On Sunday, Sue Edelman wrote
in the NY Post about how the DOE has
made misleading claims in court in their attempt to keep School Leadership Team meetings closed to the
public. School Leadership Teams, made up of half
parents and half school staff, have an important role to play in school
planning and budgeting, and thus it is important to keep their deliberations as
transparent and accountable as possible.
To briefly recap: Last January, the Public Advocate Letitia
James and Class Size Matters intervened
in a lawsuit against the DOE, originally filed by a retired NYC teacher named Michael Thomas, who had
been barred from an SLT meeting. Speaking
for CSM, we decided to intervene in the interests of accountability and transparency,
but also as the DOE’s argument based its argument on yet another false claim:
that SLT’s were only advisory, though state law and Chancellor’s regs clearly
state that they have ultimate authority over each school’s Comprehensive Education
Plan, which is also supposed to inform the school’s budget.
In March,
Judge Moulton ruled in our favor, partly on this basis and his decision pointed
out that even if they were solely advisory, SLT’s have a specific governance
role established in state law and thus are a public body subject to open meetings law. The state law also specifically says that SLTs
must announce meetings in advance “as in open meetings law,” so the state’s
intent on this is obvious. Yet the DOE announced
they would appeal this decision, and in the meantime, told principals to close
these meetings to anyone outside the “school community”, which presumably means
anyone who was not a parent or employee of the school.
In July, we filed
papers
in the Appellate court, asking them to keep the meetings open until the DOE’s appeal could be
heard.
On August 6,
the city filed a cross motion, arguing
that that it would take an “enormous effort”, and a “Herculean” task to open
these meetings to the public in the interim, at a “substantial cost.” Opening these meetings would be “a daunting and impracticable task” that would
jeopardize privacy and the safety of children, and represent “a sea change.” It
would “alter a status quo that has existed for more than two decades”, as “SLT
meetings have never before been open to members of the press and the general
public.”
Yet none of
these claims are true. As our
reply brief pointed
out, from their inception, the DOE encouraged schools to keep these meetings
open. The “Green Book”, or the SLT
manual first put out by Chancellor Crew in 1998 and then again by Chancellor
Klein in 2002, clearly states, “Each
school leadership team should determine whether team meetings will be open to
the public…teams are strongly encouraged to invite open attendance…”
Then, during Dennis
Walcott’s Chancellorship, who led the DOE between April 2011 and
December 2013, the DOE correctly pointed out that these meetings MUST be
open to the public – including in a DOE power
point that is still online.
In addition, in
an article printed in the Riverdale
Review on January 3,
2013, the reporter Tess Mcrae told how she contacted the DOE after she
had been kicked out of an SLT meeting at PS 24 by principal Donna Connelly.
After the reporter contacted the DOE
spokesperson, David Pena, he first said he was “under the impression” that they are closed meetings, but after
checking, Pena got back to the reporter, saying on the record that “Generally,
these meetings are open to the public except if an executive session is being
held.”
For some
reason, in the spring of 2013,
officials reversed the practice and policy of nearly twenty years, by ordering principals
to close SLT meetings, which sadly the Chancellor has continued to maintain in and out of court – despite the decision of the State Supreme Court.
Our papers
make short shrift of the DOE’s other false claims – that opening these meetings
would be enormously costly, and put children in danger. You can check them
out here.
See also the article in yesterday’s
NY Times that mentions our lawsuit as one of
several involving important issues in which Public Advocate James has
challenged the city. We are hoping
for a favorable order from the Appellate Court in four to six weeks.
4 comments:
Why do they want these meetings held privately? What are they hiding? These are Public schools. Farina can't expect to run the schools like charters and then say they're Public schools, when it's convient. Things inside and outside our Public schools are much, much worse under DeBlasio and Farina. If they bar the public, make them film and record every SLT meeting.
Even if the court sides with the petitioners we can expect that the Chancelor will require the SLT's meat only in executive session.
Why aren't charter school meetings open to the public? Why can't the public see their finances and budgets? What are they hiding?
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