The Daily News covered this story and reported that Eva Moskowitz plans to appeal the US Department of Education's decision. The story was also reported in Education Week and Politico. WBAI evening news interviewed me about this as well; start at 9 min. 30 seconds in.
For immediate release: June 4, 2019
For immediate release: June 4, 2019
For more information contact Leonie Haimson, leoniehaimson@gmail.com;
917-435-9329.
US
Department of Education finds Eva Moskowitz and Success Academy repeatedly
violated a child’s privacy according to FERPA
On Monday, June 2, 2019, Fatima Geidi finally received a response to a
FERPA complaint she filed more than three and half years ago with the US
Department of Education. The Privacy Office of the Department of Education
found that her FERPA complaint against Eva Moskowitz and Success Academy
charter schools was justified and that they had indeed repeatedly violated her
son’s privacy rights. The official
findings letter to Ms. Moskowitz, dated May 31, 2019, is here.
On October 31, 2015, Ms. Geidi filed a complaint detailing how Eva
Moskowitz, CEO of Success Academy charter schools, had revealed details of her
son’s disciplinary records to the media and on her website. Ms. Moskowitz made these disclosures in order
to retaliate against Ms. Geidi and her son after they had appeared on the PBS
News Hour to report how he had been repeatedly suspended at one of her
schools. Her original FERPA complaint is
posted
here.
Yet the US Department of Education waited more than two years to even
launch an investigation into her complaint.
In the meantime, Ms. Moskowitz included many of the same exaggerated charges
against Ms. Geidi’s son on several pages of her memoir, The Education of
Eva Moskowitz, that was published in September 2017. When Ms. Geidi noticed these passages in a
bookstore, she filed a second FERPA complaint on December 20, 2017.
Last week, the US Department of Education refused to accept the weak rationalizations
offered by the Success Academy legal staff about these disclosures and found that
in both cases, they were flagrant violations of FERPA.
Yet in order to address
these violations,
Frank Miller, Deputy Director of the Student Privacy Policy Office, wrote that
Success Academy must merely ensure that “school
officials have or will receive training on the requirements of FERPA as they
relate to the issues in this complaint.”
He refrained from imposing any penalties or demanding that the offending
passages be deleted from Eva Moskowitz’ book – a book that is still for sale on Amazon and in bookstores all across
the United States.
As Fatima Geidi said, “While I am glad that the US Department of
Education agreed that Ms. Moskowitz and Success Academy repeatedly violated my
child’s privacy by disclosing trumped-up details of his education records to
the media, on the Success website and in her book, I am furious that they failed
to fine her, or at the very least, demand that she take the offending passages
out of her book. Because the Department of Education waited over two years to
respond to my initial FERPA complaint, Eva Moskowitz illegally put the
same information (false by the way) about my child in a book where it may remain
forever. This is unacceptable, and I
demand that the illegal passages from the book be deleted.”
Leonie Haimson, co-chair of the Parent Coalition for Student Privacy, said,
“Ms. Moskowitz and Success Academy have repeatedly violated FERPA in order to retaliate
against parents who dare reveal how she abuses children and pushes them out of
her charter schools. These illegal disclosures
happened again just last month, in the case of Lisa Vasquez and her daughter,
as reported in a Chalkbeat article.
On May 9, 2019, Ms. Vasquez filed a FERPA complaint with the US
Department of Education and the NY State Education Chief Privacy Officer. Her FERPA complaint is posted
on our blog, where we point to other privacy violations by Success charter
schools. Simply asking for Success staff to receive privacy training will
likely prove no real deterrence to Eva Moskowitz. Instead she and her staff will likely
continue to flagrantly violate their students’ privacy with impunity in the
future.”
The US Department of Education has
provided more than $37 million in discretionary grants to Success Academy since
2010, including nearly $10 million awarded in April 2019. Its officials should be required to explain
why they chose not to withhold any federal funds from her schools, and worse, will
allow the offending passages in Ms. Moskowitz’ book to remain in perpetuity.
The unacceptable delay of more than three and a half years in responding to Ms.
Geidi’s initial complaint and the lack of an meaningful response by the
Department provides further evidence as to why parents should be able to sue
for damages under FERPA when their children’s right to privacy has been violated.
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Teachers get fired for making comparatively benign comments in front of other students. As a teacher and parent, I do not condone such teacher behavior, but the disparity in punishment (or lack thereof) is galling.
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