In a piece in yesterday’s
Gotham Gazette, I tried to put the recent credit recovery scandals in
context and proposed an alternative vision for NYC struggling schools. Please take a look and let me know what you
think!
In that article, I noted that despite many months of
pleading by teachers, and numerous exposes featured in the newspapers and on TV,
DOE’s internal investigative unit, called the Office of Special Investigations
(OSI), dragged its feet before confirming that Dewey HS principal had engaged
in an illegitimate credit recovery scheme to boost graduation rates. In the meantime, the Chancellor and the Mayor
both minimized the news stories that had offered voluminous evidence pointing to her corruption. In March, de Blasio said, referring to the
internal DOE investigative arm:
“I don’t assume because some teachers talked
to you that that’s the whole truth. I believe very, very strongly in the
quality of our investigations unit. I have absolute faith in the integrity of
that unit.”
As I pointed out, the OSI is absolutely notorious among
teachers for their bullying tactics, biased treatment and shabby reports, in
which they generally support the principal’s position or whoever happens to be
in favor among the top brass at Tweed.
Well, yesterday, Special Investigator Richard Condon blasted
DOE and OSI, about their shocking treatment of Debra Fisher, an
occupational therapist who was suspended from her school for helping one of her
disabled students raise money to write a book.
Condon's report pointed out how the OSI had made all sorts of false and unsupported accusations
concerning Fisher’s supposed conflicts of interest. Below is an excerpt from Condon's press
release; here is his report.
“Today, Special Commissioner of
Investigation Richard J. Condon released a report detailing an investigation
which found that Wei Liu, a Confidential Investigator assigned to the
Department of Education (DOE) Office of Special Investigations (OSI), made
inaccurate statements and drew inaccurate conclusions in an OSI report
substantiating misconduct on the part of Occupational Therapist Debra Fisher,
assigned to PS 333 in Manhattan. The statements and conclusions were at least
partially responsible for Liu’s substantiated findings in the OSI case, which
resulted in the DOE taking disciplinary action against Fisher. The SCI investigation also substantiated,
more generally, that OSI investigators and their investigations do not receive
adequate supervision. [emphasis added]“
Fisher’s
despicable treatment by the DOE had been highlighted in several columns by Jim Dwyer
in the NY Times as well as an article in the
Daily News, and she is now suing
DOE for back pay and to have the disciplinary letter removed from her file.
Last fall, Dwyer described
Fisher’s plight this way:
This is a story of an almost unfathomably
mindless school bureaucracy at work: the crushing of an occupational therapist
who had helped a young boy build a record of blazing success… A
person working to excel is being hammered by an investigative agency that began
its hunt in search of cheating on tests and record-keeping irregularities. It
found nothing of the sort. Instead, the investigation produced a misleading
report, filled with holes, on the fund-raising effort.
Ms. Fisher relentlessly nudges people —
including complete strangers — to help her physically challenged students in
and out of school, finding housing, arranging swimming lessons, bringing in
coders from Tumblr to speak with classes, creating an after-school arts program….
In reality, the fund-raising effort was supported by the entire school,
starting with the principal, who wrote emails to the staff about the project.
When the Kickstarter appeal met its goal, the success was celebrated at a
town-hall meeting in the school auditorium.
Yet unbelievably, the DOE has still not agreed to apologize to Fisher, or to remove the disciplinary letter from her file.
For at least a a decade, hundreds of less heralded individuals
have complained about their unfair treatment by DOE investigators assigned to the OSI. It
shouldn’t take news stories repeated over the course of many months, in the
NY Times and the Daily News, as happened in Fisher’s case, or in the NY Post,
Daily News and WCBS-TV, as in the Dewey credit recovery scandal, for
obvious wrongs to students and teachers to be righted by
DOE.
Worse yet, the Chancellor has kept the
same incompetent legal staff running the General Counsel’s office, as well as
the same officials running the Division
of Contracts, which during the Bloomberg administration allowed literally
hundreds of millions of dollars to be wasted or stolen from DOE.
It was the Executive Director of Contracts, David
Ross, who last February proposed that DOE award
an immense contract, worth originally
up to $2 billion, to a company that had engaged in massive
kickback scheme, defrauding taxpayers of millions of dollars between 2002 through 2008, according to a 2011 report
released by Condon.
During most of this time, Ross was already head
of that office. Luckily, City
Hall rejected the new contract, after lots of bad press, but also after the
Chancellor and the Panel on Educational Policy had already approved it, in a
vote of 9 to 1. Ross remains head of
DOE’s Contracts and Purchasing division after more than ten years, in charge of
over $4 billion of contracts each year, according to his LinkedIn profile.
In refusing to clean house, the Mayor
and the Chancellor have played into the hands of their enemies and allowed the reputation
of the entire DOE to be sullied.
More on the new report, blasting the DOE and the OSI,
by Jim Dwyer of the New York Times, and in the New York Post.
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