One of Minnesota’s worst-performing charter schools is still being run by a director who was leading the school when it fraudulently obtained more than $1 million in taxpayer funds by intentionally inflating the school’s attendance.
The Minnesota Internship Center (MNIC), which had four high school campuses in Minneapolis and St. Paul, was sanctioned by the state in 2021 and ordered to repay $1.3 million after an investigation showed MNIC received reimbursement for 137 students who no longer attended the school. MNIC officials acknowledged in court documents that leaders had fabricated attendance records for the 2017-18 school year — and earlier this year told the Minnesota Star Tribune that none of the MNIC officials associated with the fraud were still with the school.
But that’s not true. According to interviews with seven former employees and board members, and complaints filed with the Minnesota Department of Education (MDE), the fraud took place under the direction of Reginal Womack, who remains the school’s executive director. They say Womack continued with questionable financial practices, including spending hundreds of dollars each month to take employees to Topgolf, all while MNIC posted abysmal attendance and graduation rates.
Two of the school’s four locations have closed in recent years, and records show MNIC is on the brink of insolvency.
“I think it’s abhorrent,” said Mary Ander, who helped start MNIC and served for years as a board member and director of vocational programs. “Reggie never should have been hired for that position.”
Womack declined to comment. In a prior written responses to the allegations, Womack blamed other employees for the fraudulent activity for which the school was sanctioned.
Leadership questions
Problems at the charter school became public last month when the Minnesota Supreme Court upheld MDE’s right to investigate the fraudulent enrollment practices. The charter school is overseen by the nonprofit Pillsbury United Communities.
Allegations against both Womack and Pillsbury United are detailed in several written complaints obtained by the Minnesota Star Tribune and corroborated by the former employees and board members, some of whom spoke on condition of anonymity because they are now working for other schools.