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end of days

DOE forecasts near anarchy in schools if Senate doesn’t act

As early as this Monday, Mayor Bloomberg refused to countenance the possibility that mayoral control could expire June 30, spiraling the system back to a power-share with 32 community school boards and superintendents, plus a citywide Board of Education.

But with the state Senate still deadlocked, the mayor is agreeing to meet with the Manhattan borough president, Scott Stringer, and discuss contingency plans, Stringer said this morning.

Department of Education officials are also burrowing into education law — and what they’re describing is a school system that would become almost anarchical if the 2002 mayoral control law expires.

School officials explain a chain of events that would lead to the power vacuum in a memo that is circulating inside Tweed Courthouse and City Hall. The first problem is that if the system abruptly reverts to pre-2002 status, there would be no community school boards. The pre-2002 law prevents board elections from happening until May 2010, and no one has the authority to appoint temporary members:

“Therefore, community school boards will exist, but they will have no members — and will thus be incapable of taking any action,” the memo says.

No community school boards means no acting community superintendents, which means several crucial school matters would be left without anyone to OK them. According to the memo, the matters include filling teaching vacancies, firing school employees who commit crimes, and deciding whether to promote students to the next grade after summer school.

Classroom decisions could also be affected, the memo says:

“While principals have the authority to make curricular decisions, those decisions will require the superintendent’s approval, and without a superintendent, it is not clear how schools can make needed instructional decisions at all.”

It’s important to remember that these predictions are based not just on conversations with lawyers, but also probably political calculations. The department has been pushing strongly for mayoral control to be renewed, and so threatening doomsday if the Senate doesn’t act is in their interest.

Here’s the full document:

  • http://nycpublicschoolparents.blogspot.com Patrick J. Sullivan

    Elizabeth,

    Rather than just pass on what the administration’s lobbyists and pr officers are saying in tabloid fashion, can Gotham Schools look at the merits of their arguments? Community school boards will not exist on day one. Got it. But what role was so crucial that it will now cause the “End of Days”? They used to recommend a slate of candidates for superintendent and the chancellor selected the superintendent. We have districts with superintendents, selected by the chancellor. We have schools with principals. Principals have their budgets. Can they all simply continue to do their jobs over the summer? Manage summer school and get the schools ready for September? I would think certainly hope so.

    The current governance law was pasted into the education law with a specific expiration date. Now we will have the old governance structure again for some limited time. We need to plan and prepare but it is certainly something that can be managed.

    Patrick

  • Ann Kjellberg

    Well, they would say that, wouldn’t they. Panic is autocracy’s best friend.

  • http://www.classsizematters.org leonie haimson

    What a joke. Right now superintendents have no instructional role to play in their districts — actually no role at all in terms of instructional support or supervision.

    Tweed has disempowered them as they have parents, teachers, and any rivals to their centralized power. I’m not sure that anyone would notice if there were no superintendents after June 30. Of course, they could stay on the job anyway until the CSBs were up and running.

    There would be no chaos; no emergency — unless the Mayor and his cronies wanted to create chaos, in order to keep dictatorial control. Anyone hear of the Shock Doctrine?

  • http://www.classsizematters.org leonie haimson

    I have another question: who wrote this memo and why is it unsigned? Isn’t that strange for an intergovernmental document? Shouldn’t some attorney or shill for the Mayor have his name on it?

    Unless it was produced only for the media….

  • Michael M.

    Ah yes, the strategic fear-mongering appeal-to-the-retilian-brain leak…

    And now, Kleinbergers can say they read it on GothamSchools, so it MUST be true. (Didn’t Cheney used to pull that one with the New York Times? This trick is sooooo…. pre-Mayoral Control? Yawn.)

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