Monday March 15, 2010 | 09:44 AM

Maine lawmakers later this morning will once again consider a bid to legalize charter schools in the state -- one of 11 that don't allow the independently run, public schools.

Members of the Legislature's Education Committee are taking up a last-minute attempt to pass a charter school law here.

They weren't supposed to debate charter schools anymore this legislative session, but Rep. Alan Casavant, D-Biddeford, last week introduced the committee to the National Alliance for Public Charter Schools' model law as an amendment to a bill meant to allow so-called "innovative" schools run by local school districts. The bill was one of three meant to strengthen Maine's position in the national Race to the Top competition among the states for $4 billion in federal funds aimed at education reform.

The model law includes all the components the National Alliance for Public Charter Schools considers to be part of the ideal charter school law. Those components include:

• no limits on the number of charter schools allowed;
• a variety of bodies -- school boards, universities, boards -- that authorize the opening of charter schools;
• exemption from state collective-bargaining laws aimed at school districts; and
• charter school contracts based on operators' pledge to improve academic performance.

A full list of the model law's components is available here.

The Education Committee that's taking up a charter schools law today is the same one that rejected charter school legislation last spring, by an 8-5 margin. Unless two committee members have changed their minds, this latest proposal will be dead until a new Legislature convenes in January 2011.

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