Sunday, August 21, 2022

Testimony of Paul Trust, music teacher and plaintiff, for tomorrow's City Council hearings

Tomorrow, City Council hearings on their resolution, demanding the Mayor restore the budget cuts to schools will be held starting at 10 AM.  You can watch them here.  

Paul Trust at budget cuts rally
Below is the testimony from Paul Trust, a public school teacher and parent and one of the plaintiffs in the lawsuit to reverse the budget cuts. 

Hello, my name is Paul Trust, I am a music educator, a father of three daughters in public schools and a resident of Richmond Hill Queens.

Many of you may know me as one of the plaintiffs in the lawsuit to restore school budget funding.

Because of the mayor cuts, the school I teach at will no longer have a music program. Because of these cuts the school my daughters attend will also no longer have a music program.   It breaks my heart that they will not be able to experience the joy of music that inspired a lifelong passion in me, thanks to the amazing music teachers I had in elementary school. 

Because the mayor appealed Judge Frank’s ruling, I gave up hope on returning my position at my school and have found a new teaching position in Brooklyn. I look forward to the next chapter of my career but I’m also sad to have been forced out because of the cuts.  I am sad for all my students I’ve known for years who thought I would be preparing them for graduation, for winter and spring concerts.

In addition, my wife, who is an art teacher in Jamaica Queens, used to spend her summers teaching at risk students. She was informed that, because of these cuts, they were not going to be able to have her teach classes. [Editor's note: though funding increased overall for summer school, the per-student amount was actually cut.] 

What I don’t understand is if mayor claims to know how important the arts are, as articulated by Commissioner Cumbo before introducing him at the future sight of the Hip Hop Museum, that when you put a trombone in a students hands it could be taking away a gun or  how important it is to have summer programing to keep at risk students engaged over the summer, how can he also say that he’s doing everything within his power to keep our city safe?

Besides these cuts to the arts, at the school where my youngest daughter attends they are losing a guidance counselor, as well as a classroom teacher, which will maximize class sizes.  Although the mayor seems to believe we are through the pandemic, we are not. Especially when it comes to normalizing our students, the mental scars of what they have been through are still playing out. Having a second guidance counselor to attend to the students needs is essential support. Especially when a report just came out that we are not providing the social emotional support to New York City students that they should be getting.

And while these are personal stories, I know that similar ones are playing out in schools throughout the city and every borough. It is crucial that the $469 million that has been taken from city schools be returned so that our students, teachers, school communities can benefit from a well-funded school system.

Thank you for your time.

Sincerely,

Paul Trust, DOE Music Educator, Activist and father of 3 public school children

 

Thursday, August 18, 2022

Sen. John Liu on the DOE's budget cuts to school

At the August 17, 2022 Education Town Hall meeting, Sen.  John Liu said the DOE's Fair Student Funding system that's tied strictly to enrollment is based on a "fallacy," and pointed out that as state funding to DOE had not diminished, there was no reason that school funding should be cut.

Sen. John Liu explains why he sponsored the class size bill

Sen. John Liu at his Education Town Hall meeting on August 17, 2022 explains why he sponsored the class size bill and how smaller classes are essential towards providing NYC students with their rights under the New York constitution according to the state's highest court in the CFE case. He says it's a simple matter of the Legislature upholding the constitutional rights of children. I missed taping the very beginning of his comments, when he said that the passage of the bill is one of the proudest moments of his legislative career.

 

Wednesday, August 17, 2022

Letter to Gov. Hochul from NYSER plaintiffs urging her to sign the class size bill & correcting numerous factual errors in NYP oped


A few weeks ago, the NY Post ran an oped by a plaintiff in the NYSER case, which was an educational lawsuit  filed in 2014 and settled last fall,  after the Governor agreed to fully fund the amount to NYC schools owed them from the Campaign for Fiscal Equity case.  

This NY Post oped, urging the Governor to veto the class size bill that was passed overwhelmingly by the Legislature in June, was full of factual errors and misinformation, including the false claim that the NYSER plaintiffs never discussed class size and never wanted any additional funding to go towards lowering class size.  

We knew that this was untrue, as Class Size Matters was one of the members of the NYSER coalition along with several Community Education Councils.  The class size issue was discussed several times at our meetings, and much of the class size data we had collected was included in the lawsuit itself as evidence of the inadequate conditions that still persisted in NYC public schools.  

I reached out to some of the other named plaintiffs and CEC Presidents who had joined the NYSER coalition as participants in the lawsuit, and asked if they would sign a letter, which pointed out the numerous factual errors in the oped.  The letter also pointed out how there was broad support for the bill among NYC education and civil rights groups, and the larger parent advocacy community.  Many of the NYSER plaintiffs that I was able to contact agreed to sign the letter, and concurred that the oped was full of errors.

I sent the signed letter to the NY Post oped editor, who refused to publish it or correct the errors in the oped. The NY Post letter editor also refused to publish it, even in an abbreviated form.  All this reveals  how little the editorial side of the Post cares about factual accuracy, as long as the claims made align with their right-wing positions, which generally oppose any more funding for public schools or any meaningful progressive reforms.  

So I rewrote the piece in the form of a letter to the Governor, which I sent to her today.  With the permission of the signers, it is posted below.  -- Leonie Haimson

____

The Honorable Kathy Hochul
Governor of New York State
NYS State Capitol Building
Albany, NY 12224

 

August 17, 2022

Dear Governor Hochul:

As named plaintiffs of the lawsuit filed by New Yorkers for Students’ Educational Rights (NYSER), and/or Presidents of Community Education Councils that were members of the NYSER coalition when the lawsuit was launched, we could not disagree more sharply with the erroneous and misleading claims  made in a NY Post July 21 oped that urged you to veto the class size bill. 

Contrary to the assertions made in that oped, class size was a frequent topic of discussion at meetings of the plaintiffs, and the excessive class sizes of NYC students were extensively described in the NYSER lawsuit complaint as key evidence of the inadequate conditions in our public schools that needed to be addressed. 

We strongly support the class size bill that was passed overwhelmingly by the Legislature in June, as do the following organizations which wrote memos of support for the bill:  the NAACP, Alliance for Quality Education,  the Educational Council Consortium, NYC Kids PAC and the Education Law Center, which now represents the Campaign for Fiscal Equity case, the original lawsuit whose settlement has resulted in $1.3 billion in additional funds being awarded to NYC schools.

 The Chancellors Parent Advisory Council, which represents all the PTAS in the city, also passed a resolution last spring in support of the  class size bill.

Why? The research is clear that smaller classes benefit all children, but especially those who need the help the most. Students who gain the most from smaller classes are students of color, those from low-income families, English Language Learners, and children with disabilities – who make up the majority of students in NYC public schools.  Thus, class size is a driver of educational equity, which makes it especially unfair that our students have long been subjected to class sizes far larger than those in the rest of the state.

 All this explains why class size remains a deep concern for most NYC K12 public school parents, and smaller classes their top priority according to the Department of Education’s own surveys nearly every year.   We urge you to sign the class size bill as soon as possible

 Yours sincerely,

Miriam Aristy-Farer, lead plaintiff in the NYSER lawsuit; former President of Community Education Council District 6/member of the NYSER Coalition 

Leonie Haimson, Executive Director, Class Size Matters/ organizational member of the NYSER Coalition

Milagros Arcia, AKA Katherine A Arcia_GChanglerth, named plaintiff in the NYSER lawsuit

Bethany Thomas, named plaintiff in NYSER lawsuit 

Lisa Donlan, former President of Community Education Council District 1/organizational member of the NYSER Coalition

NeQuan McLean, former and current President of Community Education Council District 16/ organizational member of the NYSER Coalition

Melanie Mendonca, former President of Community Education Council District 23/ organizational member of the NYSER Coalition

Nicole Job, named plaintiff in NYSER case and former President, Community Education Council District 17/ organizational member of the NYSER Coalition

 

Cc:

Assembly Speaker Carl Heastie

Senate Majority Leader Andrea S. Cousins

Sen. John Liu, Chair of the Standing NYC Education Committee

Assemblymember Benedetto, Chair of the Assembly Education Committee

Sen. Robert Jackson

Thursday, August 4, 2022

NYC parents, teachers, and kids win in court to halt budget cuts to schools!

 


What a morning!  First there a huge rally at Foley Square, with parents, teachers and advocates inveighing against the grotesque budget cuts to schools.  Tamara Tucker, the lead plaintiff in the lawsuit against these cuts, spoke first, and her photo at the microphone is above.

Tamara and I left the rally at about 9:40 AM, and quickly walked over to the courtroom at the NY State Supreme Court, 80 Centre St., room 308 so as not to miss our chance to witness the oral arguments in the case before Judge Frank.  The courtroom was already half full, mostly with reporters and city attorneys, and soon would fill up completely before the hearing started.

Among the parents I noticed aside from Tamara were Tom Shepherd and Kaliris Salas-Ramirez, two PEP members, and NeQuan McLean, CEC16 President.  Tom and NeQuan had also provided us with affidavits about how the public process in adopting the budget had been contrary to what’s required by state law.

The court officer said that we had to wear masks unless we were vaxed or boosted in the last six months,.  A few people went up to show their vaccination cards; I kept my mask on even though I’ve been recently boosted.

Jill Jacobsen, reporter for NY1, showed up with a cameraman, and submitted a piece of paper requesting that  theyvideotape the proceedings.  The Court officer came back and said the Judge respectfully declined the request.  (I didn’t know that was possible in NY courtrooms, did you?)

Judge Frank came in and jokingly said, “My Gosh!  So many people in the courtroom!”  He immediately launched into the substance of the case.  He thanked both sides for their papers, said he was on a sharp learning curve on the issues involved, and focused on the Emergency Declarations that the DOE had been using to short circuit the PEP vote, for at least ten years out of the last twelve.

He asked the City’s attorney, Jeffrey Dantowitz, about the latest Emergency Declaration issued on May 31, what did it say?   Did it mean the PEP didn't have to vote before the budget is determined?  Dantowitz said that it did, but that in any event they did eventually vote to approve the budget later, even if this was after the Council voted to adopt the budget. 

The pro bono attorneys for the plaintiffs, Laura Barbieri and  Arthur Schwartz from Advocates for Justice stood up and said the Emergency Declaration was obviously invalid; it described no explanation of any actual emergency, and no affidavit from the Chancellor was submitted  to attest to an emergency.  Arthur said, “It’s not like 9/11 or Covid just happened.”

Judge Frank pointed out that as we had reported in our Memo of Law, year after year, the DOE has issued Emergency Declarations with boilerplate language, and that they appeared to be issued just to dismiss the importance of the PEP vote.  Even the Chancellor said at the PEP meeting that their vote didn’t matter.

Dantowitz said their vote did matter, and that groups like Class Size Matters had put out messages about the budget cuts before both the City Council and the PEP votes, and these bodies had still voted to approve the budget.  A vote is necessary eventually from the PEP, he said, because the Emergency Declaration only lasts so long. (60 days I believe). 

The Judge pointed out that the Council could have voted after the June 23 PEP meeting, but Dantowitz claimed that was too late for schools to start planning for next year.   He added that a tremendous number of issues need to be negotiated with the Council (which doesn’t explain why they seemed to rush the vote earlier than the June 30 deadline).  He pointed out that the budget had been “overwhelmingly adopted” by the Council and read out a quote from the Speaker attesting at the time to how wonderful the final budget was.

He also cited a NY Post article, that reported how budget had been held up for a few days because of the proposed budget cuts to schools, and that we have to look at the budget in its entirety, and not just the education budget.

Laura said that if the education budget had been posted online and presented for public comment on April 26, the same day as the Executive budget was released, there would have been 45 days of comment and still voted  before the City Council voted on June 13.  (In my affidavit, I pointed out this could have been happened by June 10.) .  Or, she said, the Chancellor could have called an Emergency vote of the PEP as Chancellor Klein did in 2009 when the Council was about to vote on the budget before the PEP, and then-Manhattan PEP member Patrick Sullivan alerted the DOE to the fact that this was illegal.  (For more on Patrick’s central role in the genesis of the current case, see today’s Daily News.)

This idea seemed to resonate with the Judge, who repeated that the Council did not have the benefit of hearing from the 70 people who spoke out against  the budget cuts at the PEP meeting on June 23.

Dantowitz kept on saying that it was “pure speculation” that the Council would have voted differently, but the Judge seemed to lose patience with that argument. 

Judge Frank said that next question is, assuming the process was “kaput”,  can I tell the Council to revote, or does that violate the separation of powers?  Arthur and Laura cited past cases when the Court has instructed the other branches of government what to do when they flouted state law or the constitution.

Laura stood up and pointed out that  41 of 50 Council members signed a letter that they regretted their vote and were not told about the impact of these cuts.  Many have since said they were misled by DOE who insisted that only unfilled position would be eliminated as a result, but now we know that at least 700 teachers have been excessed.  This is “material misrepresentation,” as she put it.  The Judge said he would consider whether to instruct the Council to revote, or instead allow them the opportunity to do so.

The City’s attorney got very upset as it was becoming clear that he was losing his case, at least as far as Judge Frank was concerned.  He said, “I don’t want…” and the Judge interrupted, “I know you don’t want any of it.”  

 Then the discussion became what the Preliminary Injunction would say, would it be based on the previous TRO that said last year’s budget would be in place until the Council revoted, or something else?

As far as returning to last year’s budget, the city’s attorney said,  “That ship has left the port.  Plans are being made, goods ordered, to revert to last year’s budget would be detrimental.”  He argued that the plaintiffs should have filed the case on June 13, as soon as the Council vote happened.  “Relief is inappropriate; we ask that the preliminary injunction be denied.”

Laura said that even as late as last night, the DOE added money to school budgets by allowing them to repurpose $100 million in recovery funds that now could be used for teacher salaries, and quoted from a press statement from the Speaker, that this $100 million offer was “inadequate and  misleading.”  The City’s attorney insisted that was “not new money, but they were simply robbing Peter to pay Paul” (something I tweeted critically last night!)  He offered to have the City agree to carry out the budget process properly in future years, as long as there didn’t have to be a Council revote this time.

 Dantowitz also claimed that the DOE budget couldn’t be invalidated without invalidating the entire city budget at the same time (which is absurd.).  He muttered something about the need to balance the entire budget etc.  Laura pointed out that there are billions of dollars in the city’s reserve as well as unspent education funds from last year, according to the Comptroller.

Finally , the Judge asked both sides to prepare papers on how the preliminary injunction should be written.  The city's attorneys have till the end of  today; the plaintiff’s attorneys have until the middle of day Friday.  He said he would issue his decision by the end of day on Friday.  

I hope the City doesn't appeal which would drag out the process even longer, as Laura says below.