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Indiana is seeking more $154 million from individuals and businesses with ties to Indiana Virtual School and Indiana Virtual Pathways Academy, online public schools that closed two years ago amid allegations that they bilked the state of millions by inflating their enrollment.
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An official report published last month revealed just how much two virtual charter schools falsified student enrollment data to receive millions in state funding. Now lawmakers are responding to the scandal.
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Tuesday night the board of directors who run two scandal-plagued virtual charter schools planned to hold a public meeting to discuss its closure. But what took place, leaves more questions than answers.
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The Daleville Community Schools Board unanimously voted to revoke the charters for the Indiana Virtual Schools and Indiana Pathways Virtual Academy.
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Teachers at Indiana Virtual School and Indiana Virtual Pathways Academy won't be paid for the work they did between July 15 and Aug. 15.
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Federal investigators are scrutinizing the enrollment and financial practices of two Indiana virtual schools on the brink of collapse.
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The attorney for two virtual charter schools alleged to inflate student enrollment and received millions of dollars in overpayments from the state, says new evidence will prove the schools did nothing wrong.
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Two virtual schools being investigated by the state could close as early as this September. The school district that authorizes the schools began the process of revoking their charters at a special meeting Thursday night.
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Two virtual charter schools and the district overseeing them have to pay back millions of dollars in state funding, after the Indiana State Board of Education voted to get money back from the schools at its meeting Wednesday.
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Early findings of an ongoing state investigation say the two schools may have nearly doubled their enrollment numbers when reporting to the state and received funding for kids who had left the school. Some moved to different states; in one case, a student had died.