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Union’s ‘community schools’ initiative gets a boost from the city

Teachers' union president, Michael Mulgrew, greets chancellor Dennis Walcott, at announcement for community school initiative.

When teachers’ union president Michael Mulgrew announced a grant program last month to bolster social services in schools, he said the union was moving ahead because the Department of Education was not.

But today, when Mulgrew announced the schools that will receive grants, Chancellor Dennis Walcott was standing next to him. The two came together in a last-day-of-school show of camaraderie after a year in which relations between the union and the city grew more strained than ever.

The joint appearance meant that amount of grant money awarded doubled, to $600,000, since Mulgrew’s May announcement. That will make it possible for six schools to bring health and dental clinics, tutoring, counseling programs, and social services to students and their families, as part of a pilot program to create “community schools.”

The UFT and Department of Education are each contributing $150,000, and the Partnership for New York City, a coalition of business groups, is adding another $300,000.

The initiative is based on a program in Cincinnati that coordinates and targets social services there. The goal is to harness existing services so they are used more effectively.

“We put enormous resources into our education system, into our healthcare system, and some of our other service systems, but we don’t do a very good job of maximizing the output,” said Kathryn Wylde, president of Partnership for New York City.

“We’ve had services for very long time in New York City. What we want to do now is start coordinating the services at the school site,” said Mulgrew, who was part of the team that began developing the initiative two years ago.

Mulgrew introduced Walcott and shook his hand, but he drew the line at offering a public display of affection. ”I’m not kissing you, brother,” Mulgrew joked.

For his part, Walcott said the decision to partner with the union on the initiative was a no-brainer.

“Why would I be opposed to that? It’s something that benefits our students,” said Walcott. “Any time we talk about our students, we have a responsibility to stand together because our students come first no matter what we may agree or disagree about at times.”

Walcott announced a separate, $30 million plan to develop mental health centers at middle and high schools over the next three years at a City Council budget hearing in May.

The union and city were attracted to Cincinnati’s model because of its impact on student performance: Since nearly all of Cincinnati’s 56 schools were transformed into community hubs, the city’s high school graduation rate increased from 51 percent to 82 percent.

Making a lighthearted reference to Cincinnati’s program, City Council Speaker Christine Quinn said, “Look, we’re in New York, and we hate to say that anyone else has a [better] model than we do, but occasionally we just have to swallow our pride and admit that there are some other places in the world that come up with good, interesting, and effective models of how to do this.”

The six schools that will receive grants are P.S. 30 and Community Health Academy of the Heights in Manhattan; P.S. 188 and Sunset Park High School in Brooklyn; P.S. 18 in the Bronx; and Curtis High School in Staten Island.

The schools will design the programs according to the needs of their students and community. To help launch their programs, the schools will partner with veteran service providers such as Lutheran Healthcare and the Children Aid’s Society.

“We’re still in the planning stage, so over the summer, we will be putting together a survey to assess even more and going deeper in terms of the community’s needs,” said Terri Stinson, principal of P.S. 30.

A third party outside of the UFT and the Education Department will assess the school’s model to determine whether it is effective, according to Karen Alford, a UFT vice president. If it is, it could grow in the future.

“We don’t have a plan for expansion yet,” said Quinn. “We have a plan for implementation and that will lead us to a plan for expansion.”

But some of the principals whose schools will host community hubs are already looking to the future.

“We’re very excited for the opportunity,” said Jasmin Varela, principal of P.S. 18. “We’re going to pilot and hopefully replicate, especially in the South Bronx, where it’s most needed.”

  • I noticed that…

    “Why would I be opposed to that? It’s something the benefits our students,” said Walcott.

    Doesn’t it benefit our students to cease in the closing/phasing out of so many schools?

  • TeachmyclassMrMayor

    Admittedly it would be a rare instance of it being about kids.

  • Save our schools

    These are the people responsible for the stress and the emotional pain of the teachers of the 24 closing schools. One of my colleagues was hospitalized after having chess pains because our principal started to rate her unsatisfactory in february after 16 years. You both have no shame!

  • Robert Kanyuk

    I’ve been advocating for similar programs for my school for three years!  Big congrats Mike and the UFT!  One day wrap around services may become a reality for all.

  • http://perdidostreetschool.blogspot.com/ reality-based educator

    This is like professional wrestling.  The UFT and the DOE are on the same side – they laugh and joke and plan it all out in the dressing room before the match, then come out and make it look like a fight to the finish.  They throw chairs, scream at each other, trash talk and generally make it look like they hate each other.  And then, after the match, they head back to the dressing room laughing and joking and cashing their checks. 

    Today was simply a glimpse into what they look like in the dressing room before the “theater” they provide for us in public.

    Mulgrew is a disgrace.  He ought to be defending the SIG teachers.  Instead he’s yucking it up with Bloomberg’s hatchet man and hedge fundie queen Quinn.  The UFT should change it’s moniker to WWE.  That’s all this is – a big, bad joke.

  • Save our schools

    Mulgrew should have visited and lift the morale of so many good prople. but the Union is selling us off little by little. Sheriff Bloomberg is in charge and what he says, his puppets always do, including our Union.

  • Ramikwilliams

    Community Schools are an underused tool closing the Education Achievement gap particularly in urban schools. Congrats and good luck to the schools receiving the reward maybe private entities will match.

  • Ellen

    Mike, playing in the sand with Dennis is a better caption for that photo

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