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Ohio’s Troubled Online School Loses More Court Battles in Repayment Feud

By Tribune News Service — July 18, 2017 1 min read
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In yet another legal blow, the Ohio Supreme Court last week rejected online school giant Electronic Classroom of Tomorrow’s requests to block the state from collecting $60.4 million in overpayments for inflating its attendance.

On the same day, July 12, a common-pleas judge rejected ECOT’s argument that the state board of education violated Ohio’s open-meetings law during a meeting in which the repayment issue was discussed.

The decision by the supreme court means the Ohio education department can start deducting $2.5 million each month from ECOT’s state aid beginning with this month’s payment.

In June, the state school board ordered restitution after education department investigators used computer log-in durations and offline documentation to verify 6,313 full-time ECOT students, about 60 percent less than the students ECOT claimed.

A version of this article appeared in the July 19, 2017 edition of Education Week as Ohio’s Troubled Online School Loses More Court Battles in Repayment Feud

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