This fact sheet is also available as a downloadable pdf here.
Fact Sheet on School
Overcrowding and the Capital Plan
The Problem:
·
According
to an audit from the NYC Comptroller, at least one third of public
schools are overcrowded, without the city having any clear plan to deal with
the problem. A third of the city’s
elementary schools are at least 138% of capacity. Nearly half a million students already attend
schools that are severely overcrowded and the situation is getting worse.
·
The
current school construction capital plan with about 38,000 seats will meet less
than half the need, given DOE’s own data and their enrollment projections. NYC is
the fastest growing large city in the country, according to the recent Census,
and yet the city has no realistic proposal to address the growing student
population.
·
There
is widespread consensus that the DOE’s formula for estimating school
utilization levels underestimates the actual level of overcrowding and the
space needed to provide a quality education. A working group appointed by the
Chancellor made suggestions in December to improve the accuracy of this
formula, but their recommendations still have not been released.
·
The
well-documented result is that hundreds of schools have lost their cluster rooms;
thousands of students are assigned to lunch as early as 10 a.m., and/or have no
access to the gym. Many special needs students are forced to receive their
services in hallways and/or closets rather than in dedicated spaces, and class
sizes in the early grades have reached a 15-year high.
·
The Mayor’s
ambitious plan to build an additional 160,000 market-rate housing units, on top
of 200,000 affordable units over the next 10 years will create the need for
even more school seats.
Class Size Matters
Recommendations:
·
The
DOE should double the number of new seats in the capital plan, which would more
nearly achieve the goal of alleviating current overcrowding and accommodating
projected enrollment growth. According to the Independent Budget office, this
would cost $125 million per year, given that the state reimburses for half the
cost.
·
The DOE planned to pay
$127 million per year at a total cost of more than $1.1B for nine years for a
computer consulting company. That
contract was later cancelled by the city after the media raised concerns about
the fact that the company had been involved in a kickback scheme. Originally
the contract was nearly twice that high, at a potential cost of more than $2
billion. For less than what the DOE was
prepared to pay for this contract on an annual basis, the number of seats in the capital plan
could be doubled and we could begin to meet the real needs of NYC public school
students.
·
The
DOE should also form an independent commission to improve the planning process
and efficiency in siting new schools, which now lags far behind private and
public development efforts.
Prepared by
Leonie Haimson, Class Size Matters, May 2015.
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