Maryland’s charter school boom is no longer a quiet trend tucked in the back of enrollment reports. Over the last decade and a half, the sector has doubled in size, and that growth is now spilling into public view as school boards, county officials and charter operators wrestle over how to pay for it.
Statewide growth by the numbers
The shift is sizable. Charter enrollment has climbed from roughly 12,000 students in 2010 to about 24,000 to 25,000 in recent counts, with around 50 charter schools now operating across the state. According to Maryland State Department of Education data and federal figures from the National Center for Education Statistics, most of those campuses are clustered in Baltimore City, where charters have become a major piece of the public school landscape.
Funding fights center on the Blueprint formula
The political fight is not just philosophical. It is baked into line items. Charter operators and district leaders are sparring over how much of the Blueprint for Maryland’s Future funding must “follow the student” into charter budgets and how much districts can legitimately hold back for central office services and systemwide costs.
As reported by The Baltimore Banner, charter leaders say districts are withholding large chunks of Blueprint dollars, while state officials are now pressing local systems to show their work and explain exactly how they arrive at per-pupil amounts.
Cecil County’s bid meets resistance
On the Eastern Shore, the charter debate has turned personal for at least one elected official. Cecil County Council member Donna Culberson says she is stepping away from elective office to pursue the county’s first public charter school after watching her grandson struggle with reading.
Culberson told WBFF/FOX45 that county leaders have not been charter-friendly. Cecil County Public Schools, for its part, has said it cannot weigh in until a formal charter application is actually filed, which leaves the political rhetoric running a bit ahead of the paperwork.
State moves to set a clear funding rule
With tempers flaring and spreadsheets in dispute, state officials are trying to referee. The State Board of Education and the Maryland State Department of Education have put forward a draft regulation that would spell out, in far more detail, how districts must calculate “commensurate funding” for charters and how Blueprint funding streams are supposed to be counted in those calculations…