GothamSchools — daily independent reporting on NYC public schools

Posts tagged "joe williams"

idealocrats branch out

The lobbying group challenging teachers unions takes on America

A screenshot from DFER's web site advertises four new branches. (Only three are legally official so far; Florida is yet to come.)

A screenshot from DFER's web site advertises four new branches. (The Florida branch is yet to be official, according to executive director Joe Williams.)

The lobbying group whose H.R. recommendations virtually staffed President Obama’s Education Department is spreading its “reform” tentacles.

Democrats for Education Reform now has branches in Missouri, Colorado, and Wisconsin, in addition to its hometown, New York, and the organization plans to be in 10 states by 2011, executive director Joe Williams told me earlier this week.

“We have very good conditions at the federal level right now for at least talking about reform, but we’re really talking about what at the end of the day is a local issue,” Williams said. “So the strength of any national organization like ours is really going to come down to how strong its local units are.”

The new branches are mostly self-sustaining, relying on leadership from volunteer boards and local residents already active in education. “It’s a lot of people who were doing a lot of work on reform, but there was no political arm to engage at the political level,” Williams said.

What Williams calls DFER’s “outpost” in Colorado is a case study for its plans elsewhere. Rather than generate policy ideas, the organization focuses on raising money for candidates who support its favored brand of changes to education — policies like charter schools, merit pay, and higher teaching standards. Among the Colorado officials DFER supports is Mike Johnston, who advised candidate Obama’s presidential campaign and replaced the president of Colorado’s state senate, Peter Groff, after he joined President Obama’s education department. (more…)

Portrait of Panic

A state of frenzy with 10 days left before mayor’s control expires

There are 10 days to go before mayoral control expires and one day left of the legislative session. Given the standstill at the state Senate, that equation is leaving both supporters and opponents of the mayoral control in a state of high alarm.

Invariably, their panic is fueled by the complete unpredictability of the situation. No one has the answers to questions about what would happen if the Senate allowed the 2002 law to sunset, as State Senator John Sampson has threatened to allow.

“If everybody goes home for the summer we’ve got 32 school boards on July 1. Mayoral control is over. The clock is ticking and it doesn’t seem like anybody’s doing anything,” said Joe Williams, the executive director of Democrats for Education Reform, which favors preserving mayoral control.

Should the Senate pull itself together and reconvene, either by choice or by force, before the law expires, it remains unclear what kind of bill it will support. A bill has already passed the Assembly, but Sampson and other Democrats have said they want to amend that to add stricter checks to the mayor’s power. (more…)

the scoop

Charter schools will get $30M in one-shot plan to counter freeze

A Queens charter school encouraged parents and students to call Governor David Paterson and Senate Majority Leader Malcolm Smith after it learned charter schools could see their funding frozen. Paterson and Smith are now sending the charter schools a pot of $30 million to ease the loss.

A Queens charter school encouraged parents and students to call Governor David Paterson and Senate Majority Leader Malcolm Smith after it learned charter schools could see their funding frozen. Paterson and Smith are now sending the schools $30 million. (Nicholas)

Governor David Paterson and Malcolm Smith, the state Senate majority leader, are back in good favor with their long-lost charter school friends. Smith has just announced a plan to counteract a budget freeze that took the schools by surprise earlier this year, by sending the schools a one-time $30 million grant.

The grant is less than the $51 million that charter schools were slated to lose after legislators axed planned funding increases in their recent budget deal. And it will expire at the end of next year, leaving supporters to wage a new fight  over funds then. But a source familiar with the plan who is a supporter of charter schools said that $30 million will be enough to help schools that had been imagining slashing after-school programs and turning down extra staff they’d already hired for next year.

Smith announced the planned injection just now at a charter school lottery in Harlem, which Philissa is covering. The lottery is the annual event for the former City Council member Eva Moskowitz, who runs the Success Charter Network in Harlem. Harlem Success is expecting more than 5,000 parents at the lottery, which will determine which children are selected to attend the schools. (more…)

Anthony Weiner will speak to charter school leaders tomorrow

Anthony Weiner

Anthony Weiner

William Thompson Jr., the comptroller, might not be the only mayoral hopeful jumping into the education conversation.

Tomorrow night, Anthony Weiner, a Democrat who represents parts of Brooklyn and Queens in the U.S. House of Representatives, will speak before a group of about 600 charter school parents and supporters in Brooklyn at an event that will also feature Schools Chancellor Joel Klein.

Many assume Mayor Bloomberg is the obvious mayoral candidate of choice in the charter school world. Weiner’s decision to attend the event tomorrow night suggests he might try to challenge Bloomberg’s “reform” mantle.

The event, happening at the Brooklyn Museum of Art, is sponsored by the lobbying group Democrats for Education Reform, which has pushed for aggressive changes to public schools including not just charter schools but more closures of failing schools and tough, test-based accountability measures.

Joe Williams, the executive director of Democrats for Education Reform, said Weiner has been a supporter of charter schools for a while and favored lifting the state cap on the number of charter schools.

Tips, questions, feedback?

Contact us at .

Follow GothamSchools

RSS

Recent Comments

60 comments so far today

Our Twitter Updates

  • Allon: We have way too many people at Tweed and way too many administrators in schools. I would cut. Maybe they could go back to classroom. 4 hrs ago
  • Mayoral control? Allon would keep it, but ask for fewer votes on PEP, where all but 5 votes are mayoral appointees, to be "less autocratic." 4 hrs ago
  • In response to Bx parent who asks if Allon would stand up to state "testing machine:" I would put a moratorium on testing, K through fifth. 5 hrs ago
  • Allon: Was it fair to disclose TDRs? "you don't put something out there that's not fully baked." 5 hrs ago
  • Allon: "You all know the problems. We could argue about them until midnight. Graduation rates, big schools vs small schools... remediation." 5 hrs ago
  • More updates...

Archives

May 2012
M T W T F S S
« Apr  
 123456
78910111213
14151617181920
21222324252627
28293031