Gallup-McKinley County Schools File Fraud Complaint Against Stride, Inc. Alleging Profit-Driven Abuse of Minority-Majority Public School District
Allegations of Profit Before Students
The complaint, filed in
-
Inflated enrollment numbers by retaining "ghost students" on rolls to secure state funding per student.
-
Cut staffing costs by assigning teachers' caseloads far beyond the required statutory limits, some exceeding 200 students each.
-
Ignored compliance requirements, including background checks and licensure laws for its employees, and ignored federally mandated special education services to students.
- Suppressed whistleblowers who documented financial directives from Stride's leadership to delay hiring and deny services to preserve profit margins.
According to whistleblower testimony cited in the complaint, senior Stride finance executives explicitly rejected requests to hire additional teachers, even when warned that the company violated a
Financial and Reputational Risk
"This case is about a publicly traded corporation deliberately choosing
GMCS's lawsuit contends that Stride's practices, while boosting short-term profitability, came at enormous long-term cost: a 27.67% graduation rate in 2024 (down from 54% in 2023), substandard test scores in every subject, and widespread loss of public trust.
"Our district is majority Native American, and these students were treated as profit centers rather than children with a right to an education," said Board Member
A Case with Broader Implications
The complaint calls for compensatory and punitive damages, triple damages under
GMCS Lawsuit and other materials can be viewed at https://www.gmcs.org/page/stride-inc
SOURCE