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Ronald J. Packard is the CEO of K12 Inc., a $848.2 million for-profit online school company headquartered in Herndon, Virginia. From 2008 to 2012, Packard received compensation of over $16.5 million from the company. In 2012, he owned over 4 percent of K12, which had a market cap of around $1.25 billion in September 2013.

Ronald J. Packard has been K12's CEO or executive chairman since 2000. He co-founded K12 with former Reagan education secretary William J. Bennett in 2000 after they secured an initial $10 million investment from his boss at Knowledge Learning and convicted junk bond king Michael Milken. The duo also received financial support from Larry Ellison of Oracle.

He also closed a $20 million venture capital funding drive for K12 in 2003 with Constellation Ventures, an affiliate of Bear Stearns Asset Management, one of the Bear Stearns internal hedge funds that blew up in 2007 and contributed to the need for a government-backed bailout of the investment bank by JP Morgan. Packard has also teamed up with investment banker Michael Moe, who helped take K12 public. According to The Nation, "Moe has worked for almost fifteen years at converting the K-12 education system into a cash cow for Wall Street."

Packard, born in 1963, grew up in Thousand Oaks, California, the son of a radar and weapon systems engineer for Hughes Aircraft, where he worked as a summer engineer. He then worked in the mergers and acquisitions operation of Goldman Sachs from 1986 to 1988, and at McKinsey and Company from 1989 to 1993. After leaving McKinsey, Packard went to Chile to work on getting government permits for some investors who had "bought title to a large forest." He was then picked up by Milken’s education investment holding firm, Knowledge Universe Learning Group, which appointed him partner, vice president and chief executive (1997-2000); and then by Knowledge Schools, a chain of preschools. Packard also served as a director at LearnNow Inc. (which was bought out by Edison in 2001), and Academy 123 Inc. (2004-2006; now owned by Discovery Communications).

Packard was a defendant in a 2012-2013 securities class action suit over his alleged misstatements to investors on student achievement at K12 schools. The suit claimed that Packard and the company boosted K12's enrollment and revenues through "fraudulent devices, schemes, artifices and deceptive acts, practices, and course of business includ[ing] the knowing and/or reckless suppression and concealment of information regarding K12's excessive churn rates, the poor academic performance of its schools compared with brick and mortar schools, improper practices at several of its schools nation-wide, and enrollment inflation." In March 2013, the parties agreed to settle the suit in return for a payment of $6.75 million by K12's insurance carriers, and the lead plaintiff agreed to withdraw his accusations. The settlement was approved by the court on July 25, 2013.

Packard has agitated for the adoption of online schools for over a decade, including by addressing a "standing room only crowd" of the American Legislative Exchange Council's Education Task Force in December 2002. Packard was flanked at the talk by Jeanne Allen from the Center for Education Reform, who has continued to defend K12 from evidence that it lags behind traditional public schools.

Packard is also a member of Digital Learning Council, a project of Jeb Bush's Foundation for Excellence in Education, which is funded by leading pro-school privatization interests such as the Broad, Gates and Walton Foundations. Bush has said that promoting digital learning, Packard's bread and butter, is at the top of his education reform list because of its capacity "to disrupt the public education system."

According to The Wall Street Journal, "a large part of Mr. Packard's job is dealing with political issues." "We understand the politics of education pretty well," Packard has told investors. He has called lobbying a "core competency" at K12 Inc., and was himself listed as a registered lobbyist to the New York City government from 2007 to 2010. The New York Times has called for-profit education companies "a lobbying juggernaut in state capitals."

Packard has also dabbled in electoral politics, serving in 2004 on the finance committee for Illinois Senate candidate Jack Ryan (along with William Bennett and then-Goldman Sachs CEO Henry Paulson), a former Goldman Sachs banker who ran against Barack Obama before withdrawing his candidacy after damaging allegations surfaced. Packard and K12's public affairs director Bryan W. Flood also donated to the 2006 campaign of Wisconsin state assembly education chair Rep. Brett Davis (R), who authored a bill benefitting Wisconsin virtual schools, including K12.

Related SourceWatch Articles

 * K12 Inc.
 * Connections Academy
 * William Bennett
 * Goldman Sachs
 * Michael Milken
 * American Legislative Exchange Council (ALEC)
 * Education Task Force
 * Foundation for Excellence in Education

Related PRWatch Articles

 * Mary Bottari, From Junk Bonds to Junk Schools: Cyber Schools Fleece Taxpayers for Phantom Students and Failing Grades, PRWatch, October 2, 2013.
 * Lisa Graves, ALECexposed: List of Corporations and Special Interests that Underwrote ALEC's 40th Anniversary Meeting, PRWatch, August 15, 2013.
 * Brendan Fischer, Cashing in on Kids: 139 ALEC Bills in 2013 Promote a Private, For-Profit Education Model, PRWatch, July 16, 2013.
 * Lisa Graves, Taxpayer-Enriched Companies Back Jeb Bush's Foundation for Excellence in Education, Its Buddy ALEC, and Their 'Reforms', PRWatch, November 28, 2012.

External Articles

 * Kristin Jones, " K12 Agrees to $6.75 Million Payment to Settle Disclosure Suit]," The Wall Street Journal, March 4, 2013.
 * Emma Brown, "Shareholder Lawsuit Accuses K12 Inc. of Misleading Investors," The Washington Post, January 31, 2012.
 * Stephanie Saul, "Profits and Questions at Online Charter Schools," The New York Times, December 12, 2011.
 * Lyndsey Layton and Emma Brown, "Virtual Schools Are Multiplying, But Some Question Their Educational Value," The Washington Post, November 26, 2011.
 * Lee Fang, "How Online Learning Companies Bought America's Schools," The Nation, November 16, 2011.
 * John Hechinger, "Education According to Mike Milken,” Bloomberg BusinessWeek, June 2, 2011.
 * Nick Gillespie, “Jeb Bush on Disrupting the Educational Status Quo," Reason magazine, May 2011.
 * Srana Mitra, “A Scalable K-12 Education Solution: K12 CEO Ron Packard (Part 1)," interview with Ron Packard, November 18, 2009.
 * Veronica Dagher, "Virtual School Chalks Up Gains," The Wall Street Journal, November 5, 2008.
 * Daniel Golden, "Former Secretary of Education Plans School on Internet," The Wall Street Journal, December 28, 2000.