The first alarm sounded last fall, when a frustrated administrator in the Anoka-Hennepin School District sent an e-mail blast to his counterparts at 10 other districts. He wanted to know whether anyone else was having trouble with a Texas company called 1 to 1 Tutor.
The answer: Who wasn't?
In Minneapolis, school officials were seething over an incident in which a 1 to 1 representative pretended to be a district employee to obtain a competitors' enrollment forms. In Rochester, a parent complained that 1 to 1 "has been the tutoring company from hell!" In St. Paul, officials reported they were "suspicious about some of their activity."
By the end of February, two of the districts had fired 1 to 1. Looking back, local administrators say, the state never should have forced them to deal with the company, which flunked the application process when it first sought state approval last spring to provide tutoring.
But the Minnesota Department of Education's decision to bypass the rules and let 1 to 1 into the market reflects the state's easygoing approach to regulating the government's after-school tutoring program. Schools can't bar any vendors with state approval.
Although state regulators rejected some applicants, questionable companies squeaked through despite evidence of potential problems, records show. Some of those companies were later caught submitting fake invoices and other falsified documents. Others caused long delays in the start of tutoring, prompting hundreds of students to bail out of the program.
"They should not have opened the door to so many providers," said Kelli Abar, co-owner of seven Sylvan Learning offices in the Twin Cities, who helped grade applications for the state two years ago. "I was appalled at what some companies were providing" in their applications.
Officials with the Minnesota Education Department concede that state regulators have done a poor job managing the program. But Charlene Briner, the department's chief of staff and communications director, maintains that "perfect reporting and perfect compliance" would not have made a difference because the tutoring program "is not working."