Consolidated Data Report shows decrease in dropouts, increase in school incidents

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) — Legislation that retools the process by which repeatedly academic low-performing North Carolina public schools can be taken over by outside operators has become law.

Democratic Gov. Roy Cooper provided neither his signature nor veto stamp to the bill by late Sunday, so the state constitution says it’s now law.

Cooper says while the bill improved the Innovative School District concept, he’s still “fundamentally opposed” to the idea and to giving control of a school over to a private charter school operator.

Cooper’s office said on Monday he wrote State Board of Education Chairman Eric Davis asking that the board seek more General Assembly spending next year to help the lowest-performing schools get better.

A Robeson County elementary school became the first to be operated through the concept last year.

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