An article about this letter was in today's Daily News. Excerpt: "We are being oversaturated with charter schools," said Tesa Wilson,
president Community Education Council in Williamsburg, Brooklyn. "It's
tax dollars being poured into a black hole with no accountability."
July 30, 2014
OPEN LETTER TO
SUNY BOARD OF TRUSTEES
Dear Members of the SUNY Board of Trustees:
We, the undersigned members of the New York City (NYC) Council, oppose any further expansion of charter schools, urging you to hold off on authorizing new charter schools, until you address the lack of oversight and accountability in this rapidly growing sector.
On May 6, 2014, the NYC Council
Committee on Education held an oversight hearing for charter schools, making it
apparent that accountability measures and oversight have lagged behind the
growth of charter schools.
Currently, New York State has 209
charter schools, with 183 (88%) of them in NYC. Recent changes to state law,
pushed by Governor Cuomo and Wall Street financiers, aim to make further
charter school expansion easier but fail to address the need for common sense
regulation.
Both the NYC Council and the SUNY
have a shared responsibility to ensure that our public school dollars are spent
wisely and that all of our public school students, both traditional and
charter, receive the best education possible.
We ask that the following
concerns that arose at the hearing be addressed before any further expansion of
charter schools takes place:
- Examination of harsh discipline practices;
- High teacher and student attrition rates;
- Exclusionary admissions practices, as witnessed by the significantly reduced percentage of students with special needs, English Language Learners and over-the-counter students, as compared to district averages;
- Discriminatory marketing practices, which include marketing materials only in English as well as marketing to specific groups of individuals;
- Lack of transparency with how public dollars are being spent;
- Parent handbooks and school policies not being made publicly available; and
- The practice of shutting schools down to engage in political activity.
Lastly, the Annenberg Institute
for School Reform recently released a report entitled “Public Accountability
for Charter Schools in New York
City: Common-Sense Regulation and Oversight for the Future,” which details how all NYC
students can benefit from increased regulation and oversight of the charter
school sector. We ask that you review this report and implement the
recommendations contained therein.
We look forward to your response.
Sincerely,
Daniel Dromm Margaret
Chin
Chair, Committee on Education 1st District
25th District
Antonio Reynoso Mark
Treyger
34th District 47th
District
46th District 12th
District
Deborah Rose Inez
Barron
49th District 42nd
District
33rd District 43rd District
cc: Hon. Andrew
M. Cuomo, Governor
NYS State Capitol Building
Albany, NY 12224
Hon. Bill de Blasio, Mayor
City Hall
New York, NY 10007
Carmen FariƱa, Chancellor
NYC Department of Education
52 Chambers Street
New York, NY 10007
Susan Miller Barker, Executive
Director
Charter School Institute
State University of New York
41 State Street, Suite 700
Albany, NY 12207
State University of New York, Board
of Trustees
H. Carl H. McCall, Chair
Joseph W. Belluck, Member
Henrik N. Dullea, Member
Ronald G. Ehrenberg, Member
Angelo M. Fatta, Member
Tina Good, Member
Eric Corngold, Member
Eunice A. Lewin, Member
Marshall A. Lichtman, Member
John L. Murad, Jr., Member
Peter K. Knuepfer, Member
Lori Mould, Member
Linda S. Sanford, Member
Richard Socarides, Member
Carl Spielvogel, Member
Cary F. Staller, Member
Lawrence J. Waldman, Member
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