Richard Allen Schools (RAS) is a charter school system headquartered in Dayton, Ohio.[1] It operates schools in Dayton and Hamilton.
It was named after the founder of the African Methodist Episcopal Church (AME) and a former slave, Richard Allen.[2]
Jeanette Harris and Reverend Earl Harris established Richard Allen in August 1999 in Dayton. The first campus was in the Edgemont neighborhood.[3] The former became the president and CEO of the school system.[4]
For a period Institute of Management and Resources (IMR) operated the school, and Michelle Thomas served as the superintendent.[5]
In 20008 , the school system gave more than $1 million to consultancy firms established by Jeanette Harris; state taxpayers sent over $6.5 million to the system that year.[4]
Dave Yost, the Ohio Auditor of State, ruled that Richard Allen paid $1.5 million in money to IMR in excess of what it should have; IMR sued Yost, but the 10th Ohio District Court of Appeals, on December 10, 2015, upheld the decision.[6] A new audit in 2013 stated that IMR had overcharged an additional $452,281, meaning the total overspent funds were now $2.2 million.[7]
In the summer of 2017 IMR stopped its operations of the schools, and IMR filed for bankruptcy in March 2018. Richard Allen became the sole charter school system operated by EDMG, established in April 2017.[5]
In 2018, the Ohio Department of Education stated that it would no longer sponsor the school system.[8]
In 2019, legal proceedings had been opened against both Thomas and IMR.[5]
As of 2019[update], the school system had a total of 525 students. Previously it had a total enrollment of 964;[5] its 2013 enrollment was around that size.[7]
In 2013, the Dayton campuses had academic performances superior to those of schools of Dayton Public Schools while the Hamilton campus had academic performances inferior to those of schools of the Hamilton City School District.[7] In 2011, Christopher Magan and Margo Rutledge Kissell of the Dayton Daily News stated that the school system was "known for the type of strong academic performance that would make any urban educator envious."[4]