$0 California Homeschool Quick-Start Checklist

Best Micro-School Resource for California Families Leaving Charter Programs

If you're a California family currently enrolled in a non-classroom-based (NCB) charter school — an independent study program, a virtual academy, or a vendor enrichment-funded curriculum — you're facing the most disruptive legislative attack on alternative education California has seen in decades. Assembly Bill 84 (AB 84) and Senate Bill 414 (SB 414) are advancing through Sacramento with the explicit goal of slashing NCB charter funding by up to 30%, eliminating your ability to choose your own curriculum, and banning charter partnerships with the uncredentialed community vendors who provide the music, art, and specialized tutoring that make these programs worth enrolling in. The best resource for families in this situation is a California-specific micro-school guide that walks you through the Private School Affidavit (PSA) pathway — the one legal structure that gives you complete independence from state charter politics, permanently.

Why Charter Families Need a California-Specific Resource

Moving from an NCB charter program to an independent PSA micro-school isn't complicated, but it has California-specific landmines that national resources miss entirely:

  • The PSA vs. PSP decision — Are you better off filing your own PSA (maximum privacy, no state oversight, SB 277 vaccine exemption) or joining an umbrella Private School Satellite Program? The wrong choice locks you into administrative structures you may not want.
  • Timing the withdrawal — Removing your child from a charter program at the wrong time can trigger truancy investigations. There are specific dates and notification sequences that protect you.
  • AB5 when you hire an educator — Charter programs handled teacher employment. When you run your own pod, you need to comply with AB5 if you hire anyone. Getting this wrong costs $5,000–$25,000 per violation.
  • Zoning if you're forming a pod — If you're combining your family with two or three others (the most common post-charter transition), you need to understand residential and commercial educational-use zoning in your metro area.

Generic national micro-school resources don't cover any of these California-specific layers.

What Makes a Resource Useful for Charter Families Specifically

Feature Needed? Notes
PSA vs PSP decision matrix Essential Different families need different structures
Charter withdrawal timing guide Essential Wrong timing triggers truancy investigation
AB5 tutor compliance Essential Charter handled this; now you must
SB 277 vaccine exemption explanation Important Applies to single-family PSAs, not multi-student
Metro zoning guidance Important if forming a pod LA, SF, SD, Sacramento, San Jose rules differ
Family agreement templates Important if multi-family Prevents pod collapse from undefined expectations
Budget templates Helpful Charter stipends are disappearing; real costs matter

Who This Is For

  • California families enrolled in NCB charter programs threatened by AB 84 or SB 414 who want an exit plan before funding cuts hit
  • Families who have relied on charter-provided vendor enrichment stipends for music, art, or specialized tutoring and need to know how to fund those independently
  • Parents considering forming a micro-school or learning pod with two or three other families after leaving a charter program — especially in San Diego and Orange County where charter school communities are densest
  • Families who want to understand the PSA pathway in enough detail to make the right structural choice before they withdraw from the charter
  • Parents who are currently in a charter program and want to understand their options while they still have time to plan

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Who This Is NOT For

  • Families who are happy with their current charter program and aren't facing immediate legislative pressure
  • Families who want a fully funded, state-supervised alternative — the PSA pathway requires you to fund the education yourself
  • Families looking to stay in the public education system in any form — the PSA makes you a legally recognized private school

The Legislative Threat in Plain English

AB 84 and SB 414 together would:

  • Cut funding for NCB charter programs by up to 30% statewide
  • Require charter schools to get district approval for curriculum partnerships with external vendors
  • Ban uncredentialed vendors from providing services paid for with charter stipend funds
  • Give local school districts veto power over enrichment activities that fall outside their preferred curriculum

For families using vendor enrichment to fund private tutoring, art programs, or STEM enrichment outside the public school framework, this means the financial model they've built their homeschool around is about to be dismantled. The PSA pathway exists entirely outside the charter system — it is immune to these legislative changes, permanently.

The PSA as Your Charter Escape Hatch

Filing a Private School Affidavit takes California families out of the public education system entirely. Your micro-school becomes a legally recognized private institution. You receive no state funding, but you also receive no state oversight of curriculum, no mandate to use credentialed teachers, no state testing requirements, and no vulnerability to the political whims of the Sacramento legislature regarding charter funding.

The transition from an NCB charter to an independent PSA is one of the cleanest moves in California alternative education. The CDE filing is free and annual. The protections are immediate. The catch is that you need to understand AB5, zoning, insurance, and family agreements before you start — and those layers require California-specific guidance.

The California Micro-School & Pod Kit is built specifically for this transition. It covers the five legal pathways, the PSA vs. PSP decision matrix, charter withdrawal timing, AB5 compliance for hired educators, metro zoning for all five major California metros, LiveScan and SB 277 requirements, and customizable templates for family agreements, liability waivers, and tutor contracts.

Tradeoffs: Charter Program vs Independent PSA

Charter program advantages: State-funded (partially). Administrative compliance handled by the charter. Vendor enrichment stipends available. Existing community of families. No legal setup work for families.

Charter program disadvantages: Subject to state legislative changes. Funding cuts via AB 84/SB 414. Loss of uncredentialed vendor partnerships. District veto power over curriculum choices. Political vulnerability as charter politics shift in Sacramento.

Independent PSA advantages: Zero state oversight. Immune to charter legislation. Complete curriculum freedom. No teacher credential requirement. No state testing. Permanent independence from public school politics.

Independent PSA disadvantages: No state funding — you fund the education yourself. Setup requires understanding PSA filing, AB5, zoning, and insurance. Annual PSA renewal. Requires more family administrative work than a charter program.

Frequently Asked Questions

How quickly can I transition from a charter program to an independent PSA?

The PSA filing window opens October 1 and closes October 15 annually. If you're withdrawing from a charter program outside that window, you can file a late PSA (the CDE accepts these) and immediately enroll your children in your private school. The timing of withdrawal from the charter matters — the California Micro-School & Pod Kit includes a withdrawal sequencing guide that prevents truancy issues during the transition.

Will I lose my vendor enrichment stipend when I leave the charter?

Yes. Charter enrichment stipends are only available to enrolled charter students. When you move to an independent PSA, you fund all educational expenses directly. The Kit includes real California cost benchmarks and cost-sharing formulas for pod families who are pooling resources to replace charter stipends.

Does AB 84 affect all NCB charter schools equally?

The bill targets funding for all NCB programs, but the impact varies by program size and how heavily the program relies on uncredentialed vendor partnerships. Programs that have already moved toward credentialed-teacher-only models are less immediately affected. The Kit's charter section explains how to assess your current program's vulnerability and what the transition timeline looks like.

Can I keep my existing curriculum when I switch to a PSA?

Yes, completely. The PSA has no curriculum requirements beyond covering the subject areas mandated by California Education Code Sections 51210 and 51220 (English, math, social science, science, visual and performing arts, health, and physical education). You can continue using Saxon Math, Charlotte Mason, Singapore Math, Classical Conversations, or any curriculum you've built under the charter.

What happens to my child's transcript when we leave the charter?

Your child's public school transcript through the date of withdrawal belongs to them and can be obtained from the charter school. Going forward, transcript records for students in a private PSA school are maintained by the school itself — by you. The Kit includes record-keeping guidance covering the documentation requirements for private schools in California.

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