Nearly 3 years have
passed since that quiet afternoon in November 2010 when I glanced at my phone
to see the newsflash:
SCHOOLS CHANCELLOR
JOEL KLEIN STEPPING DOWN. BLOOMBERG TO APPOINT CATHLEEN P. BLACK, HEARST
MAGAZINE, AS REPLACEMENT
The news is
always presented so matter-of-factly, so unemotionally. The effect is
predictable and comforting to so many in a hectic, unpredictable world like the
one we inhabit. The news usually makes sense of it for us.
Usually, but this
news didn’t make sense. Not to me.
I called my teacher
friends, then a principal, then a parent advocate. Nothing but confusion.
Nothing but disbelief. And shoulder-shrugging acquiescence. There’s enough
crisis fatigue going around the public school system to slide this next
unbelievable fact into the shoebox of unbelievable, but inevitable,
administrative moves. Mayoral control means mayoral control, and if you don’t
like it “you can boo me at parades.”
Hold on a minute.
There are laws
protecting us from this? Protecting the public from administrative overreach
and cronyism, right? You need some educational experience – maybe a year
in the classroom – to run the largest school system in the country, right?
Not quite. You do
need permission from the state, in the form of a waiver signed by the State
Commissioner of Education, which I found out as I frantically researched the
laws online. At the time, his name was David M. Steiner, something of an
academic himself. He was close with the Mayor, the Upper East Side political
elite, and the charter school operators – what I call the new ‘corporate
education reform’ establishment – but perhaps he could be swayed?
So I sat down and
wrote an open letter
to David, asking him not to grant the waiver to Cathie Black. I posted it up
onto an online petition site and sent it around to a few friends in the
schools. I couldn’t have imagined what would happen next.
Building
Momentum
That night, my email
and petition ricocheted across the internet. I realized quickly that so many
people felt as I did that there was something fundamentally wrong about this
move by the Mayor, and that we had to stop it. I also knew that an online
petition alone wouldn’t do it, so I sent a Facebook message to some of my
former students in Red Hook:
Team Red Hook; November 2010 |
Want to help get rid
of Cathie Black? Msg me back.
The next day, four of
us met in Red Hook at a cafe near the school I used to teach in. Red Hook is a
quiet but potent hotbed of resistance against mayoral control and the
encroachment of centralized power into education, and we quickly set to work on
a ground campaign to flyer and canvass the neighborhood for
petition-signers. Our group grew, and we got a dose of reality when my
principal came into the cafe one day and nervously warned me against organizing
anything in the neighborhood. (By this time, newspaper accounts of our work had
begun to circulate, some mentioning the school and alluding to the political
battle that ultimately lead to my departure from the school and resignation
from the DOE. Lesson #1: It’s often easier to confront power from outside the
system.)
As our efforts grew,
and the neighborhood became activated to our cause, we set up shop in the
office a friend of mine. She was also nervous about any public association with
our group, so we kept our presence there “under wraps”.
Council Member Robert Jackson |
By this time,
political momentum against the appointment had begun to build. Lead by the
grassroots success of our petitioning, one by one local electeds and community
leaders began to speak out against the Mayor, though often in deeply-softened
terms. It became apparent that the City was on the offensive as well now,
rallying elite celebrities like Oprah and business leaders to “endorse” Cathie
Black. Remarkably, as noted by education historian Diane Ravitch, the City
didn’t think to gather the support of any education experts, but Cathie
did reach out personally to UFT President Mulgrew,
perhaps encouraged by his offer to help train her and his endearing words about her in a NY Times piece
days before. (Later, Mulgrew would take on a much more adversarial tone as public opposition to her
appointment intensified.)
When
the People Lead the Leaders Will Follow
In the last
week of November, opposition intensified and the NY Times came out with a piece
about the internal dilemma Commissioner Steiner was having over whether to
approve Cathie. He assembled a panel of “experts” to help guide him through the
decision – experts that many of us were certain would side with the Mayor – but
this panel had actually voted against her appointment. He now had to
figure out how to do this appointment right. Meanwhile, we printed out the
thousands of public comments on our petition and delivered it right to the
Commissioner’s door.
‘Cathie
Black Gets Her Stinking Waiver’
On Monday
morning, we awoke to the news – this headline’s from Gawker – that the Commissioner
had sided with the Mayor, albeit with a caveat: in order for Cathie to get the
job the Mayor must appoint a “second-in-command”, a chief academic officer to
assist Cathie in all things educational. As one anonymous State Education Dept.
official put it:
“This is the
product of an extensive dialogue between the state and the city about the
concerns raised by the commissioner. The feeling is that it substantially
addresses those concerns”
It was a slap
in the face to the tens of thousands – perhaps millions – of New Yorkers who
had rallied, petitioned, signed, called, emailed, commented and – yes – complained
about the Mayor’s bonehead move.
Here’s where
things get interesting…
Legal Action
& Disruption
The Deny Waiver
Coalition – of which I was a part – immediately decided to file a lawsuit
against the appointment. At meetings and on conference calls, I reminded the
(mainly-adult) members of this group that there must still be a way for regular
folks to voice their opposition. We needed sustained action, and the Panel For
Educational Policy (PEP) meetings became that exact forum.
For three long
months, we made it nearly impossible for Cathie Black to speak. It’s important
to note that this was not a noble, pretty protest. This was organized chaos:
yelling, booing, jeering, singing, picketing, protesting. The idea was simple:
you are not qualified to lead our schools, let alone shut down 22 of them!
The protest
became a wider referendum on Mayoral Control, which ultimately had led to this
fiasco, yet the first demand remained clear: FIRE CATHIE
BLACK.
A sign at a January 2011 PEP Mtg |
Finally, on
February 3rd, Cathie Black lost her cool. She fired back at our boos with a
jeering sound that showed utter contempt for our protest and our legitimate
grievances against her boss, Mayor Bloomberg. The Daily News called that night an “ugly circus”, blaming the
teachers unions. But the damage had already been done.
We had kept up
the sustained pressure and scrutiny that turned every word, every action, but
Cathie Black into a headline. She was quoted at a parent meeting talking about
birth control as a solution to lower Manhattan school over-crowding. Camera
crews followed her around and she couldn’t get into the schools.
This is what
resistance looks like.
Finally, with a
17% approval rating and a populace in plain revolt, Cathie Black stepped down,
or was fired, after merely 100 days in office.
Uncovering
the Emails
America
journalist and humorist Finley Peter Dunne said that “the job of the newspaper
is to comfort the afflicted and afflict the comfortable.” One independent
reporter, Sergio Hernandez then at the Village Voice, took the motto seriously:
he sought to uncover the email exchanges between Cathie Black and City Hall in
the early days of her appointment. Why had she been appointed? How was the city
handling her appointment?
Sergio Hernandez |
Sergio realized that
inter-agency emails are generally protected from Freedom of Information
requests, but Cathie Black was not a City employee at the time of her
appointment and her communications with the City were not protected from public
view. For two years, he battled with the City in court to release the emails.
When they further-entrenched themselves, he lurched forward to uncover the
costs of their legal defense: more than 168 hours and $25,461.42 in litigation
time.
This week, we
saw what the Mayor had spent over $25,000 of taxpayer money defending: the
City’s frantic efforts to justify his appointment of Cathie by means of
celebrity endorsements and well-placed news quotes, phone calls to union
leaders and local politicians. The emails reveal a coziness between City Hall
and big money that confirms what I have long suspected: Michael Bloomberg is
completely detached from the day-to-day realities of the 99%. (He frets
constantly about losing the top .05% of taxpayers, though!)
The emails also reveal a very calculated attempt on the part of City Hall to
manage and control the flow of information to the general population through
media outlets like the NY Times. A year later, when Occupy Wall Street hit,
we’d learn just how tight that relationship was when a call from City Hall led
to TIME magazine removing an “overly-inflammatory”
photo of an elected official being arrested during the Zuccotti Park eviction.
Brave
journalists like Sergio Hernandez are the life-blood of corporate and
governmental transparency and accountability efforts, and they should be
honored.
The Next
Cathie Black Moment
It is
impossible to not place this whole fiasco on a continuum of escalation of
public discontent with our unaccountable, unrepresentative “leaders”. Not long
after Cathie resigned did sleeping bags pop up outside of City Hall for
Bloombergville, a protest against budget cuts to education, healthcare and more
in Spring, 2011. When City Councilman Charles Barron of Brooklyn’s East New
York neighborhood stood on the steps of City Hall that month and declared that
we would “Bring Egypt to NYC” and “shut this city down!” he wasn’t far off:
weeks later 20,000 New Yorkers marched on Wall Street. Then, on September 17th,
2011, 150 brave citizens – including myself – occupied Wall Street with tents.
The resistance continues.
In Cathie Black we
saw the epitome of cronyism and the removal of any real agency from the
decisions that affect our lives, but Cathie Black moments abound in NYC today.
Slowly, the democratic structures that give us voice and power have been
stripped away from us, privatized, barricaded behind ever-growing bureaucracy
and harsh police enforcement. The social contract is broken each day. The
rising inequality and burdening debt that puts half of New Yorkers in, or at
the brink of, poverty also steals from us the precious few hours of freedom
from work that we need to be active contributors in our civil government. As
the old saying goes: something’s gotta give.
There will be more
Cathie Blacks, but we can take lessons from this struggle as one of the few
true victories against corporate control of our lives. As the number of our
grievances accumulates exponentially, let us not forget that there’s at least
one Cathie Black behind each of them. Let us not forget that it was only
through sustained pressure on many fronts – legal, journalistic, direct action,
political – that the effort to un-seat Cathie Black came to fruition. At each
step along the way, resistance was present, and every action that drew us
nearer to victory was branded as a “failure” or a “circus” or a petty
“disruption” by those in power opposed to change.
Shortly after Cathie
Black resigned, the David I wrote my open letter to followed suit and stepped
down. When the Daily News asked Cathie how she was feeling she replied:
“I’m fine, I’m fine…
And I went out and bought a new pair of running shoes, so I’m off.”
Justin Wedes is an educator &
activist living in Brooklyn, NY. He is co-founder of the Paul Robeson Freedom School,
a youth summer program sponsored by the Coalition for Public Education &
Occupy Labs to train the next generation of youth & educator-leaders to
create real education reform and community-controlled public schools. He’ll be
hosting a Cathie Black Email Reading Party to benefit the
school this Sunday, May 5th, 7-9pm, at DBA Bar in the Village.
2 comments:
manyCathie Black should have never been appointed school Chancellor, but was teacher hater Joe Klein or Mayor Bloomberg's yes man Walcott any better. Hopefully we will get a mayor who appoints a chancellor who really knows something about how to improve the NYC public school system.
What about the organize way that Commissioner Steiner and Chancellor Tisch followed Bloomberg's request!
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