
Thursday, July 14, 2011
The widening Murdoch scandal and the Wireless no-bid contracts: sign our petition now!

Thursday, June 9, 2011
Another super-mugging? NY State Education Department to award $27 no-bid contract to Joel Klein and Rupert Murdoch
Friday, July 31, 2009
More waste and mismanagement at Tweed; when will it end?

In NYC, 2400 teachers remain on Absent Teacher Reserve, with no assignments, getting paid full salaries; while class sizes are expected to swell in the fall. (GothamSchools, Post, Daily News, NY Times)
What a fiasco! Can you imagine the headlines if our schools had still been run by the old Board of Education? These teachers ought to be offered for free of charge by DOE to any principal who wants to put them to work.
Meanwhile, the financial scandals at Tweed continue. Juan Gonzalez reveals that DOE is paying the company Future Technology Associates an average of $250,000 each, for 63 consultants, through a no-bid contract– though the company has no offices, only a mail drop in Brooklyn .
The contract with FTA began in 2005 at $2.5 million -- about when the company was founded -- and has now mushroomed to over $15.7 million per year. Their contract, to align DOE’s finances with the city’s financial reporting system, which is years behind schedule, is expected to be extended for five more years at $95 million. Meanwhile, the cuts to schools next year amount to $400 million.
FTA director Tamer Sevintuna is getting $348,000 for the project, more than any city official including Deputy Mayors, while his second-in-command is getting paid $345,000 – with a portion of their salaries up to now hidden -- drawn from the schools’ capital budget.
But that’s not all. Turns out that FTA’s contract workers, many of them on temporary work visas from
"None of us made anywhere near $100,000," said a former FTA consultant who claims he quit the company in disgust because of all the money the DOE was "wasting on an archaic system that was always crashing."
"They had all 60 of us working in one room that was hot, dirty and absolutely not what you would expect from such a well-funded business," the former consultant said. …."Most of the 60 people I worked with at FTA were from
"Every few months, someone was heading back home temporarily because their visa had expired. A few even got paid while they worked on the project back in
Meanwhile, Photeine Anagnostopoulos, the DOE's chief operating officer, told Juan that their sweetheart deal with FTA is “better than competitive".
The growth of private contracting has hugely grown under this administration – a practice ripe with abuse.
See this April testimony from the City Comptroller, showing that one out of every five DOE contracts in 2007 and 2008 went over its maximum allotted amount by 25 percent or more, sometimes by millions of dollars.
An audit from the State Comptroller released in May reported that the DOE awarded 291 no-bid contracts between FY 2005 and FY 2008, for more than $340 million, and in most instances "failed to properly document" the reason why.
And this analysis from the NY Times, showing that despite hundreds of millions of dollars awarded the city from the state and the federal government to reduce class size over the last seven years, the number of classroom teachers has shrunk by more than 1600, while high-paid administrators and out-of-classroom positions have grown by over 10,000. The number of employees making over $100,000 has quadrupled – even after adjusting for inflation.
When are the Mayor and Chancellor going to be held accountable for their huge waste of taxpayer funds; while each year, our children suffer from worsening overcrowding and rising class sizes?
Sunday, August 10, 2008
No-bid contracts at DOE have reached $342 million

According to the Post, since 2004, DOE's spending on no-bid contracts amounts to $342 M. (click on summary to the right, courtesy of the NY Post.)
More recently, the number of official no-bid contracts has lessened somewhat, to “only” $12 million last year, but one wonders if this is in name only. There is little or no accounting or explanation of the 944 contracts that last year that cost the taxpayer $1.9 billion. During the budget hearings, City Council Speaker Quinn asked the DOE to cut back or limit these contracts, but they continue to soar upwards each year.
For example, see the recent DOE announcement that the NYC Leadership Academy “was selected from among multiple vendors through a competitive procurement process” to receive a five year contract. Yet how competitive this process is questionable, given the fact that the Leadership Academy was founded by the Chancellor, is run by his appointee, and he was chair of the board until just weeks before he granted it this $50 million, five year contract.
Tuesday, May 1, 2007
IT'S ALL A GAME

May 1, 2007 (GBN News): Schools Chancellor Joel Klein, struggling to keep up the appearance of parental involvement in the face of parents' widespread refusal to participate in the Community Education Councils, has reportedly commissioned a new game involving the CEC’s. The Chancellor was said to have felt that a game would generate greater enthusiasm among parents than the actual parent councils, and would be seen as more meaningful. The game, still in the production stages and as yet untitled, would be one of the more unique games ever developed. According to sources at the Department of Education, this would be the first game ever in which the object of the game would be to get people to play it.
Choosing a company to develop and produce the game proved to be a major dilemma for the Chancellor. Given the wide popularity of the game, “Children First: A Game of Irony”, based on the NY City schools, all of the major game companies were interested in vying for the contract for this one. However, the Chancellor, with no experience whatsoever in dealing with contract bids, was unable to cope with this competition. With all of the experienced companies engaged in a bidding war, the Chancellor had to find someone to whom he could grant the sort of no-bid contract with which he is comfortable. Fortunately for Mr. Klein, Deputy Chancellor Chris Cerf had just finished reading the recent best seller, “No-Bid Contracts for Dummies”, and the Chancellor immediately tapped him to produce the game.
Few details about the game have been revealed, given the DOE’s penchant for secrecy. All that is known is that parents will have no role in developing the game, but will be consulted after the game comes out. And, it is rumored that it features a large role for Parent Coordinators, who can win lavish prizes for succeeding in persuading parents to play the game.
Tuesday, April 10, 2007
Who are the real special interests when it comes to our schools?
On Monday, Mayor Bloomberg held a press conference where he castigated critics of his risky restructuring and funding proposals, calling them "a small chorus of people who are calling for a return to the good old days", who represent "special interests," like the National Rifle Association.
"You always do have the problem of a very small group of people who are single-issue focused having a disproportionate percentage of power," he said. "That's exactly the NRA."
Others might think, on the other hand, that it is he and the Chancellor -- a very small group with almost dictatorial powers over our schools -- who are the real problem.
Given the fact that among the many critics of their proposals are parents legitimately concerned about what these funding cuts might mean for their children, in terms of the loss of experienced teachers, class size, or essential services, I don't know how he can call us "special interests."
For an excellent critique of these funding proposals, and how they treat public education differently from all other municipal services, see this discussion from the Educational Priorities Panel.
Can you imagine if the city funded firehouses or police stations based not on the actual salaries of the employees, but on average salaries citywide – essentially forcing police captains to try get rid of their most experienced officers?
The attitude reflected here – seeing teachers as disposable resources -- goes against everything that the administration pretends to say about respecting them and honoring their profession.
"We want smaller classes, we want more arts funding, we want less testing, we want more input from real stakeholders on the ground....We have been asking for real changes for six years and they have kept their ears shut to us."
In fact, many of us have been calling for real change in our schools long before Bloomberg even thought of running for Mayor, and Joel Klein was still a prosecutor living in DC.
On the other hand, the Mayor surrounded himself yesterday with people who had signed onto a letter of support - with none representing either parent or mainstream education groups. Most of the organizations represented had financial interests with DOE or had received funding from the city or Bloomberg's own charitable donations.
Several had applied to be a partnership support organizations. Many of the news articles, including the NY Sun and the NY Post, pointed out how many of these organizations were dependent on
What was not pointed out, though, is how many had been the recipients of large no-bid contracts from DOE.
Last spring, CityYear (which contributed not one, but two signers to the letter) received a five year, no-bid contract for $11 million through 2012, “to help children learn to read, encourage children to stay in school and to care about their communities.” (The sixth year, and more millions of dollars, are to be contingent on follow-up questions “to be asked of CityYear.”)
Or what about the New Teacher Project, whose director also signed onto the letter of support? Last April, Tweed officials submitted a two year, $2.2 million no-bid contract for the Project, based at the
So the contract was re-submitted for even more money in May, and this time was approved, for $2.8 million! There's accountability for you.
And parents are the special interests, according to the Mayor!
In any case, the fact that the administration asked its contractors to sign onto such a letter shows how isolated and desperate they have become, to resort to an ethical and PR blunder almost as bad as New Visions asking their grantees for kickbacks.