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

Sunday, April 21, 2024

Post mortem on a disappointing state budget


 The state budget was finalized on Saturday, more than two weeks late, and to the surprise of many, Mayor Adams was successful in getting Mayoral control renewed within the budget.  He did not get four years, as he and the Governor wanted, but he got two years, which flies in the fact of what nearly all the Legislative leaders had said about the importance of keeping school governance outside the budget.  As Sen. John Liu said,

The proper way to do this is a thoughtful deliberation and hearing more voices in the process — taking into account more opinions from education stakeholders — and that’s exactly what we had planned to do immediately after the enactment of the budget. As it turns out,, the governor was very insistent on including this issue, and the governor has a great deal of influence during the budget making process. So this decision making was clearly rushed. It’s not best practice, but this is where we are.”

Instead of giving the thoughtful consideration the issue deserves, especially after weeks of public hearings on the matter, where hundreds of parents and teachers came out to speak about why mayoral control was  inherently flawed and needs badly to be reformed, the Governor apparently insisted the issue be shoved into the budget as part of a backroom deal. 

Extending mayoral control for two more years represents not only a slap in the face to all those parents and teachers who spoke out, but also to the State Education Department, that made a real effort into holding hearings in every borough, and commissioning a 500 page report on Mayoral control, released just 11 days ago.  That report analyzed the public comment, looked at how Mayoral control in NYC differed from school governances systems elsewhere in the country, and recommended several significant changes, including reconstituting the Panel for Educational Policy so that the Mayor no longer has a majority of appointees, and establishing a Commission to come up with more fundamental reforms.

But all of that effort was for naught, as Albany reverted to its usual bad habit of wheeling and dealing, with only three people in the room making the final decision on this issue of monumental importance: Governor Hochul,  the Assembly Speaker Carl Heastie, and the Senate Majority Leader, Andrea Steward Cousins.

Knowledgeable sources say that while Hochul’s insistence was crucial,  Speaker Heastie was favorably inclined towards renewing mayoral control, and Majority Leader Cousins could not withstand that pressure from the other two. 

At the very first borough hearing in the Bronx, John Collazo, chief of staff for the Assembly Education Chair Michael Benedetto read aloud statement from Benedetto that the Assembly as a whole recommended mayoral control should be renewed in its present form  “at least six more years.”  As shown on the video (see about 1.11 hour in), his speech was booed. While it is unlikely that the entire Assembly held this consensus, it seems probable that on such a high profile issue, Benedetto would not have issued this statement without checking it first with Speaker Heastie. 

The only apparent change to the governance system or the composition to the Panel for Educational Policy will be that from now on, instead of the Panel for Education Policy electing its own chair, Legislature leaders and the Chancellor Lester Young of the Board of Regents will produce a list of nominees for the position, from which the mayor will select one.  This seems to be a supremely silly idea, as well as being somewhat insulting.  Rather than lessening the Mayor’s power, this will add yet another mayoral appointee to the Panel to the 15 out of 23 that he currently controls.   It is hard to understand what such a trivial change could possibly mean in terms of providing checks and balances or lead to any more accountability in policymaking or minimizing waste and fraud.

Governor Hochul said “I want parents & children & teachers to know that governance mechanism been in place for many years will not be politicized. It will not be a political football for the next few months.”

Except it was she  who politicized the issue by cramming mayoral control into the budget where it did not belong.  No parents or teachers I know of will be assured by this backroom deal, which instead was engineered presumably to satisfy StudentsFirst and the charter school lobby, which had threatened to spend millions on ads pushing for the continuation of mayoral control, in a campaign funded by Bloomberg, the Walton family, and other billionaire supporters of privatization.  Though charter schools are NOT under mayoral control, and these ads never mention charter schools, the billionaires who really exert outsize influence with the Governor and the Mayor, and in fact funded Adams mayoral campaign want to make sure that he will be able to continue providing favors to the charter school sector in the future. 

While the sensationalist ads created by the charter lobby trumpeted the corruption of the pre-Mayoral control days, since Mayoral control was instituted there have been many much larger, multi-million dollar corruption scandals at the Department of Education as I detail in my presentation to the NYC Bar Association.  And cronyism and conflicts of interest seem endemic to this administration, as evidence by a NY Post expose today, as well as here, here, and here.

In any case, it appears that once again, public school parents and teachers and community members lost out, and the charter lobby won.  There is no other reason the Governor should have to support the Mayor in this way, who himself is experiencing record low popularity according to polls – if it were not to keep her big donors happy.

This brings me to another point – one of the reasons that elected schools boards were instituted in the first place was to try to insulate them from the horse trading that goes on in ordinary politics, so that children’s education is run by people singularly focused on this issue alone, which is too important to be traded away for some other monetary or policy issue.  But the back room deal, at least when it comes to the fate of NYC students and schools, lives on in this budget.  One can only imagine the constituent outcry if the Gov. tried to eliminate elected school boards in the suburbs or the rural areas of the state and impose a system where the Mayor had unilateral power over their schools, with a chair of their school board  appointed by the State Legislature, the Chancellor, and the Mayor.   

Yet the views of NYC residents are not given the same respect or consideration as the residents of Scarsdale or Allendale, or even voters in Detroit, Newark, and Chicago, all of which have moved away from mayoral control in the past few years.

The state budget also includes complicated language around class size, which says that the Mayor and an independent auditor must certify the city’s annual education budget to ensure that it includes sufficient funding to meet the annual targets in the class size reduction law.  Now “independent auditors” are a dime a dozen, as we saw in the Enron case.  But there is another wrinkle in the law: if the required class size targets are not reached by the end of October, the City Council must add whatever additional funding is needed to meet those targets in the November budget modification. As we saw in the recent lawsuit over the cuts to school budgets, it is difficult to get a court to overrule the Mayor and the Council, even when they clearly violate state law.

How effective this will be in fencing in Mayor Adams is difficult to predict,  Adding another budgetary provision to state law is like a parent saying to a misbehaving child, “I really mean it this time.”  In any case, as Ben Max pointed out on twitter, it is “quite something that the state passed a class size law and due to the mayor's opposition to implementing it the legislature feels it necessary to add new legal mechanisms to make the city follow the law.”

The state budget also specifies that the DOE will have to add two billion dollars for classroom construction to the proposed five-year capital plan, over and above the $4.1 billion currently proposed new capacity.  That amount is sorely needed, especially, as the DOE cut more than  $2 billion to new capacity after the class size law was passed.  But whether that will mean dividing existing classrooms or common spaces to even smaller spaces, or building and leasing new schools is unclear, as well as whether the amount is enough, especially as the head of the School Construction Authority testified at recent Council hearings that it would cost an estimated $22 to $25 billion to create enough new space to comply with the law, which is six times the amount they will now be obligated to spend.

We  have long argued that the estimates of the DOE and SCA of the capital costs for compliance are inflated.  Just a few weeks ago, after all, the Chancellor and Deputy Chancellor claimed that it would cost $32 billion to $35 billion for that purpose.  But how much it will actually cost is ,  is unclear, as I discussed in my testimony to the City Council, because of a chronic lack of transparency by the SCA and DOE, who refuse to share their methodology, despite both state and city laws that require them to do so.  In the end, how much more space is needed will depend on whether the DOE agrees to implement other changes recommended in the Class Size Working Group report, including capping enrollment at lower levels in overcrowded schools when there are underutilized schools nearby, or moving some school-based PreK and 3K programs into nearby community based organizations or Early Childhood Centers, which currently have thousands of empty seats.

At the last minute, according to several sources, Hochul also tried to include in the budget amendments to the state law that attempts to ensure that all non-public schools, including ultra-Orthodox Yeshivas, provide an equivalent secular education, include  sufficient instruction in English, math, and science.  Negotiations on this issue continued until late Friday night, and was the last item holding up the finalization of the budget. Like the billionaires who fund charter schools, the ultra-Orthodox leaders have outsized political influence with both the Governor and the mayor, and as a result, their schools continue to receive millions in state subsidies while graduating many students unable to speak English or do basic math.   Luckily, in this instance she failed to get her way.

There is also a poison pill in the budget, that so far has not been reported on, to my knowledge.  The State Foundation formula that largely determines school aid has not been updated since 2007, and there has been a move  to ask the State Education Department to commission a study on how it might be revised.  Yet instead, Hochul insisted that this study be done instead by the conservative Rockefeller Institute, run by Cuomo’s former budget director Robert Megna.  The Institute’s Director of Education Policy Studies is Brian Backstrom, an ed reform consultant who used to run the Foundation for Education Reform, a charter lobbying organization, and is still serves as the board co-chair of the Henry Johnson charter school in Albany,  and also sits on the Brighter Choice Foundation board that funds charter schools. His bio below boasts that “he is one of the founders and chief architects of New York’s early charter school movement” and he advocates for various forms of school vouchers, including private school tuition tax-credits.  It is likely that whatever the Institute recommends in terms of school funding will be biased towards further privatization, rather than supporting public schools.

In other more welcome news, on Friday the Mayor agreed to restore $500 million in planned cuts to the education budget ,including many programs that had been previously funded through federal stimulus dollars during the administrations of both de Blasio and Eric Adams.  The Mayor now has agreed to increase funding for PreK and 3K programs, including PreK for students with special needs, as well as to pay for  guidance counselors, community school services, and other programs that were on the chopping block.

What the Mayor did not agree to do is to reverse  planned cuts to restorative justice programs, or to make any commitment that schools will not face cuts in their budgets, especially for those schools that may have lost enrollment since the pandemic.  This means that many schools can expect to  see their budget for staffing cut,  leading to increases rather than decreases in class size.  As I also pointed out in my Council testimony, the size of the full-time K12 teaching staff has already shrunk by over 4,000, and the city’s financial plan outlines a further reduction of 3,000 teachers over the next two years.  Whether the language in the state budget that earlier described will be effective in preventing further class size increases from happening  is unclear to me at this point.   We will just have to see how this ongoing battle over class size and trying to persuade the Mayor to comply with the law plays out now that he has gained Mayoral control for the next two years --- the rest of his first and perhaps only term in office.

Wednesday, April 12, 2023

State & city budget update, and how you can help prevent further cuts to our schools

April 12, 2023

Dear all:

The state budget is now nearly two weeks overdue, with negotiations showing little evident progress so far. As a result, Gov. Hochul’s controversial proposal to raise the NYC charter cap is still up in the air, that the city says would cost another $1.3 billion, over and above $3 billion that charters already subtract from the DOE budget each year.

Charter co-locations also take up increasing space in our public schools, space that is desperately needed to lower class size, as pointed out by a new lawsuit filed on March 28 to block charter co-locations in Brooklyn and Queens. My affidavit in that case, as well as other legal papers are here. A court hearing is scheduled on May 12 before Judge Lyle Frank, who previously ruled for parents and against the DOE by ordering that that this year’s budget cuts to schools be restored, before the Appellate Court reversed his ruling in November.

Speaking of budget cuts, last week the Mayor announced his intention to cut the DOE’s budget by another 3% next year, amounting to more than $400 million . This is in addition to school budget cuts that DOE officials admitted they had already planned during Council hearings last month. Yet the City is expected to have a surplus of more than two billion dollars, and our schools are due to receive an additional $568 million in state Foundation Aid next year. The City Council released a preliminary budget response that allocates more funding for some important school-based programs such as arts and mental health services, but does not clearly oppose any more cuts to schools.

We have drafted a resolution against any further cuts to school budgets and the capital plan, and that urges the Council to restore the cuts already made; please consider forwarding it to your CEC, Presidents Council or other organization to consider.

We are also scheduling briefings for NYC Council Members on these issues and are looking for parents and other constituents who’d be willing to join us. If you’re able and interested, please sign up on this google doc today.

Thanks Leonie

PS The Gates Foundation recently revealed a grant of $6 million to the Fund for Public Schools, NYU, and Amplify, a for-profit ed tech company, “to develop R&D tools and related instructional strategies” in NYC schools.

According to the DOE website, there are 15 Amplify programs that students already use in our schools; and yet they have failed to disclose what personal data these programs collect, how the data is used or how it is protected, as required by law. More on this here, including a sample letter you can send DOE to demand this information for your child.


Wednesday, February 15, 2023

What the Chancellor said on class size and raising the charter cap; & Mayor proposes to cut school budgets next year once again

 1. Last week, state education budget hearings were held, where many groups, advocates and organizations inveighed against the Governor's proposal to expand the cap on charter schools. Chancellor Banks also testified and was non-committal, saying it was up to the Mayor weigh in, But under questioning from Sen. Liz Krueger, he admitted that the city’s Office of Management budget had estimated the cost to the DOE of raising the cap was $1.3 billion - though he didn't mention how it could also deprive our public schools of the space needed to lower class size.

When questioned by Sen. John Liu, however, about the new class size reduction law, Banks complained that this would cost the DOE about a billion dollars. Liu pointed out that the DOE was receiving more than this amount from the state a result of the settlement of the Campaign for Fiscal Equity case, so that it was hardly an unfunded mandate.

The Chancellor admitted that it would be difficult to meet the class size goals starting year three of the five-year phase in. He said that he would form a working group to help develop a class size reduction plan, something we’ve long proposed. Hopefully this group will include some of the many advocates, parents, and elected officials who have pushed for smaller classes, rather than the handful who opposed it.

2. I also submitted testimony, pointing out the many ways in which the DOE has undercut its ability to meet the benchmarks in the law, by cutting school funding, slashing the capital plan, and refusing to lessen enrollment in our most overcrowded schools. Contrary to the claims of the DOE, the Mayor's preliminary budget for next year would reduce school budgets once again – if not as radically as this year. Yet NYC schools should be receiving more funds, not less, to help them lower class size and restore services, especially as DOE is due to receive $568 million in additional CFE funds, and the IBO projects NYC will end fiscal year 2023 with an $4.9B surplus.

As for increasing the number of charter schools, you can join our email campaign urging your legislators to reject the proposal, or pass a resolution here.   I’ll be presenting the charter issue to CEC 15 tomorrow Thursday at 6:30 PM, and you can watch by logging into Zoom here.   If you’d like a similar presentation for your organization, please let me know.

thanks, Leonie


Tuesday, April 7, 2020

Update on Regents exams, state budget, Zoom and student privacy

1.First, some good news to report:The Board of Regents announced yesterday that the Regents exams due to take place this spring are cancelled. Today they put out guidance that any student who would have originally needed to pass a Regents exam to graduate in June can be issued a diploma without taking them. More details in this FAQ. Thanks to those of you who sent one of the 400 plus letters to the Regents and Commissioner about this; a Regents member mentioned receiving your letters at their meeting yesterday.

2.There's also bad news. The state budget passed last week & froze school spending at this year’s level, without raising taxes on the ultra-wealthy; given rising costs and salaries this will be experienced by many districts including NYC as cuts. The Governor was also given the authority to slash education spending further over the course of the year, depending on state revenue– though the Legislature will be able block proposed cuts with a vote within ten days.

If you’d like to see how your legislators voted on the budget, you can check out the Senate here and the Assembly here, where the vote was especially close. More on what this budget means for education compared to the outcomes that many advocates and parents hoped for is outlined in this helpful chart from AQE .

We will all have to work hard to see that the city doesn’t follow the state’s lead by drastically cutting back on its own support for education. School services and especially class sizes have STILL not yet recovered from the economic recession in 2008, more than a decade ago. It would be devastating to NYC kids for class sizes to grow even larger.

3.Late on Friday, the Chancellor announced that schools should stop using the video conferencing tool Zoom as it doesn’t comply with state student privacy law, which was passed in 2014, and it puts children’s safety and their personal data at risk in numerous ways. As this document released by the regional BOCES shows, state administrators are now in the process of negotiating a contract with Zoom that would protect student privacy, as required by the NY state law.

Other districts including Washington DC and Las Vegas have also told teachers not to use Zoom, because of similar concerns, and last July, EPIC filed a 22 page complaint to the FTC about Zoom’s practices, including how the company had "exposed users to the risk of remote surveillance, unwanted video calls, and denial-of-service attack." I understand the frustration of teachers and parents who were getting used to Zoom and wanted to continue using it, but there is no excuse for continuing to violate the law and putting kids’ personal data and safety at risk.

As I said to Education Week , the Chancellor should “negotiate a contract with Zoom that complies with state law and protects student privacy, and train teachers on how to use this app and other apps in a more responsible manner." The state regs require all districts to do such privacy trainings; I have yet to hear from a single NYC teacher who has been provided with any such guidance. There also has needs to be vigorous oversight by both DOE and the state to ensure that Zoom and other companies are abiding by their contracts and the law – such enforcement is too often lacking.

I will be providing more resources about student privacy that often is ignored by districts, especially now in the rush to adopt commercially-designed online programs. I will also be reaching out to see which online programs and apps your children’s schools are using, and what your thoughts are about the risks and rewards involved.

Hope you’re all bearing up and staying safe during these unprecedented times, Leonie

Wednesday, April 9, 2008

Use test scores for tenure? Not a good idea, with these bumblers

So the NY State budget finally was decided, with all the proposed cuts to NYC schools restored, and the promise of CFE maintained, yet all the newspaper editorial boards and bloggers can do is to blather about a provision in the budget that prohibits the use of student test score data in making teacher tenure decisions.

Eduwonkette provides some of the links to the bloggers who are so outraged as to contend that this is the end of the civilized world.

Actually, the final language in the budget bill was a reasonable compromise, in which it was agreed that there will be a two year moratorium while a commission considers how best this information can be utilized to inform tenure decisions.

Evaluating a teacher’s competence on standardized test scores alone is not sufficient, since the gains or losses that any class achieves in scores is often highly erratic from year to year, is partly based on factors such as class size which is quite variable across NYC schools, and the background of students in each class.

Actually, research shows that its not just the current class size that helps determine the rate of learning, but a student's past class sizes, which can change the entire trajectory of his or her academic career.

And what are they going to do about the fact that many of the tests are given in the middle of the year? The DOE's proposed solution is to give last year's teacher half the credit, but that assumes equal effectiveness of all teachers -- which is contrary to the whole point of this exercise - that some teachers are more effective than others.

Moreover, test scores do not tell the whole story. Other evidence of a teacher's skills and value are equally if not more important, including her ability to motivate students, keep them engaged, and guide them in their writing, their projects and all other types of creative learning that cannot be assessed by test scores alone.

Most importantly, it is by now abundantly clear that this statistically illiterate administration cannot be trusted to use this data carefully and intelligently, with a grain of salt and in relation to other critical factors, given their record on merit pay and school grades.

In both cases, they chose to base the results primarily (85%) on test scores, with more than half based upon the essentially unreliable gains or losses in scores over one year alone.

Tying tenure to test scores could have very destructive effects, discouraging teachers from taking on classes of struggling or special ed students, and lead to a further loss of morale, with even more test prep replacing real learning.

A hiatus of two years is a terrific idea since whatever is decided will be implemented by a new administration that will hopefully be more trustworthy with the use of such data. We know that the bunch of bumbling amateurs in charge of our schools now would never be able to figure out how to balance all these factors in an intelligent, humane and constructive fashion.

For more on this issue, including comments from Chancellor Klein, Randi Weingarten and me, see the Channel 2 report here.