Above is a video of the City Council hearing last week on Mayoral control, also available here. There were incisive questions from the new Education Committee Chair, Eric Dinowitz, as well as from several other council members. Also impressive were the oral testimonies of many parents, advocates and former students about how this governance system without any checks and balances at the local level or community input was inherently undemocratic and had led to unjust and damaging policies.
Dinowitz expressed skepticism of claims of learning gains under Mayoral control, given the lagging results in the NAEPs-- the only reliable data on achievement, as opposed to the state test results which are erratically designed at best. He also pointed out how graduation rates can be artificially inflated through the use of credit recovery and the like. He was also critical of HMH Reading, the most commonly used of the mandated box curriculums.
He asked about the DOE contracting process, which over the last 23 years under Mayoral control hashas wasted millions of dollars on useless or corrupt products and vendors, and whether it was true that the Panel for Educational Policy's Contract committee had been dissolved -- which in the past had provided one of the few occasions where the DOE was forced to explain the rationale for proposed contracts before the PEP meeting at which they will be voted upon. Now PEP members are briefed privately on proposed contracts, and are told they are not to reveal what they haave been told to any member of the public.
DOE officials seemed confused as initially claimed that the Contract Committee still existed, until they conceded that indeed it had been eliminated, but refused to say that they would support such a Committee being restored and mandated in law.
There was also some confusion as to whether PEP members were sent resolutions by DOE that CECs had passed on relevant proposals they would be voting on, such as co-locations and school closures. It turns out they are not, though Katie Jedrelink of DOE said that CECs could send them directly to the PEP members if they liked. I subsequently pointed out that for years, the DOE website lacked the names of many members of the PEP, and in even more frequently their email adddresses, making it impossible for the public to contact them. This lack of information provided for members of the school board of the nation's large school district exists no where else in the country, to my knowledge. After years of complaining about this matter, I was informed the day before the hearings that they had finally posted all the names and the email addresses of PEP members, though I have heard from several that it is difficult for them to access their DOE emails, for reasons I don't understand..
Other Council Members also asked good questions, including former Education Chair Rita Joseph, who asked them what would be done to improve parent participation, given that only 2% of parents had voted in the recent CEC elections, and also how mistakes had been made in the process, including names of candidates omitted from the voting website. CM Carmen de la Rosa also had particularly pointed questions related to the lack of adequate space planning by the DOE to allow schools to lower class size in compliance with the state law.
Below are five of the written testimonies, first from NYC school historian and education advocate Diane Ravitch, followed with my testimony for Class Size Matters , then Jonathan Greenberg of the Educational Council Consortium, Naveed Hasan, PEP member and parent leader, and Naila Rosario, President of NYC Kids PAC.
All five of us pointed out the deep inherent flaws with what is essentially dictatorial, one-man rule, and the Mayoral majority on the Panel for Education Policy should be eliminated, to make it less of a rubberstamp. Each of us also proposed other reforms. Check them out!
In my testimony, I provide a list of major, multimillion dollars examples of waste and corruption under Mayoral control -- in the text and in the Appendix. Just two days after the hearing, yet another major scandal erupted: Kevin Taylor, the head of the School Safety division was indicted for bribery along with the CEO of the SaferWatch company, who had paid Taylor as well as Terence Banks, the brother of Chancellor Banks to promote the device to DOE, although Terence Banks has not been indicted.
See this story here and the indictment here.
Here is the written testimony of Jonathan Greenberg of the Educational Council Consortium, which represents many leaders of Community Education Councils.
Following are the views of Naveed Hasan, a Manhattan parent representative on the Panel for Educational Policy.
Finally, last but not least, the testimony of Naila Rosario, the President of NYC Kids PAC, who points out how Mayor Mamdani has left his supporters in the lurch, by reversing his position on mayoral control, one of his central education positions, without explaining why.


