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Diaz Sets Up UWF Charter School Outside School District

EDUCATION

UWF Trustees Approve Charter Role for Somerset Academy — After Months of Saying It Wasn’t a Charter

Board of Trustees unanimously approves UWF as charter authorizer for Somerset Academy Escambia, taking oversight away from the elected Escambia County School Board and placing it with the university.


The University of West Florida Board of Trustees voted unanimously on June 18 to make the university a charter school authorizer for Somerset Academy Escambia.

Evolving Story: It is the latest, and most formal, chapter in a story that has changed shape every few months since September 2025, when UWF employees were told the university was “exploring” a tuition-free K-3 school for their kids.


From “Benefit” to Charter

Diaz has spent the better part of a year insisting this wasn’t a charter school.

That framing is now gone. The June 18 vote makes UWF a charter authorizer, the school’s enrollment target is 180 students at opening, and Diaz himself estimated that fewer than a third of the students enrolling will have any connection to the university at all — a sharp reversal from the original pitch sold to faculty and staff as a benefit for their own kids.

More Confusion: According to the Pensacola News Journal, Diaz described the academy to trustees as a K-12 school. The application materials describe a K-5 campus capped at 580 students.


Concerned Argos, again

An anonymous group calling itself “Concerned Argos” — the same name attached to a January letter to the Florida Auditor General over Diaz’s charter-industry ties — sent the Board of Trustees a detailed memo before Tuesday’s vote.

“Concerned Argonauts notes publicly available information regarding President Diaz’s personal and financial relationships with entities connected to the private school sector, including Academica, the parent organization of Somerset. Clarification is requested regarding his role in the development and advancement of this proposal.”

The memo lays out its concerns in three categories:

Process and conflicts of interest: The group says the proposal moved from senior administration to the state and then to the Board of Trustees “without meaningful consultation or input from shared governance bodies, including faculty, staff, and students.”

Somerset’s full application wasn’t included in the BOT agenda materials.

Financial viability: The group points to risks the FCI report itself identified in hitting the 180-student enrollment target, especially with the school opening in less than two months.

“What is the concrete financial plan to bridge the gap between initial opening and long-term sustainable enrollment? What compensation or cost-recovery mechanisms are in place to ensure that UWF is made financially whole?”

Community impact: The memo asks why a local demographic analysis wasn’t conducted, why a collaborative model with Escambia and Santa Rosa public schools wasn’t pursued, and how the proposal accounts for competition with public schools already under financial strain.

The pattern: Every previous turn in this story has involved UWF telling one version of events publicly while documents told another. The license agreement signed Nov. 3 wasn’t disclosed to trustees until more than two months later. Somerset’s own board minutes from October described no UWF-only restriction and no “pilot” framing, contradicting what Diaz told the Board of Trustees in January. The Somerset recruitment website was scrubbed of references to UWF once it drew scrutiny. Tuesday’s vote is the first time the arrangement has been described in its full scope — as a charter school, authorized and overseen by UWF, with the elected Escambia County School Board removed from that role.

Diaz-Academica Connection

Diaz has long-standing ties to the charter industry that predate his time at UWF. He served as chief operating officer of Doral College from 2013 to 2022, a role he held simultaneously with his election to the Florida Legislature, where he chaired education committees and championed charter school legislation.

Diaz’s wife, Jennifer Diaz, is the former vice-chair of the governing board of Tallahassee Classical School, a Hillsdale College-affiliated charter school. In October, the Diaz family filed incorporation papers for MDJ Consulting Group LLC, a for-profit education consulting firm, while Diaz was serving as UWF’s interim president.

 


Pensacola State College Difference

Northwest Florida already has a working example of a college-sponsored charter school, and it looks nothing like the Somerset arrangement.

The Pensacola State College Charter Academy opened in 2022 with 42 juniors and seniors and has grown to roughly 200 students in grades 9-12. It’s a dual-enrollment high school: students work toward a diploma and an Associate in Arts or Associate in Science degree simultaneously, with PSC providing the college-level instruction.


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