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cuts detailed

Bloomberg lists central budget cuts to accompany schools’ hit

Following up on his promise to detail school budget cuts required by the collapse of a teacher evaluation deal earlier this month, Mayor Bloomberg today described how he plans to reduce costs in the Department of Education’s central administration.

The rest of the $250 million funding will cut come from schools, Bloomberg said during a press conference in which he announced the first city budget revision to reflect costs incurred from Hurricane Sandy.

In addition to the cuts that Chancellor Dennis Walcott outlined in an email to principals on Monday, Bloomberg said he would restrict hiring centrally and eliminate vacancies in areas such as administration, human resources, budget, and help desk staff.

He said the city would also cut non-personnel costs–the costs of running an office that don’t include staff salaries–in administrative and field-based offices by 90 percent, and reduce spending on contracts for services such as youth development, professional development, and anti-bullying programs.

Special education will take a hit, with reduced funding for pre-K, transportation, and non-public schools.

The proposed funding changes drew a flurry of critical statements from advocates and elected officials, who focused on cuts to after-school programs, early childhood education, and teacher hiring.

“Every year the notices go out to parents, informing them that the early childhood education program or after-school program they’ve built their lives around has been cut,” said Public Advocate Bill de Blasio, who announced this week he’s officially running for mayor. “Whether the services get restored or not, lives are upended and providers are left scrambling…Our children’s futures deserve more than yet another version of the budget dance.”

City Council Speaker Christine Quinn raised concerns about the level of teacher attrition that would take place under the new plan. “While some level of attrition is always a reality, the Mayor’s proposed extremely high levels of teacher attrition would be detrimental to the quality of our city’s education system,” she said.

Bloomberg’s announcement was short on details as to how those cuts would be made and what exactly their effects would be. Instead, the Mayor continued his offense against the UFT and the state for putting the city in this situation.

Bloomberg criticized the state for threatening to withold additional funds alongside the expected $250 million if the city and the union does not reach an evaluation deal by February 14. “We’re hoping the legislature will ensure that this loss of state education aid doesn’t become a perpetual 250 million dollar penalty against our schoolchildren next year and every year thereafter, which is what the current state budget would make it,” he said.

Budget plans could change if an evaluation deal is reached and the budget is restored.

Bloomberg argued that the state is not doing its part to provide for New York City students. Citing an $8 billion per year increase in city spending on education since he took office, he said, “We have not walked away from education in spite of the fact that I would argue that the state has walked away from us.”

  • Clay

    Here’s an idea, cut some of the bs six figure jobs with fancy names that Bloomberg created for his friends with kids fesh out of the Ivy Leagues.

  • T5yuir

    And while your at it cut out the ridiculous professional development. What a waste of time and money .
    The people who come into instruct us have minimal time in a classroom. I am a high school math teacher. The person “who trains us” admitted that she is an elementary school teacher who has never taught math.

  • wise owl

     I agree 100%. and please cut out the PD’s on the Common BORE!!!

  • wise owl

    Bloomberg is trying to press the panic button. Nobody cave!!! I bet he reads or has someone reading these blogs. Good I want to be heard.

  • wise owl

    Yeah trim the fat and begin with TWEED!!

  • Been There

    Deans, Coaches, unreconciled paras and people not in the classroom doing direct instruction… you need to teach or go.

  • Lisa Donlan

    So if I am reading the comments correctly, the new fangled equivalent of the old district office, called Children’s First Networks,  are NOT an improvement on the old structure?
    Besides being VIRTUAL ( across 4-5 boroughs) and INVISIBLE (how do you hold 25 employees accountable if ONE BARELY EVER EVEN SEES THEM?), Network PD’s are as boring and useless as the old PD’s?
    So Mayoral control has not:
    eliminated the achievement gap?
    provided a voice for the voiceless?removed disparities among districts? stopped corruption and cronyism?increased education budgets?provided greater accountability?improved education practices and results?So WHY do all the Mayoral candidates want to retain it? $23 Billion dollar budget is a lot of power in the hands of a non-educator Mayor!NYS legislature,  you have created a monster and it has been terrorizing the village that it takes to educate our children for more than a decade- PLEASE do something!

  • Bloombergdisaster

    wow that’s all i can say

  • Bloomypleaseleave

    yeah deputy this and deputy that, deputy morons is what i say AND actually know

  • Bloomywaste

    People of NYC, are we not tired of this same ole bs from this midget mayor.  iTS The same ole bs from this midget.  How can any New Yorker actually say that they like this mayor.  He is so annoying, I cannot believe a politician can be that annoying.  Please bloomterd, will you leave this city please…..go pick on boston where you are from…….how insane is it that we hired a bostonian to run nyc…..The Yankees and Steinbrenner of the world are laughing silly 

  • Waititoutmulgrew

    LOL, THATS GREAT!!!!!!LOLLOLLOL

  • Waititoutmulgrew

    here’s another idea, how bout we get rid of these so called “consultants”.  omg these people are so annoying….for people who have not experienced this please note:  You will see these Aussies who speak with a accent that even New Yorkers sound pleasing, they walk around the school asking question like how to get shrimp on the barbie or some nonsense…lol.lll not making this up

  • Waititoutmulgrew

    do not vote for christine quinn…vote for BILL THOMPSON
    quinn is bloomdoe in disguise

  • Waititoutmulgrew

    someone should check out transfer school jill chavetz…they have scabs working there who are not doe people…they also do not have a working, active doe guidance person…instead, they are using F status counselor and so called “advisors” from so bogus non profit…chek out gotham

  • Waititoutmulgrew

    heres another idea, get rid of the aussie consultants who cant speak english and are so ignorant to our system its freken scary

  • Flerp

    Based on FY11 (the last year I have data for), here are the 10 non-pedagogical jobs with the most employees and highest salary-cost (with the exception of “Community Assistant,” which actually comes in 14th in total salary).  Let me now which should be fired and I’ll pass it on to Bloomberg the next time I’m golfing with him.  Fire every single one of them and it saves you $336 million.

    1,983 Community Associates ($75,877,099)829 Senior Occupational Therapists ($50,966,633)619 Staff Nurses ($36,336,846)586 Clerical Associates ($23,818,133)551 Senior Physical Therapists ($34,187,124)418 School Food Service Managers ($19,377,334)393 Substance Abuse Prevention & Intervention Specialist ($16,786,282)380 Administrative Education Analyst ($33,203,167)364 Community Coordinator ($17,930,817)334 Community Assistant  ($7,904,862)253 Administrative Education Officer ($20,507,250) 

  • wise owl

    Okay let’s talk dollars and cents. I think that we should all work for a dollar a year like Bloomberg.

  • wise owl

     TWEED is the biggest porker of all!!!

  • Flerp

    Not even remotely true.

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