed Uplift site, though, not only met the state standard, it earned four distinctions from Texas.