Showing posts with label budget hearings. Show all posts
Showing posts with label budget hearings. Show all posts

Saturday, June 25, 2022

Angry questions from Council Members met with incredible claims by Deputy Chancellor Weisberg at the budget hearings yesterday

Speaker Adams, Ed Chair Joseph & Oversight Chair Brewer

The budget hearings yesterday were pretty explosive. I've never seen so many Council Members at hearing at once, including the Speaker, so angrily question the DOE, furious about how many teachers  have been excessed as a result.  Several of the members had children in public schools and related how their principals had come up to them, distressed because they had to lay off their teachers and lose their arts programs or other valuable services to kids.

Speaker Adams asked Deputy Chancellor Dan Weisberg if he had anticipated the impact of these cuts on schools.  He responded, yes, but implied it was no big deal, and this happens every year.  He made two unbelievable claims:  one, that the numbers of teachers excessed this year were fewer than during the previous two years, though he couldn't supply a figure.  

He also claimed that he didn't expect any Absent Teacher Reserve to be created as a result, because all these teachers would somehow find positions elsewhere, even though he admitted the vast majority of schools had seen cuts.  Indeed, he asserted that NYC schools would be hiring "thousand of teachers."

Deputy Chancellor Dan Weisberg and DOE CFO Lindsey Oates
 

DOE Chief Financial Officer Lindsey Oates admitted that many other budget lines were cut in addition to Fair Student Funding.  She also admitted that there were $4.5 billion in unspent federal stimulus funds that the DOE intended to use elsewhere.  She then claimed the leaked internal DOE briefing we  posted that revealed an additional $1.1 billion that schools hadn't spent and were told to return to Central because  “These are real dollars that could be used for other purposes.” was merely a "training memo" and that it didn't mean what it said.

 CM Restler
Perhaps the angriest Council Member appeared to be Lincoln Restler, who said he was "red hot mad" , held up a list of the millions of dollars cut from the schools in his district, and said that the DOE had assured the Council that the cuts would only affect vacant positions.  

There is some evidence for this in the Council briefing sheet,  which reports "Administration maintains that this budget action aligns DOE’s budget with actual headcount ...and that the 3,227 [teaching] positions are vacant."  

Sadly, too many reporters have echoed this false claim by DOE,  except for Jill Jorgensen of NY1, who accurately reported that if enacted, the Mayor's Preliminary budget would cause schools to lose actual teachers when the budget was first released in February.

CM Shekar Krishnan asked why the Chancellor wasn't there to answer their questions.  Weisberg said that he and Oates were better equipped to address the sort of "technical" issues that the hearings dealt with.  Krishnan pointed out that the $215M in Fair student funding cuts were less than 1% of the entire DOE budget, and he was incredulous that the funds couldn't be found to reverse them.  CM Brewer insisted that if they gave her a spreadsheet with all the details of DOE spending, she could find enough funds in a few minutes. 

Many other members pointed out that these cuts would surely increase class size, the opposite of what the law required just passed by the Legislature, which obligates NYC to be lowering class size starting next fall.  Weisberg responded that they had people working on such a plan, in case the Governor signs the bill.  Really!

One of the main sponsors of the state legislature,  Senator Robert Jackson proclaimed, "These cuts must be

eliminated, no ifs, ands, or buts! Schools should not be penalized for having a reasonable student teacher ratio." He urged the Council to "Stand up & fight back. Time is now!"
NYC Comptroller Brad Lander


NYC Comptroller Brad Lander testified
that the FSF cuts were larger than DOE had reported, and amounted to a net reduction of $372 million—and for schools losing money,  a total of $469 million, with an average FSF loss of  $402,456.  

He also cited our finding that the "FSF reductions are just a piece of the estimated $1.7 billion in Galaxy school budget losses facing our schools. Unfortunately, given limited transparency on what those overall budget losses represent, we cannot fully assess what that $1.7 billion means for our schools."  

We have heard from principals and from the DOE itself that any funds added to Galaxy budgets after the June 13 date on which we did our calculations cannot be used to pay for staffing in any case.  

Lander also pointed out that with rising tax revenues, there was no reason that the city couldn't sacrifice some its own surplus to fill the gap:

It is also important to remember that, while enrollment has been declining, the City tax revenue and State aid that provide the vast majority of school funding is not based on the number of students. So reductions in enrollment could be an opportunity—with the funding and space we already have— for reductions in class size that we’ve long desired.

In our testimony below, we reported how 98% of schools or 1,535 lost Galaxy funding, while only 29 schools gained funding. The average cut per school was $1.1 million, or 13.9%.  We also explained how unnecessary these cuts are given the huge budget surplus and reserves that the DOE and the city currently has.    

Cuts to schools are always tragic in my eyes, but are especially inexcusable when the city is flush with cash and our kids need the close attention and support of their teachers more than ever before. 

Nearly twenty years ago, by cutting school budgets and closing schools, Bloomberg/Klein/ and their labor chief, Dan Weisberg, caused the excessing of thousands of teachers, creating something called the Absent Teacher Reserve fund, while paying their full salaries at more than $100 million per year- even at a time of rising class sizes.  Clearly they hoped that the political backlash to this ridiculous wasteful policy would be strong enough to force the union into allowing these teachers to be fired. 

We argued strenuously that these teachers should be allowed to teach, and put back into the classroom where they belong, and eventually under Mayor de Blasio, DOE allowed  teachers in the ATR pool to be placed back into classrooms.  

In 2017,  as head of TNTP, the organization founded by Michelle Rhee, Weisberg inveighed against providing these teachers with permanent positions, and again last year, when he argued, "It trumps the interest of kids."  

Is it really better for kids to let their class sizes increase while their teachers are paid to stay home ?  Despite all his claims that there will be no ATR pool again, I suspect there will be and he will resume this tired old argument and wasteful practice now that he is Deputy Chancellor, unless these awful school budget cuts are reversed.

Anyway, if you want to hear more of the trenchant questions asked by Council Members and the often clumsy deflections by Weisberg and Oates, you can follow my twitter feed from yesterday @leoniehaimson or watch the video here.  

Our written testimony is below. 

Wednesday, January 26, 2022

State budget testimony on class size and the broken Contracts for Excellence program

Today the state budget hearings are being held for education.  Below are the testimonies submitted by Class Size Matters and the Education Law Center, mostly focused on class size.

Clearly the Contracts for Excellence process is broken, with non-compliance by DOE and lax enforcement by the State Education Department.  This probably needs a legislative fix as I say -- so that the C4E law is updated and strengthened with actual class size caps to be achieved over five years, and with enhanced accountability and enforcement.   I also provide the data showing that the decline in class size this year is purely due to enrollment decline, not any actual effort by DOE.  In fact, there are fewer classes at all grade levels than there were in 2019 -- despite the even greater need for smaller classes for the sake of health and safety as well as more learning support. 

Monday, March 22, 2021

Our testimony about why NYC kids will need smaller classes next year than ever before -- & the federal funding is available to achieve this

City Council education budget hearings were held today.  The DOE offered no plans or thoughts on how to spend the additional $6B or more they will get from the federal government over the next two years. When Education Chair Treyger asked Chancellor Meisha Porter about the potential of reducing class size to strengthen academic and emotional support and creating stronger bonds between teachers and students, she said there were other ways to achieve this and that class size was "a contractual matter."  Disappointing. You can watch today's hearings here, in Virtual Room 2.  

See our testimony below, advocating for a big chunk of the federal funds be used for smaller classes below for the sake of health, safety and to address the damage done by more than a year of remote learning.

Tuesday, March 10, 2020

Budget hearings on March 19; and please call the Speaker!


The February 28 hearings on class size were so overcrowded that many people who came did not even get in the room or have a chance to testify. Many others were unable to attend because of other reasons. But I wanted to let you know that you will have a second chance. 
On Thursday March 19, starting at about 1 PM, the Council will be hearing public testimony on the education budget.  The hearings will take place in the Council Chambers at City Hall.  Please try to make it if you can!  If you need talking points, they are here.  If you plan to testify, make sure to fill out a slip with the attendant at the desk at the front of the room first.
In any case, for everyone who cares about this issue:  please call the Speaker’s office today, with this message:  As a parent [or teacher, or concerned citizen], I urge the Speaker to  fight for $100 million to be targeted towards reducing class size in the public schools, and for this initiative to be included in the Council’s budget response.”
Here are the Speaker’s phone numbers:
212-788-7210  (City Hall office)
212-564-7757 (district office)

If you do call, please let us know by filling out this one-minute survey.
Finally, we have now posted several compelling short videos and links to written testimony from the Feb. 28 hearings on our website. Please take a look, especially at Regent Cashin’s lead testimony, recounting how when she was Superintendent of District 23 and lowered class size, the “whole world changed.”
But please remember to call the Speaker’s office today!
Thanks for your support,

Sunday, February 7, 2010

Nine years of "torture" under Chancellor Klein

See State Senator Carl Kruger, chair of the Finance Committee, at the recent budget hearings in Albany, telling Joel Klein that its been nine years of "torture" under this administration, because of the way Klein has cut off parents, communities, and elected officials from the process of running the schools. I'm sure alot of parents would agree.