Public Hearing - May 19, 2016

    


       1      BEFORE THE NEW YORK STATE SENATE
              STANDING COMMITTEE ON EDUCATION
       2      ------------------------------------------------------

       3                        PUBLIC HEARING:

       4              TO EXAMINE THE MERITS OF EXTENDING

       5          MAYORAL CONTROL OF SCHOOLS IN NEW YORK CITY

       6      ------------------------------------------------------

       7
                                         Senate Hearing Room
       8                                 250 Broadway - 19th Floor
                                         New York, New York 10017
       9
                                         May 19, 2016
      10                                 11:00 a.m. to 2:00 p.m.

      11

      12      PRESIDING:

      13         Senator Carl L. Marcellino
                 Chair
      14

      15      PRESENT:

      16         Senator Joseph P. Addabbo, Jr.

      17         Senator Thomas D. Croci

      18         Senator Simcha Felder

      19         Senator Martin J. Golden

      20         Senator Liz Krueger

      21         Senator Jose R. Peralta

      22         Senator Bill Perkins

      23         Senator Toby Ann Stavisky

      24

      25







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       1
              SPEAKERS:                               PAGE  QUESTIONS
       2
              Carmen Fariña                              7       21
       3      Chancellor
              Ursulina Ramirez
       4      Chief of Staff, and
                Chief Operating Officer
       5      NYC Dept. of Education

       6      Mark Cannizzaro                          136      140
              Executive Vice President
       7      Council for School Supervisors
                and Administrators
       8
              Teresa Arboleda                          155       --
       9      Chair, Legislative Committee
              Education Council Consortium
      10
              Ellen McHugh                             155       --
      11      Member, Public Advocate Appointee
              Citywide Council on Special Education
      12
              Mona Davids                              155      189
      13      Founder, and President
              New York City Parents Union
      14
              Tenicka Boyd                             195       --
      15      Senior Director of Organizing
              StudentsFirstNY
      16
              Martha Zornow                            195       --
      17      Principal
              Girls Prep Bronx Middle School
      18
              Khari Shabazz                            195       --
      19      Principal
              Success Academy, Harlem West
      20
              Jacob Mnookin                            195       --
      21      Executive Director
              Coney Island Preparatory
      22        Public Charter School

      23      Kathyrn Wylde                            214       --
              President and CEO
      24      Partnership for New York City

      25







                                                                   3
       1
              SPEAKERS (Continued):                   PAGE  QUESTIONS
       2
              Marcus A. Winters                        214      --
       3      Senior Fellow
              Manhattan Institute for
       4        Policy Research

       5      Leonie Haimson                           214      --
              Executive Director
       6      Class Size Matters

       7      Laura Altschuler                         214      --
              Member of the Board of Directors,
       8        and Former President
              League of Women Voters
       9        of the City of New York

      10      Richard Kahan                            243      --
              CEO
      11      The Urban Assembly

      12      Dennis Walcott                           247      253
              President & CEO
      13      Queens Library System

      14

      15                           ---oOo---

      16

      17

      18

      19

      20

      21

      22

      23

      24

      25







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       1             SENATOR MARCELLINO:  My name is the

       2      Senator Carl Marcellino.  I am the Chairman of the

       3      Education Committee.

       4             We are here for a hearing on mayoral control.

       5      This is the second of two hearings.

       6             We held one up in Albany.  Several groups

       7      testified, including the Mayor and the Chancellor.

       8      We were very pleased that they were there, and

       9      questions were asked, and many were answered, but

      10      many were given the answer, that "We don't have the

      11      answer at this point, and we will get back to you."

      12             For the most part, that has not happened.

      13             We have not heard back from the Mayor's

      14      Office on most of the questions that were asked and

      15      left unanswered at the last hearing.

      16             That's a disappointment.

      17             I'm sure, and I hope, that those answers will

      18      be forthcoming.

      19             We have about a dozen questions or so, and

      20      there's about ten that are still outstanding.

      21             We'll provide a list to the Chancellor so

      22      that she can take it back with her, to know that,

      23      these questions, we still would like to hear some

      24      answers to.

      25             Some questions -- answers to questions that







                                                                   5
       1      appeared in some Senators' offices late yesterday

       2      afternoon, which was interesting.

       3             But we are missing the Mayor, and he's the

       4      chief player, and he's the person in charge, and we

       5      would like him to have been here.

       6             We understand he's busy.

       7             Everybody is.

       8             Everybody at this table is busy.

       9             We all have things we would -- we could be

      10      doing now in our districts, but we are here because

      11      this is an important issue.

      12             We're talking about the leadership of the

      13      largest school system in the state of New York,

      14      dealing with approximately 1.1 million children.

      15             And that's what this is all about,

      16      "children," and that's what I want to stress here.

      17             We're asking these questions to find out if

      18      the children of the city of New York are being

      19      well-served by their educational system; and that's

      20      important to us.

      21             I taught in the city of New York for

      22      20 years, a former schoolteacher at Grover Cleveland

      23      High School, long may it wave.

      24             And it is -- it was then, and it is now,

      25      still a functioning, vibrant school.







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       1             And I recently visited, with

       2      Chancellor Fariña, and we took a little tour of the

       3      building.  Reminiscent.

       4             I was still looking for some of my colleagues

       5      that I saw there way back when.  But, some of them

       6      have retired, some of them are still teaching, some

       7      of them moved on to other places.

       8             But the educational system, and the process

       9      in dealing with the children, is ongoing, and

      10      mayoral control is an integral part of that.

      11             It's still a relatively new experiment in

      12      education.  It's not done everywhere.

      13             In some cities they're looking at it.  And,

      14      in fact, in many -- in some cases, are reluctant to

      15      take it on, because they're looking at New York and

      16      they're seeing what they consider to be a mixed bag

      17      of goods.

      18             So we're looking for answers today.

      19             My colleagues are here with me, and I'm

      20      pleased to be joined with:

      21             Joe Addabbo -- to my left, Senator Addabbo,

      22      Senator Simcha Felder;

      23             Senator Marty Golden and Senator Tom Croci.

      24             Others will come and go as they can.

      25      Hearings are being held, meetings are being held,







                                                                   7
       1      throughout the day.

       2             People will come in later.  People will

       3      leave.

       4             Hopefully, we will get the list.

       5             We have several speakers on the list

       6      available to us to come, who have volunteered to

       7      speak.

       8             And our first speaker of the day will be

       9      Carmen Fariña.

      10             Chancellor Fariña, please, take the

      11      microphone.

      12             CHANCELLOR CARMEN FARIÑA:  Sitting next to me

      13      is Ursulina Ramirez, chief of staff, and, chief

      14      operating officer, new title.

      15             Good morning, State Education Committee

      16      Chairperson Marcellino, Ranking Minority

      17      Leader Latimer; New York City Education Subcommittee

      18      Chairman Felder; members of the Senate Education

      19      Committee; and all the Senators attending today.

      20             SENATOR MARCELLINO:  With one correction,

      21      Chancellor.

      22             Senator Latimer could not be here, so

      23      Senator Addabbo is sitting in, in his stead.

      24             CHANCELLOR CARMEN FARIÑA:  Okay, great.

      25      Thank you.







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       1             I'm grateful for the opportunity to testify

       2      on the importance of extending mayoral control of

       3      New York City schools.

       4             I also appreciate how many of you have worked

       5      closely with us to bring resources to your specific

       6      districts, and I look forward to continuing work

       7      together on the issues that are important to all of

       8      us.

       9             Mayoral control has given the people of

      10      New York City a clear person to hold accountable for

      11      the performance of their schools, and mayors have

      12      responded by giving our school system more attention

      13      and resources than ever.

      14             Mayoral control has created a stable,

      15      practical, efficient system, where we don't have to

      16      worry that funding and resources that are there one

      17      year will be gone the next.

      18             This allows us to conceive of and execute

      19      long-term initiatives for supporting our students

      20      and schools.

      21             It has allowed me to select the best and

      22      brightest superintendents to lead our community

      23      education districts.

      24             Superintendents must now have ten years of

      25      pedagogical experience, including at least three as







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       1      a principal, and must have a record of success in

       2      advancing student learning and facilitating

       3      community involvement and input in schools.

       4             Also, it helps us with hiring and recruitment

       5      of people.

       6             Across this country, I'm getting resumes all

       7      the time, and they want to know that they're

       8      applying to a system that has certain goals and

       9      certain belief systems.

      10             And it's important that that be something

      11      that they apply to, and then feel comfortable that

      12      they will be supported in.

      13             If you notice from my prepared speech, I've

      14      cut out a lot of it so we can get to the questions

      15      and answers.

      16             But perhaps the most --

      17             What?

      18             SENATOR MARCELLINO:  Bless you.

      19                  [Laughter.]

      20             CHANCELLOR CARMEN FARIÑA:  I know there's a

      21      certain attention span that people have, including

      22      me, so I want to make sure that we get to the things

      23      that you're most concerned about.

      24             Perhaps the most important consideration,

      25      though, is whether or not mayoral control has had







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       1      measurable impacts on student achievement.

       2             Anyone in search of proof need to look no

       3      further than the fact that, under mayoral control --

       4      and this goes back to the Bloomberg years as well --

       5      more students than ever are graduating and fewer are

       6      dropping out.

       7             Last year, the year's (indiscernible) year

       8      graduation topped 70 percent, and this also includes

       9      many of our English-language learners, as well as

      10      special-ed students.

      11             And 70 percent is good, but it's certainly

      12      not better, and I -- we want to make sure that we

      13      continue working on that to at least 80 percent or

      14      over.

      15             Mayor de Blasio came into office

      16      January 2014, with a commitment to provide

      17      New Yorkers with free, full-day, high-quality pre-K

      18      for all.

      19             The beginning of our first school year, we

      20      expanded pre-K to more than 53,000.

      21             There are more than 68,500 children right now

      22      in our pre-K.

      23             And I want to be clear that, to me, it's not

      24      about the number.  It's about the quality.

      25             When I visit schools, I look to see:  What is







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       1      happening in these pre-K's that may not have

       2      happened before?

       3             And, first and foremost, there's a lot of

       4      talk going on in our English-language-learner

       5      schools that's particularly important.

       6             There is at least a minimum of one

       7      parent-engagement day per month.

       8             There are trained supervisors to work with

       9      these teachers so these teachers can develop their

      10      craft.

      11             And the question I've been asking over and

      12      over again is:  How is kindergarten better this year

      13      because your students were in pre-K last year?

      14             And resoundingly from teachers I'm hearing:

      15      The kindergarten students have more stamina.

      16      They're able to focus.  They come in with more

      17      language skills.

      18             That's the beauty of pre-K.

      19             I'm also proud of what we have accomplished

      20      for our English-language learners.

      21             We created a standalone division for ELLs,

      22      and have been actively expanding innovative

      23      programs.

      24             Last year we created 40 dual-language

      25      programs.  And this year we're opening 36 new







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       1      dual-language and bilingual programs.

       2             As the daughter of Spanish immigrants, and a

       3      former English-language learner myself, I know

       4      firsthand that strong education makes all the

       5      difference.

       6             Currently, there are more than

       7      180 dual-language programs in 150 schools throughout

       8      New York City, and they are in many languages:

       9      French, Haitian-Creole, Polish.

      10             Got a request from one the Senators to do

      11      Albanian in one of our districts.  And if we can

      12      find the students and the teachers, why not?

      13             Being a multi-lingual person is part of the

      14      New York City experience.

      15             This is why mayoral control is so important.

      16             It allows us to create and rapidly expand

      17      citywide solutions to the unique issues our students

      18      face.

      19             In serving English-language learners and all

      20      students, we improve dramatically how the DOE

      21      communicates and engages with parents.  Partners --

      22      parents are partners in everything you do.

      23             This year alone, I have done over 100 town

      24      hall meetings.

      25             We have created meetings with CEC presidents







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       1      on Saturdays, rather than during the week, so we can

       2      pay more attention to major issues.

       3             And, also, our parent-engagement office has

       4      been increased with personnel so we can have more

       5      translations.

       6             And this year we have even created a

       7      grandparents advisory group, because we're finding

       8      in certain parts of the city that grandparents are

       9      actually raising the students, and it's really

      10      important that we help them hone their skills.

      11             We're thinking outside the box with

      12      student-led conferences.

      13             We've increased our parent attendance at

      14      schools by 38 percent this year, and student-led

      15      conferences allow students to articulate their

      16      academic progress to their families, and they sit at

      17      the parent-teacher conference with their parents,

      18      often as translators; but more often than that,

      19      actually being able to explain in their own words

      20      what they need more help in.

      21             Recently, I was in a fourth-grade class,

      22      where the teacher was explaining to the parent that

      23      there are certain days of the week the child doesn't

      24      do the homework as well as they should.  And the

      25      child actually said to the mother:  See, I told you,







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       1      you overprogram me on Wednesdays.

       2             And having a child hear what he or she needs

       3      to do better, to me, is more important than just a

       4      lot of things being said that don't have impact.

       5             We cannot be successful without meaningful,

       6      sustained parent engagement at a variety of levels.

       7             We have added 40 minutes with parent

       8      engagement every single week.  First four months of

       9      this year, attendance increased 38 percent.

      10             And thanks to our multilingual Raise Your

      11      Hand Campaign, more parents have run for their seats

      12      in their local education councils.

      13             In 2013, just 729 parents applied.

      14             Last year we saw nearly 1,300 parents apply,

      15      an increase of 75 percent.

      16             We are investing $23 million more in arts

      17      education each year.

      18             We now have the highest number of art

      19      teachers in a decade, and 22,000 more students

      20      across 113 middle and high schools of receiving arts

      21      instruction.

      22             I want to say about the arts, it's always

      23      been very close to me and something I'm passionate

      24      about.

      25             And this year we also started something







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       1      called "Teen Thursdays," where all the museums in

       2      the city of New York actually host teenagers.

       3             And any of you who have lived with a teenager

       4      know that hosting teenagers after school in groups

       5      of 30 to 60 is not the easiest thing in the world.

       6             And many of our cultural institutions

       7      had embraced this, to the degree that the

       8      Metropolitan Museum has hosted 4,000 teenagers on

       9      Fridays, through their museums, mostly studying

      10      American history.

      11             We have hired 250 new guidance counselors to

      12      support students.

      13             And we recently created new third-grade

      14      gifted-and-talented classes opening next year in

      15      only -- in the districts in the city that didn't

      16      have them: 7, 12, 16, and 23.

      17             And in this development, all districts will

      18      have at least one program.

      19             These initiatives, and many others like them,

      20      came across because of parent and community input,

      21      but mayoral control is what made it possible to

      22      implement them so quickly.

      23             The investment in the arts was made with City

      24      money.  The expansion of guidance services was made

      25      by the City's commitment.







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       1             Without mayoral control, and the support of

       2      this Mayor, these initiatives would not have

       3      happened.

       4             Mayoral control also allows us to plan more

       5      fully and with more confidence for the future.

       6             Without mayoral control, it would be nearly

       7      impossible for a mayor to lay out a long-term,

       8      detailed vision for our schools, such as, Equity and

       9      Excellence.

      10             Equity and Excellence is a program that

      11      I believe totally in.

      12             This Saturday we're having a conference at

      13      which almost 1,000 school leaders and CEC members

      14      will be attending, to see it laid out, in workshops,

      15      principal to principal.

      16             Universal literacy program places reading

      17      coaches and teachers with experience, who will be

      18      trained over the summer, in many -- ultimately, in

      19      every elementary school right now in four districts

      20      in the city.

      21             Algebra For All, AP For All, Computer Science

      22      For All, seeks to provide students with skills and

      23      courses that they need to be successful in today's

      24      colleges, but also in the job market of the future.

      25             College access for all middle schools will







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       1      provide students earlier exposure to college; or

       2      college access for all high schools, to ensure our

       3      students have access to the resources they need to

       4      pursue a path to college.

       5             Yesterday I attended a college fair in City

       6      Councilmember Comrie's district.  And I did a survey

       7      about how many students there will be the first in

       8      their families to go to college.

       9             And an overwhelming number, almost

      10      60 percent, will be the first.

      11             So there are lots of challenges, not only to

      12      get into college, but to stay in college, and to

      13      make families understand the importance of that.

      14             All students, regardless of what type of

      15      school they attend, deserve to benefit from the

      16      combined knowledge of our supremely talented and

      17      gifted teachers.

      18             The District-Charter Program will pair

      19      district and charter school together, to foster

      20      strong relationships and the sharing of best

      21      practices.

      22             I went to visit a program yesterday that has

      23      a strong relation, in Brooklyn, with a middle school

      24      and a charter school in the same building, where

      25      they're doing reading buddies with each other.







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       1             We have done strong partnerships also with

       2      un-Common-schools network which, now does training

       3      for some of our teachers and principals on teacher

       4      feedback.

       5             We believe that support like this is key to

       6      helping our most disadvantaged students thrive.

       7             This is the philosophy we've used in our

       8      approach towards supporting and improving struggling

       9      schools.

      10             The Renewal Schools Program, another cohesive

      11      citywide program, is only possible because of

      12      mayoral control.  It focuses on supporting schools

      13      and students while providing clear academic

      14      benchmarks.

      15             It's really important to understand that the

      16      commissioner, MaryEllen Elia, has actually been

      17      visiting our 27 persistently-struggling schools, and

      18      has been impressed by the amount of resources we've

      19      put in these schools, the amount of training we're

      20      giving these teachers, and, also, by the amount of

      21      leadership that we've had to change in some of these

      22      schools, to make sure the schools are successful.

      23             In these particular schools we have training.

      24             We've extended learning time by an hour each

      25      day.







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       1             We've given them very targeted resources.

       2             And, also, we ensure that we are visiting

       3      them on a regular basis to ensure that the work

       4      that's happening is of high level.

       5             We have seen real progress.

       6             70 percent of renewal schools have increased

       7      their graduation rates, up from 50 percent a year

       8      ago.

       9             We have been able to achieve this, in large

      10      part, by working with our partners to ensure that

      11      the schools have access to our best principals.

      12             We are receiving whatever support they need.

      13             The program is also showing success in terms

      14      of parent engagement.

      15             And something that we are particularly proud

      16      of, that they are visiting each other and actually

      17      seeing wonderful processes in all the schools.

      18             Together we have made remarkable progress,

      19      and we have so much work ahead.

      20             To continue building on the critical progress

      21      we've made, and to confidently plan on a scale

      22      that's necessary, I ask you to consider at least a

      23      three-year extension of mayoral control.

      24             As someone who has proudly dedicated my

      25      entire life to education, I know this is necessary







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       1      for students to thrive.

       2             As a veteran of four different New York City

       3      public-school systems, I know what works, and what

       4      didn't work.

       5             I was part of the original centralization

       6      model, where you got a number; and based on your

       7      number, you got assigned to a school or a

       8      principalship regardless of whether you were the

       9      right person for that school.

      10             I was a superintendent under

      11      decentralization, and knew that, sometimes, even

      12      appointing a principal to a school took two years

      13      because of the politics involved.

      14             I was a regional superintendent, which I also

      15      understand had some really strong value to it, but,

      16      ultimately, maybe not the consistency, because if

      17      you were in a school in The Bronx, there was a big

      18      difference what was expected of you, from the school

      19      perhaps in Brooklyn.

      20             On behalf of all our students, parents,

      21      families, educators, our city, and it's future,

      22      I thank you for the opportunity to testify before

      23      you today, and ask you to allow us to continue to do

      24      what works.

      25







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       1             SENATOR MARCELLINO:  Thank you.

       2             We've been joined by Senator Toby Stavisky,

       3      coming to join us.

       4             And, let me start off with a multi-part

       5      question.  I'm going to ask it at once, and perhaps

       6      you could address it.

       7             Recently in one of the newspapers -- local

       8      newspapers, "The New York Post," there was an

       9      article which quoted Police Commissioner Bratton,

      10      telling the parents of students, to "Pat your kids

      11      down before they leave the house because they're

      12      picking up weapons in the schools."

      13             There's been a twenty -- according to the

      14      article, approximately, a 26 percent increase in the

      15      amount of weapons found in the schools.  And he felt

      16      that the parents should be checking the kids before

      17      they leave the house.

      18             I don't remember, in 20-plus years of

      19      teaching, anybody ever saying anything like that

      20      before, telling the parent to pat their kids down

      21      and check them for weapons as they leave their

      22      houses.

      23             I think that's a bit much.

      24             But if it's true that there has been an

      25      increase in the amount of weapons seized, I'd like







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       1      to know why, and what are we doing about it to stop

       2      it?

       3             Schools -- I've heard you've been quoted

       4      recently, as they're closing a particular school,

       5      and you want to close a few more are coming.

       6             If we're working so well, how many new -- how

       7      many schools are going to be closed?  Where are they

       8      located?  Why are they being closed?

       9             These are questions I think that have to be

      10      answered, and we'd like some of those answers now,

      11      if you can give them.

      12             And if not, we'd like to see answers come to

      13      us as quickly as possible.

      14             We gave you a list of the questions that were

      15      not answered in the prior hearing.  Those are the

      16      ones we consider was most important.

      17             There were several others that we just didn't

      18      think were that significant to warrant a rehash.

      19             But, the list was -- has been provided.  We

      20      hope that some of those answers can come to us at

      21      a -- in a timely way.

      22             But I would like the answer to the questions

      23      about the school closures; and the potential for

      24      violence and weapons in the schools, because that,

      25      to me, is extremely significant, protection of the







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       1      both the students and the staff -- the teaching

       2      staff, in the buildings.

       3             I don't know that a firing of a principal is

       4      going to resolve that problem.

       5             CHANCELLOR CARMEN FARIÑA:  Well, first and

       6      foremost, let me take on the school closures.

       7             I was certainly here under the prior

       8      administration when schools were closed, and, in

       9      many cases, not with a lot of community input.

      10             We're looking at school closures a little

      11      differently.

      12             And I'm looking at it from the point of view

      13      is:  What's too small to succeed?

      14             When I came on board, we had almost

      15      100 schools that had less than 150 students in them.

      16             As you know, you cannot give resources to

      17      students in schools that don't have a guidance

      18      counselor after-school program.

      19             And those numbers don't generate the

      20      resources.

      21             I will tell you that as a -- you know, having

      22      done this all my life, that I know, anything less

      23      than 300, or a little bit more, middle schools don't

      24      allow you to have the certified teachers, the

      25      after-school programs.







                                                                   24
       1             So, we see looked at school closures from two

       2      points of view:

       3             Does it make sense, in this particular

       4      neighborhood, that there are other equally good or

       5      much better schools that these students could be

       6      moved to?

       7             Which is exactly what we did, to ensure that

       8      the students are in a place where they have the

       9      resources they need.

      10             So school closures this year, we did three

      11      school closures, with one, I believe, happening now.

      12      And next year, probably not many more than that.

      13             But before we close a school:  We have

      14      community meetings.  We visit the schools, we talk

      15      to the principals.  And in every single case, we

      16      also worked with the affiliated unions in terms of,

      17      if these are principals who we have another opening

      18      for, we move them.

      19             But you can't -- we had schools with 67 kids.

      20      We had a school with 24 kids.

      21             SENATOR MARCELLINO:  But why would that be,

      22      if there's schools within the immediate area, if

      23      these are elementary schools, and most of the

      24      parents or the kids who live in the outlying

      25      community would be going to that school?







                                                                   25
       1             CHANCELLOR CARMEN FARIÑA:  Not necessarily.

       2             SENATOR MARCELLINO:  They have choice and

       3      they're walking with their feet?

       4             CHANCELLOR CARMEN FARIÑA:  Well, partially,

       5      but that wasn't the major thing.

       6             We had a high school with 40 kids, because

       7      they were allowed to stay open and no one was

       8      applying there.  There was an enrollment issue.

       9             In middle schools, we had a lot of schools

      10      that were set up around specialty themes, but you

      11      had four or five middle schools in the same

      12      building, and one school didn't have the resources.

      13             So, we're not only closing, we're also

      14      merging and consolidating.

      15             This year we had 25 schools that we merged

      16      and consolidated into 12 schools.

      17             Again, lots of neighborhood community input.

      18             But the idea was, to increase the resources

      19      for the students, and give the students more choice

      20      in the curriculum areas.

      21             And, again, we visit communities, we give

      22      them choices.

      23             And one particular middle school that had the

      24      67 students, we gave parents a choice of other

      25      schools in the neighborhood that they could apply







                                                                   26
       1      to, to make sure there's no disruption.

       2             In the past, what happens is, instead of

       3      closures, you do what we call "phase-outs."

       4             And "phase-outs" meant that you gave them

       5      four years' notice that a school was going to close,

       6      and you let the students, over time, leave the

       7      building.

       8             And that actually was much more problematic

       9      because, when teachers got wind of a phase-out, the

      10      good teachers, in many cases, ran to open market, to

      11      go somewhere else.  And, also, a lot of parents lost

      12      faith in the school because they knew, over time, it

      13      was not going to be there.

      14             So I do think closing, and giving parents

      15      options, is the right way to go for schools that are

      16      too small to succeed.

      17             And I think also, with mergers and

      18      consolidations, it's how to do two schools together.

      19             I'll give you an example of middle schools in

      20      The Bronx.

      21             There are four schools in the building.

      22             Two of them are doing quite well.  One not

      23      so well.  And the reality is, it had, maybe,

      24      150 students.

      25             There was plenty of capability to stay in the







                                                                   27
       1      same building and work with one of the other

       2      principals, and ensure that those students now,

       3      which they didn't before, have full after-school

       4      programs, become part of the community school

       5      program which is in that building.

       6             So, to me, it's all about the kids:  What

       7      works better for the students?

       8             And the mergers and consolidations work.

       9             As far as Commissioner Bratton's statement,

      10      I was with Commissioner Bratton actually, yesterday?

      11             You don't remember.

      12             We had a team-up day, where we went to

      13      schools around the city, to talk about, you know,

      14      NYPD and principals and teachers working better

      15      together.

      16             I think the one thing he and I agree, that

      17      parents have to take some responsibilities.

      18             I don't think I would use the expression

      19      "tap-down" (sic), but, you know, a lot of the

      20      weapons that are coming to schools, particularly in

      21      high school, are coming from homes.

      22             And if parents have weapons in their homes,

      23      keeping them under lock and key, to me, seems like a

      24      parent responsibility.  And I think that's

      25      important.







                                                                   28
       1             As far as safety is concerned in the

       2      schools -- and I visit a lot of schools -- I don't

       3      feel our schools are not safe.

       4             You always will have a few kids who do

       5      something they shouldn't do.

       6             But in terms of the weapons that are in our

       7      schools, they are generally confiscated quickly.

       8      And, again, parents get called in, and then the

       9      students have to take responsibility for what

      10      they've done.

      11             SENATOR MARCELLINO:  What happens to a kid

      12      who has a weapon?

      13             CHANCELLOR CARMEN FARIÑA:  Well, it depends

      14      on the issue and the type of weapon.

      15             They're suspended, and there's a whole

      16      process that has to be done.

      17             And then, of course, the parents are always

      18      called, and some kind of a repercussion takes place.

      19             It depends on the school's particular issue,

      20      and what the child did with the weapon.  Or, in some

      21      cases, didn't do anything; was just caught through

      22      the scanning process.

      23             SENATOR MARCELLINO:  I notice we've been

      24      joined by Senator Peralta, and Senator Perkins also.

      25             Thank you for coming.







                                                                   29
       1             All right I will pass the baton on to a --

       2      Senator Addabbo.

       3             SENATOR ADDABBO:  Thank you, Mr. Chair.

       4             First, let me thank you and your staff for

       5      organizing this hearing today.

       6             And I do appreciate when you say that the

       7      focus is about the children and the system.

       8             And I totally agree, it should always be

       9      about the children and the system or the structure.

      10             So, Chancellor, thank you very much for being

      11      here today as well.

      12             And if we can focus on the system or the

      13      structure, because, back in 2002, when I was in the

      14      city council, and Mayor Bloomberg at the time had

      15      this idea about mayoral control, I actually thought

      16      it was problematic about the name being called

      17      "mayoral control," because, if you think about it,

      18      when we do our streets, it's not mayoral control of

      19      our streets or roadways.  It's Department of

      20      Transportation.

      21             And so the mayor's control over our schools

      22      should be considered the Department of Education,

      23      not mayoral control.

      24             Actually, it should be local government of

      25      schools, or local control.







                                                                   30
       1             So that being said, let's take the

       2      consideration, a hypothetical, that if the State

       3      Legislature did not do anything, if it was to lapse

       4      come June, and we no longer have the Department of

       5      Ed or mayoral control, government control of our

       6      schools, talk us through what you think would be the

       7      ramifications for our children if we were to go back

       8      to the old Board of Ed or some other structure.

       9             CHANCELLOR CARMEN FARIÑA:  I would say it's

      10      probably going to be a nightmare, but I'll try to

      11      temper that a little bit.

      12             I think the -- who makes ultimate decisions,

      13      you need someone to be accountable.  And you need

      14      someone -- and to some degree, you know, it's

      15      happening already.

      16             Who do you point a finger at?

      17             People don't call when you're doing a good

      18      job and say, Thank you very much.

      19             But I do think it's important to say, okay,

      20      this is the person that I'm holding accountable.

      21      These are the things they've said publicly they're

      22      going do stand for, and tick off the boxes as they

      23      do it.

      24             We said we were going to do pre-K.

      25             We said we were going to do middle school







                                                                   31
       1      after-school.

       2             We said we were going to do a higher rate of

       3      high school graduates.

       4             Those are all things we put on our agenda to

       5      get done, and that's what I believe we have

       6      accomplished.

       7             I think, for me personally, in terms of being

       8      a chancellor, it means -- and I don't even know what

       9      the legality would be if we go back to a board -- it

      10      means you have to convince X number of people to

      11      vote, and have a unanimous vote, or a majority vote,

      12      on the issues you want to do; which, to some degree

      13      is going to necessarily slow us up on some of the

      14      things we want to do.

      15             I remember as a school-board member --

      16      I mean, a superintendent, and, actually,

      17      Mayor de Blasio was on my school board, that I had

      18      to meet with every member of the school board,

      19      one-on-one, to convince them about some of the

      20      things that we wanted to do.  And it took, maybe,

      21      three or four months, and then, ultimately, nobody

      22      would agree with anybody, so we didn't get some of

      23      these things done.

      24             So, to me, I do think it's going to slow the

      25      process.







                                                                   32
       1             I do think that the satisfaction of

       2      principals and teachers, overall, in the city is

       3      high.  This is the highest it's ever been.  We've

       4      done our own internal surveys.

       5             And having people who are satisfied with

       6      their profession and working hard at what they do,

       7      I think is crucial.

       8             I think the other thing we've done

       9      differently now than we did before, is that we have

      10      a lot more support, where local officials and

      11      parents have access to superintendents.

      12             You know, one of the things that's different

      13      now than it was in 2002, the hierarchy is very

      14      clear.

      15             It's the mayor.

      16             Then it's me.

      17             Then it's my superintendents.

      18             And we now have 44 superintendents who have a

      19      geographical neighborhood, so many of you already

      20      know who your superintendents are.  You know who you

      21      can call if there's an issue.

      22             Those superintendents have all these

      23      principals accountable for them, and all of them are

      24      educators, which was not necessarily true in the

      25      past.







                                                                   33
       1             So I think we have a system that holds

       2      accountability, that has stability, and, that's

       3      evaluated.

       4             I evaluate all my superintendents on several

       5      things.

       6             One:  How much they've engaged parents in

       7      their decision-making.

       8             How much they've evaluated principals to make

       9      sure principals are doing the right job.

      10             I'm just finishing by one-on-one interview

      11      with every single superintendent that works for me,

      12      and I've asked them:  What's working?  What's not

      13      working?  What would you like to see changed a

      14      little bit?  And then, also, what are you proudest

      15      of?

      16             Those are the questions every one of them has

      17      to answer.

      18             And, if they're not mentioning parent

      19      engagement in some form or another, then I worry.

      20             And if they're not talking about professional

      21      development, which really did not exist a lot in the

      22      past, I don't feel we're moving in the right

      23      direction.

      24             SENATOR ADDABBO:  Just in this hypothetical

      25      other structure, should mayoral control expire, is







                                                                   34
       1      it your understanding that this new structure comes

       2      about this September of 2016?  Does it come about

       3      mid-year, starting January 2017?

       4             What is your understanding about, possibly, a

       5      new structure for our children?

       6             CHANCELLOR CARMEN FARIÑA:  Well, the mayoral

       7      control ends at the end of this June, so I'm

       8      assuming, unless there's another away around it,

       9      that July 1st.

      10             And keep in mind, that even under Bloomberg,

      11      you had a month in that -- at one time, where there

      12      was a time -- well, it turned out being temporary,

      13      but nobody knew it at the time, and you had people,

      14      I guess, from the borough president's office

      15      representing, but no decisions were generally made

      16      at that time, because it was like a standstill kind

      17      of clock.

      18             And that's -- you know, I have a sense of

      19      urgency around this job.

      20             I did not come to do this job, at this stage

      21      in my life, where I want to take things slowly,

      22      unless it's something, obviously, that requires some

      23      legal looking into.

      24             I want to make sure that every child in

      25      New York City is getting the education that is going







                                                                   35
       1      to make them the citizens of tomorrow.

       2             So, to have anything that stops us from doing

       3      the work, I would find very detrimental.

       4             SENATOR ADDABBO:  It has been mentioned that

       5      the mayor is not here today.

       6             We have about 12 --

       7             SENATOR MARCELLINO:  If he is here, could he

       8      raise his hand?

       9                  [Laughter.]

      10             SENATOR ADDABBO:  He might have come in.

      11             We have about 12 session days left up in

      12      Albany.  Of course, we can call special session, and

      13      all that stuff.

      14             But let's say we're working with the

      15      12 calendar session days.

      16             What is your strategy over those next 12 days

      17      or so, with the Mayor, coming back to Albany,

      18      answering questions, having meetings?

      19             What is the strategy for the Mayor to

      20      convince the State Senate that mayoral control

      21      should be extended?

      22             CHANCELLOR CARMEN FARIÑA:  To do my job as

      23      best as I can, day after day.

      24             I have been to Albany many times this year.

      25      I have met many of you, one-on-one.







                                                                   36
       1             I have, now, meetings for the next month,

       2      one-on-one, with a lot of our city council members.

       3             My job is to stay focused on the kids, and

       4      what they need to do in their classrooms.

       5             I have a saying, "The answer is always in the

       6      classroom."

       7             But I do think that, by listening to

       8      constituents -- and, again, elected officials being

       9      constituents -- I think it's really important to

      10      say, Well, what's working for you; what's not?

      11             So my job is to do what I know is -- I know

      12      best to do, which is educating kids.

      13             SENATOR ADDABBO:  I do, we do, appreciate

      14      your dedication to our children; and, again, I want

      15      to say thank you.

      16             I guess part of that question was:  Does the

      17      Mayor plan on coming back to Albany for these

      18      meetings, for these negotiations, for these, again,

      19      private meetings, with leadership?

      20             But does he plan on coming back to Albany.

      21             CHANCELLOR CARMEN FARIÑA:  Well, again, the

      22      Mayor was there for over four hours, as I was,

      23      sitting next to him.

      24             After those four hours, we then met with the

      25      Assembly, which over 100 people were in that







                                                                   37
       1      particular room.

       2             Then we met with individual interest groups

       3      that asked to meet with us.

       4             So we were there an entire day.  And I, from

       5      6:00 in the morning till almost 5:00 that afternoon.

       6             Any Senator, or even city council member,

       7      who's asked for private meetings with me has

       8      received them.

       9             And, I've met with caucuses.

      10             We went out for the Black and Latino caucuses

      11      as well.

      12             So, I do think we've made ourselves extremely

      13      accessible.

      14             And I -- in terms of his particular schedule,

      15      I do not want to answer for him.

      16             But like I said, for me, my job is to work in

      17      the city, with the schools, and the leaders of the

      18      schools, as much as I can.

      19             SENATOR ADDABBO:  And the last question --

      20      I may have others, but I do want my colleagues to

      21      have an opportunity to speak to you -- with the

      22      expiration of practically anything, we have the

      23      opportunity to improve.

      24             That gives us this opportunity to have this

      25      kind of conversation, and, hopefully, improve the







                                                                   38
       1      structure for our children, educationally.

       2             Now, Tuesday -- late Tuesday evening, the

       3      Assembly voted for a straight extender.

       4             In your opinion, in talking about the

       5      opportunity to improve, do you think there's this

       6      opportunity, instead of just a straight extender, to

       7      I make these improvements, for parents', you know,

       8      input, relevancy of the CECs or PEP or

       9      administrators and teachers?

      10             We have this opportunity to improve our

      11      current structure, all for the sake of our children.

      12             Do you see, not only this opportunity for

      13      improvement, but maybe what improvements might you

      14      even suggest?

      15             CHANCELLOR CARMEN FARIÑA:  Well, I think

      16      we've put in a lot of the improvements, only from

      17      the last time I was here, to now.

      18             And in terms of parent engagement, which

      19      I guess is one of the things you're asking, when

      20      I first came on board, I remember the CECs being,

      21      to some degree -- they just met; and some came, and

      22      some didn't come.

      23             So moving the CEC presidents to Saturday

      24      meetings, and also giving them specific

      25      responsibilities.  One of the things I've asked them







                                                                   39
       1      to think about this year is enrollment improvements

       2      that we needed to do, because we have structures in

       3      place.  It's how they're used that matter.

       4             I think, also, with the CECs, we asked them

       5      to start looking at diversity issues, which I know

       6      is something that's very close to both the Mayor and

       7      I, and -- but without any mandates.

       8             So, for example, you have a CEC president,

       9      District 13, David Goldsmith, who has done an

      10      unbelievable job of getting the people in his

      11      community to talk about what should this look like,

      12      and how does it look like in our community?  Because

      13      there's a community-based decision-making.

      14             And for any of you who have been following

      15      the press, I sat on the PEP under prior

      16      administrations, and you knew what the foregone

      17      conclusion was going to be on any vote, because it

      18      was, very much, everybody did what they were told.

      19             And I'm not saying it's bad or good.  I'm

      20      just saying, that's what happened.

      21             We go to our PEP meetings, after having spent

      22      hours of discussion, after having the PEP members

      23      going and visiting the schools that are on the

      24      agenda, and we change our mind occasionally, based

      25      on parent input.







                                                                   40
       1             So I do think the system is there.

       2             I just don't think all the structures may

       3      have been utilized to the degree they should have

       4      been.

       5             I inherited a parents' department that was

       6      really more a proforma.

       7             And the one of the things we asked

       8      Yolanda Torres, who's the head of the

       9      parent-engagement office, is to go out in the

      10      community and ask different communities:  What do

      11      they want more of?

      12             And based on what they've told us, they want

      13      more English classes, they want GED classes, they

      14      want cooking classes, they want -- it's going to

      15      depend on what they tell us they want, rather than

      16      us telling them what they need.  And I think that's

      17      a major shift.

      18             So the structures were there.  They might not

      19      have been utilized as much as they could have been.

      20             We put out publications now on a monthly

      21      basis, for new teachers, for parents, for

      22      principals.

      23             A lot of our communication strategies is

      24      letting people know in as many ways as possible.

      25             And, actually, with our P-Notes, which is







                                                                   41
       1      actually going out today, we've put them out to

       2      everybody.

       3             CEC presidents, city council members; anyone

       4      who wants a copy of what's at least on my mind, gets

       5      it every single month.

       6             So, I do think our communication and our work

       7      with parents has been really strong, and we'll

       8      continue to get even stronger.

       9             And we always listen to recommendations from

      10      elected officials.

      11             SENATOR ADDABBO:  Again, Chancellor, I thank

      12      you so much.

      13             And I just encourage you, as you have these

      14      conversations up in Albany regarding the extension,

      15      to give us that kind of input on what we can

      16      possibly do to improve the current structure to,

      17      again, increase the roles of, again, certain

      18      interests in education.

      19             CHANCELLOR CARMEN FARIÑA:  I would say the

      20      one thing is, that I am going to come back,

      21      certainly to the State Legislature, on several

      22      issues, which are legal issues, that we could use

      23      more help with.

      24             And I've discussed this with the

      25      State Commissioner.







                                                                   42
       1             We need help in terms of our CTE programs.

       2             We want to increase our CTE programs, and a

       3      lot of the reasons we can't --

       4             (The lights go out.)

       5             CHANCELLOR CARMEN FARIÑA:  Okay.

       6             SENATOR MARCELLINO:  Can we stay away from

       7      the light switches in the back, please.

       8             It's a little annoying.

       9             CHANCELLOR CARMEN FARIÑA:  -- and a lot of

      10      the legislation, and I think that's the role you

      11      guys play that's very important, requires changes.

      12             We can't get teachers for our pharmacy

      13      program, we can't get teachers for our health

      14      programs, because there are certain things in state

      15      stature (sic) that keep this from happening in an

      16      easy way.

      17             So, definitely, that's a role that all of you

      18      can play.

      19             One of the things I'm concerned about there

      20      are -- some of our major shortage areas are, for our

      21      dual-language expansion, is teachers who teach

      22      another language.

      23             And I have a lot of teachers who want to

      24      teach in New York City, but they don't have

      25      reciprocal licensing.







                                                                   43
       1             So if you're teaching in Texas, which is

       2      where I'm getting a lot of requests from, there's a

       3      surplus of dual-language teachers, but they can't

       4      teach in New York City because of their licenses.

       5             So there's a lot of things that we can sit

       6      down together and say, as partners:  What could we

       7      do better to make some of the things that are, you

       8      know, actually stumbling blocks to our work?

       9             SENATOR ADDABBO:  Thank you.

      10             Thank you, Mr. Chairman.

      11             SENATOR MARCELLINO:  Just so everybody knows,

      12      and put in it perspective, the State contribution to

      13      the educational system in the city of New York is

      14      $9 billion.  We're not talking about small change

      15      here.

      16             So when we discuss what's going on, we have

      17      an oversight responsibility, which we will adhere to

      18      and we will put forth.

      19             So, I am pleased that our members -- the list

      20      that I have established right now is:

      21      Senator Croci, Senator Golden, Senator Peralta,

      22      Senator Stavisky, and Senator Perkins.

      23             That's it.

      24             And Senator Felder, obviously, we'll fit in.

      25             I'm going to go left to right.  Whichever







                                                                   44
       1      order, we'll get --

       2             SENATOR PERKINS:  (Indiscernible.)

       3             SENATOR MARCELLINO:  -- we'll get to

       4      everybody.

       5             SENATOR STAVISKY:  (Indiscernible.)  You're

       6      in the middle, right.

       7             SENATOR MARCELLINO:  Everybody will get a

       8      fair shot and a fair chance to ask questions, and we

       9      have other panels to go.  So if we can keep our

      10      questions concise, and if can keep our answers as

      11      tight as we can, then we have a chance of getting

      12      out of here before midnight.

      13             Senator Croci.

      14             SENATOR CROCI:  Well, thank you,

      15      Mr. Chairman.

      16             And thank you, Senator Golden, for allowing

      17      me to jump ahead, as I'm going to have to leave

      18      early.

      19             But, Chancellor, I appreciate your appearance

      20      here today.

      21             I want to dovetail off of something that you

      22      raised, and then something the Chairman raised

      23      initially.

      24             First, as a former chief executive of a

      25      small -- the third largest town in the state of







                                                                   45
       1      New York, when there was an initiative important to

       2      the residents of my town, and in my role as chief

       3      executive, if the Legislators in Albany wanted to

       4      discuss policy with me, I got in the car and I drove

       5      to Albany.

       6             If they wanted me to come back, I got in the

       7      car and drove back to Albany.

       8             I checked ego at the door, particularly when

       9      it came to the welfare of the children and the

      10      families of our community.

      11             So I would just say that, in this case, we

      12      are talking about, as you have raised, and,

      13      certainly, your focus is on the families and the

      14      children that we're talking about, it's worth the

      15      chief executive coming out and appearing.

      16             It's an indication to the Legislature about

      17      the importance of the issue to the chief executive.

      18             And something that the Chairman raised was

      19      the security.

      20             Of the 32 persistently dangerous schools in

      21      the state of New York, as rated by State Ed, 27 them

      22      are in New York City.

      23             And, so, when I hear about young kids

      24      being -- being -- arming themselves with weapons on

      25      their way to school, it's because, it's not just







                                                                   46
       1      they're afraid of something in the school.  It's

       2      from their house/from their home to the school,

       3      there is an issue; and inside the school, there is

       4      an issue.

       5             It's not a spontaneous action that a kid

       6      decides to arm themselves.

       7             So I'm concerned about some of the security

       8      questions that have been raised, and I was wondering

       9      what the school system intends to do, or the City

      10      intends to do, to ensure that, from that young

      11      person's home to the school, on the streets, that

      12      they feel safe; and then once they're inside that

      13      school, they feel safe.

      14             Because the parents' expectation is, when

      15      they give their children to the school system and

      16      they enter that doorway, that they are safe and in

      17      an environment conducive to education.

      18             CHANCELLOR CARMEN FARIÑA:  I want to be very

      19      clear that, at this moment, the State and the City

      20      do not use the same template to give us safety

      21      statistics.

      22             And, actually, the Commissioner and I have

      23      been talking about how do we equalize that, so when

      24      we use numbers, we're both using the same set of

      25      numbers?







                                                                   47
       1             Crime has gone down in New York City schools

       2      almost 29 percent.

       3             And I will tell you again, I visit schools

       4      all the time.  And I particularly have visited most

       5      of the persistently dangerous schools personally.

       6             And one of the schools on that list is

       7      actually one of our gifted-and-talented schools.

       8             So I want to be clear that, sometimes, it's

       9      the incident itself that -- because incidents have

      10      point systems.  And what the point system will bring

      11      up is, sometimes, for one student and one incident,

      12      it increases the number.

      13             So we have to be very honest about what --

      14      how we evaluate these schools, and how do -- what

      15      constitutes a crime?

      16             Having said that, even one incident is one

      17      incident too many.

      18             One of the things we've instituted also, with

      19      the NYPD, because a lot of these incidents,

      20      unfortunately, happen on the way to school/on the

      21      way home, we started increasing what we call "safe

      22      corridors."

      23             There are many schools in our city that we

      24      know are in particularly unsafe neighborhoods.

      25             So we now have a system where, at dismissal







                                                                   48
       1      time, there are extra safety officers and police

       2      department personnel, to actually have students,

       3      when they walk what they call the "safe corridor,"

       4      watched.

       5             If we have incidents -- and I'm thinking of

       6      one in particular that we just saw about two weeks

       7      ago, where there were some gangs in two rival -- in

       8      two schools.  And gang activity is one of the issues

       9      that raises the safety concerns in neighborhoods.

      10             We now have a special unit that we work with,

      11      with NYPD, just to put in those neighborhoods.

      12             We have increased school safety agents in

      13      some schools, but, more importantly, I think, we're

      14      starting retraining school safety officers.

      15             How do you de-escalate issues?

      16             How do you anticipate an issue even before it

      17      happens?  Which is possible.

      18             So I do think our schools are safe.

      19             I certainly go into schools all by myself.

      20             People also always shocked.  I walk in the

      21      building, all by myself.  Where's my entourage?

      22             I don't take an entourage.

      23             I really feel that our public schools are as

      24      safe as they can be, but always -- there's always

      25      room for improvement.







                                                                   49
       1             SENATOR CROCI:  Thank you.

       2             SENATOR MARCELLINO:  Senator Golden.

       3             SENATOR GOLDEN:  Thank you, Mr. Chairman.

       4             Thank you, Chancellor, for being here today,

       5      and thank you for the good work that you do in the

       6      school system.

       7             It's a difficult school system, but some of

       8      the questions I asked the last time are going to be

       9      very similar to the questions I'm going to ask

      10      today, so there will be few surprises here.

      11             I still believe you have to be an MIT

      12      graduate to traverse your computer system and your

      13      technology system in trying to look up schools.

      14             What money goes into the schools?

      15             How that money is divided?

      16             How much money a student gets in each one of

      17      these schools?

      18             How much money goes into the construction

      19      projects?

      20             What are the overruns on the construction

      21      projects?

      22             And why is there more of a focus on these

      23      overruns -- overriding these projects?

      24             And one I'm going to go specifically is going

      25      to be PS 201 in Brooklyn.







                                                                   50
       1             I noted that Mr. (indiscernible) and

       2      Mr. Gonzalez are doing their best.

       3             I mean, it's two and a half years, and we're

       4      going into a third year, for reconstruction.  You

       5      could have built the school by the time we finish

       6      renovating this school.

       7             There was a revolution going on in my

       8      community over this.

       9             And I have to find out, you know -- how do

      10      I find out when this is going to end?

      11             What does this actually cost us?

      12             And how would I find that in the computer?

      13             And how can you help me on that?

      14             CHANCELLOR CARMEN FARIÑA:  Well, that is a

      15      challenge.

      16             And, certainly, if you want to ask me, what

      17      is one of the challenges that I haven't really

      18      solved yet? that is definitely one of them.

      19             Our website leaves a lot to be desired,

      20      certainly, for this century, and it's something

      21      we're working on.

      22             I would say, also, we are very transparent,

      23      but getting the information is not as easy as the

      24      transparency once you dig it up.

      25             One of things that I think that I can







                                                                   51
       1      honestly say is that, this year, we're working with

       2      my financial officer, and the Mayor, no school will

       3      be budgeted at less than 87 percent of fair-student

       4      funding.  That's across the board throughout the

       5      city.

       6             Our lowest right now is at 82 percent.

       7             No school will be less than 87.

       8             And our hope is that, within a year, all

       9      schools will be at least at 90 percent.

      10             So that's one of the things in terms of

      11      getting services.

      12             The other thing is, in terms of -- and you're

      13      certainly one of the most overcrowded districts --

      14      where do we find space?

      15             And thanks to many of the elected officials

      16      and parents and everybody, real-estate agents, we

      17      are really looking for space that we can either

      18      lease or build.

      19             And one of the thing we're looking at in your

      20      particular district, is how do you convince parents

      21      to cross the other side of Third Avenue, which is a

      22      problem?

      23             We know where we have the space, but parents

      24      don't necessarily want to go to those spaces.

      25             And the other big issue that we have, and







                                                                   52
       1      this is true in your district, and it's true,

       2      certainly, in areas of Queens and some parts of

       3      The Bronx, where we have TCUs.

       4             We have several schools that we wanted to

       5      move.  But in order for us --

       6             SENATOR MARCELLINO:  What's a "TCU"?

       7             CHANCELLOR CARMEN FARIÑA:  The temporary care

       8      units.  The --

       9             URSULINA RAMIREZ:  The trailers.

      10             CHANCELLOR CARMEN FARIÑA:  -- it's the

      11      trailers.

      12             And a lot of people don't want the trailers,

      13      but if we're going to get rid of the trailers, we

      14      have to place the kids temporarily someplace while

      15      we build, because a lot of our schools have very

      16      large schoolyards and we can build schools there.

      17             I'm going through a situation right now in

      18      Brooklyn, but where do you put the kids meantime?

      19             So, there's a lot of things, but in terms of

      20      specific numbers for specific schools, this is still

      21      a work in progress.

      22             SENATOR GOLDEN:  Those trailers, we

      23      definitely don't want to go back with.  Kids were

      24      falling through the floors on these trailers.

      25             These trailers were a disaster.  They should







                                                                   53
       1      not be in existence at all.  And whatever we can do

       2      to get kids out of trailers, we have to do that.

       3             Now, I'm one of the -- this may be an

       4      old-school approach, but the "if you build it, they

       5      will come."

       6             So I do believe that you have to build them.

       7             I don't care where you build them.  You have

       8      to build them, and you have to build them with

       9      STEAM, and you have to build them with STREAM,

      10      programs.

      11             You have to be able to give the kids of the

      12      future the opportunity to stay, live, and raise

      13      their families here, and we don't have enough for

      14      that.

      15             And I don't see that in any plan, and that's

      16      sort of a real serious problem.

      17             CHANCELLOR CARMEN FARIÑA:  I totally agree

      18      with you, and that's something we're working on.

      19             We have buildings that are over 100 years

      20      old, that just to put wiring in them for air

      21      conditioning is a monumental job because they don't

      22      of the capacity for wiring.

      23             So, this is not something I'm going to tell

      24      you we are greatly successful at, but it's certainly

      25      something we're working on.







                                                                   54
       1             I was in one of your schools this week, and

       2      the principal wants more outlets, so -- because

       3      they're not used to -- when the school was built, it

       4      was not built for the technology of today.

       5             So that is part of the work with, you know,

       6      Computer Science For All.  We want to make sure that

       7      we put the support services in schools that we need

       8      to get that done.

       9             SENATOR GOLDEN:  If you could bring one of

      10      our kids in from the schools, they can build a

      11      better tech program so we can easily access that

      12      program, so we can break it down by district, by

      13      school, by account, what money is going into that

      14      school, what programs they have.

      15             I think we got some of the best kids in the

      16      entire country going to our schools, so I do

      17      believe --

      18             CHANCELLOR CARMEN FARIÑA:  Oh, I love that

      19      idea.

      20             SENATOR GOLDEN:  -- there's no reason for

      21      this not to happen.  This is the twenty-first

      22      century, we should do that.

      23             Moving along: overcrowding.

      24             I sat with the administration years ago --

      25      14 years ago, and they told me, What do I got to do







                                                                   55
       1      to reduce the overcrowding?

       2             We did it.

       3             I put 8,000 new classrooms sites in

       4      District 20.

       5             Guess what?

       6             We went to a meeting, most overcrowded school

       7      district?  District 20.

       8             It's -- it's -- I just can't -- where is

       9      there a plan for emerging communities -- emerging

      10      new immigrant -- emergent communities coming in?

      11             And what is our plan as a city to deal with

      12      them, in education, transportation, but not so

      13      much -- your goal is education -- just the education

      14      portion of it?

      15             CHANCELLOR CARMEN FARIÑA:  I think this is

      16      one of the places, very honestly, that having a

      17      committee of people from the electeds and people

      18      from school construction and us and some educators

      19      and some superintendents at the table, particularly

      20      the three most overcrowded districts, 20, 24, parts

      21      of 10, and having a real discussion, because this is

      22      a very big problem, and no one person is going to

      23      solve it.

      24             The other thing is, and because this is

      25      something, I now drive around the city, wherever







                                                                   56
       1      I see high-risers, to try to figure out, are they

       2      one-bedroom? two-bedroom? three-bedrooms? because,

       3      well, that kind of tells you, there are going to be

       4      children.

       5             Because, although Williamsburg group,

       6      dramatically, in Brooklyn, a lot of them are

       7      one-bedrooms, so you can kind of say, well, maybe

       8      there are going to be singles.

       9             But the other piece of this is, that the

      10      explosion of newly-arrived immigrants in certain

      11      parts of the city was totally unexpected, and, many

      12      times, they're not reported.

      13             So it's like, in your district in particular,

      14      there are apartments that you pass by, or houses,

      15      you assume one- or two-family houses, where, in

      16      reality, maybe six families are living in those.

      17             So we have to get smarter of how do we count

      18      these families?

      19             And many of these are the families that don't

      20      report who they are to any authority --

      21             SENATOR GOLDEN:  We have illegal conversions

      22      going on in my community, where you take a one- or

      23      two-family home and you turn it into five or six

      24      families.  And that's going on.

      25             The City knows this.







                                                                   57
       1             We all know this.

       2             So what we have to be able to do is come

       3      together, as a unit, as a city, with the Building

       4      Department, with the City Education Department, with

       5      Transportation, PD, FD, and, believe it or not, our

       6      hospitals which are impacted as well, to make sure

       7      that we get the best services for the people coming

       8      into our community.

       9             I don't want to stop anybody.

      10             I want to make sure it's done and planned

      11      correctly, to make sure that we do the right thing,

      12      and that the people that live here deserve the

      13      housing, get the housing, and get the best education

      14      they can possibly get.

      15             And we are really -- you're doing an

      16      excellent job educating, but, unfortunately, we're

      17      losing a tremendous number of our kids to

      18      out-of-state.

      19             We're losing them to Texas, to California.

      20             CHANCELLOR CARMEN FARIÑA:  North Carolina and

      21      Pennsylvania, the two biggest states.

      22             SENATOR GOLDEN:  Pardon me?

      23             CHANCELLOR CARMEN FARIÑA:  North Carolina and

      24      Pennsylvania, two of the biggest states where we're

      25      losing to.







                                                                   58
       1             SENATOR GOLDEN:  So that's -- and the other

       2      issue that -- is the pre-K's.

       3             Obviously, we enter them into pre-K and --

       4      which is the smartest thing, great idea; very costly

       5      idea.

       6             We got -- you couldn't figure out that

       7      money -- if I asked you to sit down here, we could

       8      sit here for ten hours and we couldn't figure out

       9      where that money came from, and how that money's

      10      being paid back.

      11             Now, that's number one.

      12             How many kids got to get into the system?

      13      That's another issue.

      14             And how many kids are left out of the system?

      15             And how many kids are being moved around

      16      through the shelters into different communities,

      17      that are also impacting those communities?

      18             What is lo -- co-locations doing to the

      19      overcrowding?

      20             And how are we making sure that charter

      21      schools are not hurt by this?

      22             Is that a lot of questions in one question?

      23             CHANCELLOR CARMEN FARIÑA:  It is, but let me

      24      try to take one at a time, and maybe, you know,

      25      Ursulina Ramirez can answer (indiscernible).







                                                                   59
       1             First of all, one of the things that I think

       2      would be helpful for everybody to work together, and

       3      we started doing in a small way, is that new

       4      developers always ask for some kind of easement

       5      rights.

       6             If you're going to go up higher, what can you

       7      do?

       8             I think they should do early childhood

       9      centers in their buildings.  Having pre-K's in

      10      buildings that are going up, a win-win for most

      11      developers.

      12             And I'm thinking of one we've done

      13      particularly well, I think in DUMBO, where the

      14      developer is actually giving us pre-K sites, so that

      15      means those local public schools don't have it.  And

      16      I think they should be giving us space for schools.

      17             There are some in Queens that are doing this

      18      already, but maybe this could be part of the overall

      19      plan to do this.

      20             I think having -- you have to look at the

      21      expenditure on pre-K, two ways.

      22             I see the expenditure on pre-K as an

      23      investment.

      24             If you have an extra year of school, and

      25      particularly our students who go -- start school,







                                                                   60
       1      not speaking English, and they are able to go to

       2      kindergarten with much more skills under their belt,

       3      the system and the city is going to be better off in

       4      the long run.

       5             I think in terms of the co-locations, I have

       6      the saying, "There are lessons learned."

       7             And one of the things that, actually, we've

       8      been discussing, is how do we get a much more

       9      focused approach to co-locations where everyone is

      10      well-served?

      11             Like I said, I went yesterday to a site, a

      12      success academy, Ancephalo (ph.) Middle School --

      13             SENATOR GOLDEN:  That's my district.

      14             There's tens of thousands of kids on lists,

      15      waiting to get into these schools, and they can't

      16      get into them.

      17             CHANCELLOR CARMEN FARIÑA:  But, again, it's

      18      how -- what are the things that are in common that

      19      the schools could share?

      20             Where are these things, like after-school

      21      programs, and things like that, that actually make

      22      sense?

      23             But I think the other piece of this is, also,

      24      in co-locations, does it make sense to put three

      25      middle schools in the same building, or three







                                                                   61
       1      high schools, that they can share resources?

       2             AP For All doesn't mean every single school

       3      has to have five AP courses.

       4             But if you have five high schools, and I just

       5      said this in The Bronx, and I said to each of the

       6      high schools:

       7             You have a history class, you have an English

       8      class, you have a math class.

       9             How do you then parallel teaching beyond the

      10      same bell schedule -- which is, somehow or other,

      11      it's a horrific idea for many people -- so that you

      12      can actually go into each other's classrooms and

      13      take classes in other classrooms?

      14             After-school programs, if you unify all the

      15      after-school programs, kids have more choices.

      16             So, I think we need to talk a lot more, and

      17      I think co-locations is one of the issues.  We

      18      really want to have more discussions with

      19      communities on:  What makes sense?  What doesn't

      20      make sense?  What is an underutilized building

      21      versus overutilized building?

      22             Because the Blue Book from the past wasn't

      23      working, and we now have a new way of looking at

      24      space.  But we need -- that really, probably, could

      25      use a little bit more refinement.







                                                                   62
       1             URSULINA RAMIREZ:  And, Senator, I just

       2      wanted to quickly answer, you made a comment about

       3      new capacity within your district.

       4             And last night, just so you know, the Panel

       5      for Educational Policy had voted on the amended

       6      capital plan, with $800 million in "new seat"

       7      investments, including some in your district.

       8             Because we have heard from community members

       9      about the growing -- the growth of different

      10      neighborhoods, whether that's from developments, or

      11      from students living in temporary housing elsewhere.

      12             So we have made investments, and specifically

      13      to --

      14             SENATOR GOLDEN:  I thank you on one issue.

      15      (Indiscernible) on Manhattan Beach, which I think

      16      was very good.

      17             I have three locations at that -- I have a

      18      one shelter -- a women's shelter, a men's shelter,

      19      and a family shelter.  That would have destroyed my

      20      school over there, School -- PS 22.

      21             And, thank God, you did the right thing

      22      there.

      23             URSULINA RAMIREZ:  And I do want to note that

      24      we are -- and we're trying to do -- we're doing a

      25      better job of actually working more closely with the







                                                                   63
       1      Department of Homeless Services, to talk about how

       2      we are coordinating and working together.

       3             In addition, the Mayor made an investment of

       4      $10 million to really support kids in temporary

       5      housing, and the collaboration between the

       6      Department of Education and DHS, because we do --

       7             SENATOR GOLDEN:  Sorry if I'm talking fast

       8      and putting out a lot of questions, because a lot of

       9      members here want to.

      10             And I have -- believe it or not, I have a

      11      senior -- several hundred seniors waiting for me at

      12      a town hall back in Bay Ridge, so I have to try to

      13      get as much out as quickly as I can.  And I think

      14      it's important for you, the media, for this panel,

      15      so the proper decisions are made as we move forward.

      16             So, what I need to know is the -- I wish

      17      I had some of those schools that had 100 kids in

      18      them.

      19             I got the -- my middle schools are 2,000

      20      kids.  My high schools are 4500 and 5,000 kids.

      21             You know, so when you break them down into

      22      three different academies, I think you're almost

      23      forced to break them into three different academies

      24      when you have that many kids in a school.

      25             Maybe I'm wrong there.







                                                                   64
       1             And how many -- go ahead.

       2             CHANCELLOR CARMEN FARIÑA:  No, I mean, one of

       3      the schools that I'm particularly proud of in the

       4      city is Fort Hamilton High School.

       5             SENATOR GOLDEN:  Doing an excellent job

       6      there.  The (indiscernible) program they have

       7      there --

       8             CHANCELLOR CARMEN FARIÑA:  They have

       9      5,000 students; but, yet, she has an assistant

      10      principal in charge of each academy in that

      11      building.

      12             They were one of the first schools I invited

      13      to go see Hamilton, because of the work they do, not

      14      only in the academics, but in the arts.

      15             So I think each school has to be evaluated on

      16      it's difference: is it working? isn't working?

      17             Large was -- I mean, I -- like I said, it was

      18      too small.

      19             I believe in small high schools, but they

      20      have to be the right small schools serving the right

      21      purposes.

      22             SENATOR GOLDEN:  Well, the -- I got to say

      23      that the -- we need to be able to focus, and I think

      24      there has to be more communications.

      25             And the Mayor here has to, I believe, lead







                                                                   65
       1      here in getting us, not only that we have meetings

       2      within each borough, or with the legislators, as to

       3      a plan, but each community board, on a quarterly, or

       4      at least every six months, we should have a meeting

       5      with those community boards, with the building

       6      department, with the different city assets, to make

       7      sure that we're planning correctly, and that there

       8      are some changes coming up, that everybody in the

       9      city is aware of these changes, and what are we

      10      doing as a single unit, to bring that together,

      11      where we have the overcrowding conditions, we have

      12      illegal conversions.

      13             How do we stop the illegal conversions?

      14             How do we balance the system?

      15             And how do we bring down the overcrowding in

      16      our school districts by finding the properties that

      17      you need, and to find the leased properties that you

      18      need, so you can go forward and give the best

      19      education?

      20             CHANCELLOR CARMEN FARIÑA:  I mean, I actually

      21      think that bringing a lot of people together by

      22      borough is a great idea.

      23             Somebody had mentioned it at the last

      24      meeting, and we already started -- I already asked

      25      my (indiscernible) to start thinking about it.







                                                                   66
       1             The other things, as based on a different

       2      meeting that I had a few months ago, we had our

       3      first meeting with the community planning boards'

       4      education chair people about three weeks ago.  And

       5      it was so productive, that we agreed that we were

       6      going to have these meetings at least four times a

       7      year.

       8             SENATOR GOLDEN:  Good.

       9             CHANCELLOR CARMEN FARIÑA:  And, this way,

      10      they can tell us, because it's -- you know, they're

      11      not congruent to school districts, but meeting with

      12      the community planning boards also gives us -- and,

      13      also, I asked them who they wanted to hear from, and

      14      they all asked: school-construction authority,

      15      someone from enrollment.

      16             So the more conversations we have like that,

      17      the better.

      18             SENATOR GOLDEN:  The -- and the growth of the

      19      schools, obviously, getting the best outcome, the

      20      best product, that we can possibly get, we have

      21      to -- and to get those kids to go across and go to

      22      where these schools are going to be built, is,

      23      obviously, the STEAM, the STREAM, the

      24      gifted-and-talented, the AP courses.

      25             But, we're looking down the road.







                                                                   67
       1             I don't want to lose, you know, a generation

       2      of kids when it comes to STEM and to STEAM and to

       3      gifted-and-talented.

       4             My -- my -- some of my communities are very

       5      upset with the gifted-and-talented because there's

       6      not enough programs in our districts.

       7             Do we have a -- are you getting more problems

       8      with that in other districts?

       9             CHANCELLOR CARMEN FARIÑA:  Yeah, well, what

      10      we've tried to do is increase the amount of

      11      enrichment programs in every single school.

      12             And I was just, again, in one of your

      13      schools, 112, Louise's school.

      14             SENATOR GOLDEN:  Yep.

      15             CHANCELLOR CARMEN FARIÑA:  That's where

      16      Commissioner Bratton and I went.

      17             And I asked her how she was doing.

      18             And she said what she's doing, she's doing a

      19      (indiscernible) enrichment for the students who need

      20      extra support in that area.

      21             So I do think that, in terms of -- we're

      22      trying to serve the kids at the top, the bottom, and

      23      the middle all simultaneously.

      24             And I think that is something we're really

      25      working on through professional development.







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       1             But, I'm happy to discuss this further.

       2             But I do think what we're thinking of doing

       3      in the Sunset Park area, in particular, is going to

       4      be very helpful.

       5             SENATOR GOLDEN:  And I -- because of time,

       6      EIPs.

       7             EIPs are down, I understand.  On some of our

       8      kids, somewhere around 40 percent of the programs

       9      they should be getting, they're not getting.

      10             I got to -- obviously, we all have large EIP

      11      programs.  And we might -- got to make sure they

      12      have the best possible opportunities for success.

      13             And believe it or not, my kid -- a lot of

      14      kids are getting a great, great education, but it's

      15      not everybody.

      16             My son is not taking it.  My son is out there

      17      on his own because of the process that you have to

      18      go through; the process going through the State,

      19      having to go to court every year.  And then, of

      20      course, not getting the services that are required.

      21             You're supposed to get, is another layer

      22      of -- an insult, actually, to that family that

      23      struggled to get those IEPs and can't get what

      24      they need for their kids.

      25             CHANCELLOR CARMEN FARIÑA:  Well, I think







                                                                   69
       1      we've made a lot of strides on this.

       2             And I think, you know, Senator Felder can

       3      also testify that we're working very hard on this.

       4             But I also want to tell you that we have

       5      increased our number of speech teachers.  We've

       6      increased our number of OT teachers.  We've

       7      increased the number of clinical psychologists.

       8             These are all very important people in the

       9      whole IEP process.

      10             So if you don't have the right personnel, you

      11      also don't have the correct services.

      12             The other thing I will tell you that we've

      13      tried, and this is where I think pre-K is going to

      14      be particularly helpful, because we were doing what

      15      we call "Turning 5"'; analyzing students before they

      16      came into kindergarten.

      17             Now we're getting -- catching kids one year

      18      earlier.  We have the "Turning 4" programs and the

      19      "Turning 3" programs so that we're able to analyze

      20      what students need prior to.

      21             Here, again, something we need to work even

      22      better at is our -- where we log in this

      23      information.  Our SESIS needs some improvement.

      24             And I think one of the things we've

      25      understood very well this year, is that special ed







                                                                   70
       1      has to be a top priority.

       2             I've always been -- whatever job I've ever

       3      had, one of the things that I made one of my top

       4      three priorities is students with special needs,

       5      because I believe those are the kids who need extra

       6      support.

       7             I do think we've done a good job.

       8             I think, like everything else, that

       9      particular one, more to be done.

      10             But we've put a lot of extra resources this

      11      year.  This budget has a lot more money for special

      12      ed and for both -- and for District 75.

      13             SENATOR GOLDEN:  Well, in closing, I want to

      14      say, thank you.

      15             And I want to, again, focus that we do these

      16      quarterly meetings with our community boards, with

      17      our communities, so we know what's going on, and we

      18      do them with a unit -- a city unit that's got

      19      Buildings, everybody, at that table, so we know

      20      where we're going.

      21             And, of course, I think we should do it with

      22      our legislators on a borough-wide approach.

      23             And the Mayor has got to be at some of these.

      24             And I know, in conversation -- I would

      25      imagine you're in conversation with the Mayor on a







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       1      regular basis.

       2             CHANCELLOR CARMEN FARIÑA:  Absolutely.

       3             SENATOR GOLDEN:  When do you brief with the

       4      Mayor?  Every week?  Or --

       5             CHANCELLOR CARMEN FARIÑA:  At least once a

       6      week.

       7             SENATOR GOLDEN:  Okay.  Thank you very much.

       8             SENATOR MARCELLINO:  Those weeklies -- those

       9      weekly meetings are scheduled?

      10             CHANCELLOR CARMEN FARIÑA:  Yes, I mean,

      11      depending -- there's always an emergency and we

      12      reschedule it.  But the reality is, that we do meet

      13      once a week.  And we have teams on both our sides

      14      who meet with each other.  So, there's a constant

      15      conversation back-and-forth.

      16             SENATOR MARCELLINO:  Senator Peralta.

      17             SENATOR PERALTA:  Thank you, Mr. Chairman.

      18             First and foremost, I just want to say that

      19      I am looking forward to our meeting that needed to

      20      be rescheduled yesterday.

      21             Thank you for waiting.

      22             But, today we are here to talk about mayor

      23      control.

      24             And first and foremost, I just want to say

      25      that I think you're doing a terrific job as







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       1      chancellor.

       2             But today we're here to talk about mayor

       3      control.

       4             And the issues here that have been brought up

       5      by some of my colleagues is the fact that, this is

       6      such an important issue, such a top priority for the

       7      Mayor; and, yet, he is not here.

       8             He has chosen to be at radio shows, and not

       9      be here at this hearing.

      10             And I can get your answer, when you said that

      11      you were up in Albany for a whole day, and you were

      12      at meetings and you testified.

      13             But as you know, one day of testimony, one

      14      day of meetings, doesn't move things in Albany.

      15             In fact, they don't move things anywhere in

      16      city hall.

      17             So I think that, if the Mayor, if this is

      18      such a top priority, I agree with my colleagues that

      19      the Mayor should be at these hearings and should be

      20      personally answering these questions.

      21             But be that as it may, we will move on, and

      22      I will ask you some of the questions that I would

      23      ask him.

      24             So, over the last two years, how many times

      25      have the full PEP (the Panel for Educational Policy)







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       1      denied a proposal or a contract referred to it for

       2      its approval by the DOE?

       3             CHANCELLOR CARMEN FARIÑA:  A few.

       4             Ursulina has the exact number.

       5             URSULINA RAMIREZ:  Yep.  One second.

       6             CHANCELLOR CARMEN FARIÑA:  I will tell you

       7      just all -- one of them in particular they asked to

       8      us revise, and to take back, and that was the Amazon

       9      contract.  And the Amazon contract was not supported

      10      because it did not have provisions for blind

      11      students.

      12             And we went back, and because of our

      13      purchasing power, we were able to get Amazon to redo

      14      the entire contract and provide Braille services

      15      through Amazon, not only for our students, but

      16      nationally.

      17             So I think that was a big step forward in

      18      terms of how we look at contracts.

      19             And our contract subcommittee on the PEP is

      20      particular vigilance.  In fact, they look at every

      21      single print, and bring to our attention the issues

      22      they want to discuss.

      23             Ursulina?

      24             URSULINA RAMIREZ:  We've actually altered

      25      five proposals, based on the panel and the CEC's







                                                                   74
       1      involvement.

       2             One was actual complete vote down by the

       3      panel, and the others were revisions or withdrawals.

       4             And, actually, currently, and as of last

       5      night, we're having -- engaging the panel members

       6      and the communities on several different co-location

       7      proposals that we pushed back for a couple of

       8      meetings, to continue to engage communities.  And

       9      those are scheduled to be voted on in June.

      10             SENATOR PERALTA:  Okay.  So one, in total,

      11      that has been completely denied, and five that have

      12      been sent back been for revision?

      13             URSULINA RAMIREZ:  Sorry.  One that was voted

      14      down, one was withdrawn, and the other three were

      15      revised.

      16             SENATOR PERALTA:  Okay.  And that one that

      17      was voted down, was that revised?

      18             URSULINA RAMIREZ:  No.

      19             The one that was voted down, we did not put

      20      back forward to the panel.

      21             SENATOR PERALTA:  Okay.  Good.

      22             You know, PEP is an issue that we as

      23      legislators are discussing, in terms of what the

      24      make-up will look like, and, is it working -- and

      25      these are some of the questions.







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       1             Is it working?

       2             Is there enough input by the parents?

       3             Do they actually have enough say when it

       4      comes to moving issues forward?

       5             And one of the concerns that I would like for

       6      you to address is the concerns that I've heard at

       7      meetings:  Is the PEP just a rubber stamp for the

       8      administration?

       9             And I -- it's a concern, so I want to bring

      10      it up, and I want to get clarification, and your

      11      side and your angle, and what factually happens.

      12             That's why I'm bringing up this question.

      13             CHANCELLOR CARMEN FARIÑA:  I would say that

      14      this PEP, right now, is a lot more independent than

      15      it would have been three or four years ago.

      16             I sat on both.

      17             Remember, I was deputy chancellor under the

      18      prior administration, and there were seldom

      19      pre-meetings.

      20             This PEP meets prior to every hearing two or

      21      three times, particularly when there's a contract to

      22      be discussed or a co-location.

      23             For example, yesterday's discussion on the

      24      co-locations, which is why we put them off for a

      25      while, almost every single PEP member had gone to







                                                                   76
       1      visit schools that were on the co-location site.

       2             So they actually go, they look, they

       3      interface with other people, and they come back with

       4      suggestions based on their school visits.

       5             So I think that it's really -- it's a very

       6      active PEP, very carefully selected to represent

       7      different interests.

       8             There's one PEP member who is very involved

       9      in special needs and has a special-needs child.  And

      10      every time there's a special-needs issue, we ask her

      11      to take a stance on that.

      12             We have another PEP member who is very

      13      engaged and involved with English-language learners.

      14             So I think the PEP members, to a large

      15      degree, other than the ones that are chosen by the

      16      borough presidents.

      17             Remember, there are five representatives, one

      18      from each of the borough presidents, so they

      19      certainly come with a voice based on their

      20      particular borough, and what they have been either

      21      instructed to say or to ask or to think about.

      22             So I think it is a very fair representation.

      23             I will tell you, they do a lot of talking

      24      among themselves.

      25             When they ask for more information, they've







                                                                   77
       1      asked for -- they've asked for people from my

       2      department.

       3             Like, they've asked Milady Baez to speak to

       4      them.  They've asked Corinne Rello-Anselmi, they've

       5      asked Lorraine Grillo, to speak.

       6             They ask me to make available to them, people

       7      that can give them more information.

       8             So I think it is pretty independent.

       9             I think, also, obviously, mayors do want to

      10      have their own agendas, to some degree, so I think

      11      putting it on there.

      12             But in terms of anyone who has gone to any of

      13      our PEP meetings, and last night was one of them,

      14      and parents get up and they talk and they say what

      15      they want to say.

      16             They are listened to.

      17             I want to be very clear, they are definitely

      18      listened to.

      19             But listening and agreeing are not always the

      20      same thing.

      21             And I think that's one of the things.

      22             So in terms of -- and parents e-mail me all

      23      the time.

      24             One of the reasons I do the town hall

      25      meeting, and I want to be clear on this, and







                                                                   78
       1      I didn't know this when I started this job:

       2             When I went to my first town hall meeting,

       3      and I believe it was in Queens, they gave me these

       4      cards that people -- it was Staten Island,

       5      actually-- and they gave me these cards of questions

       6      people had.

       7             So I took the questions, and I started

       8      reading the questions and answering them right on

       9      the spot.

      10             And, all of a sudden, there was total silence

      11      in the room.  And the CEC president, I guess, told

      12      me, You know, you don't usually answer the questions

      13      here.

      14             I said, Well, how do they get answered?

      15             Well, someone calls them up, or whatever.

      16             I have gone to every town hall meeting in

      17      every district.  I have not missed one district,

      18      some districts I've been to twice, and answered

      19      every question, within hours, asked of me.

      20             And in that particular one, the ones I didn't

      21      get to, I called that Saturday --

      22             I was new on the job.  I didn't have as many

      23      things on my head as I have now.

      24             -- and called parents at home.

      25             And one parent in particular hung up on me.







                                                                   79
       1             I said, This is the Chancellor.  I have your

       2      question, I want to answer you.

       3             And she hung up, and I called her back.

       4             And she said, Stop playing games.

       5             You know, I said, No, this really, really is

       6      the Chancellor.  I said, You asked a question.

       7             "Oh, my God."

       8             So I do believe in that.

       9             I was a parent of public-school kids.

      10             I expect the respect to be shown to everyone

      11      in the system.  And I do my town hall meetings with

      12      my own translation.

      13             I will -- you know, there was one meeting

      14      where the translators didn't show up, and I spoke in

      15      Spanish.

      16             I think it's really, really important that

      17      we're out there.

      18             We're public servants.  I take that very,

      19      very seriously.

      20             And I think, to some degree, how you evaluate

      21      mayoral control is, also, who does he choose as

      22      chancellor?

      23             Mayor de Blasio could have chosen anyone.

      24      I mean, I'm sure he interviewed a lot of other

      25      people.







                                                                   80
       1             But he chose me, and I think he chose me

       2      because I'm an educator.

       3             I am my own person.  We don't always agree on

       4      everything.  I'm very happy to say, you know,

       5      I think we should do this versus this.

       6             And I think that's an important way to

       7      evaluate a mayor and mayoral control:  Who's the

       8      chancellor?

       9             I represent him, certainly, under Joel Klein.

      10             Many times I went out and represented him at

      11      many meetings, particularly parent meetings.

      12             So --

      13             SENATOR PERALTA:  Well, I appreciate that,

      14      and I think that he did make a wise decision when he

      15      chose you as the chancellor, because we could look

      16      back at other decisions, that we don't need to talk

      17      about here.

      18             But this was a wise decision when it came to

      19      that.

      20             But, again, the reason that some of these

      21      concerns come up is because, I'll give you an

      22      example:

      23             Just recently, as you just stated, the

      24      Mayor -- every mayor, not just this particular

      25      mayor -- but every mayor has a certain agenda and







                                                                   81
       1      wants to move forward.  And sometimes they will take

       2      certain measures and recommendations, and they will

       3      accept them.  And sometimes they won't accept them,

       4      and they move forward.

       5             On a different front, just recently, a

       6      community-board forum in Queens, there was a vote on

       7      bike lanes, where the community boards rejected the

       8      bike lanes.

       9             And the day after -- I think maybe it was

      10      even the same day, maybe the day after, the Mayor

      11      said, That's nice.  We're moving forward.

      12             And, again, this is why some of the concerns

      13      pop up when it comes to PEP and others, and other

      14      organizations or committees, because, are we really

      15      listening to what the recommendations are?  And,

      16      will the agenda get in the way, even though the

      17      recommendation is contrary to what that particular

      18      mayor has on his agenda?

      19             CHANCELLOR CARMEN FARIÑA:  Like I said,

      20      I will answer for myself and my interactions, and

      21      I take very seriously.

      22             I will tell you that, our CEC Saturday

      23      meetings, which I really -- last almost three hours.

      24      And several of those presidents have become people

      25      I call for when I want opinions, because they are,







                                                                   82
       1      genuinely, the people who are closest to the parents

       2      in that district, and they're all different.

       3             That's another thing.

       4             When you're in the -- and, again, it doesn't

       5      even matter by borough.  Within each borough, there

       6      are all these neighborhoods that have different

       7      interests.

       8             You know, I don't want those kids in my

       9      building.

      10             Really?

      11             And what do those kids -- who are those kids?

      12             They're my kids.

      13             So how do you, you know, kind of balance

      14      everybody else's interests and come up with

      15      something?

      16             I can't stress enough, that when I'm stuck,

      17      and I get stuck once in a while, what's best for

      18      kids?

      19             And I don't think of my children, because

      20      I wasn't -- I was a mother who kind of said to my

      21      kids, you know, Get used to it.  Life isn't always

      22      fair.

      23             But -- so I think of my grandchildren

      24      because, for my grandchildren, I will go to hell and

      25      back to make sure they have the best things







                                                                   83
       1      possible.

       2             So how does everybody look at everybody in

       3      their building, as their grandson and granddaughter,

       4      and make sure we're doing the best for them?

       5             SENATOR PERALTA:  Yeah.  One -- just a --

       6      just two more questions, briefly.

       7             So last year, as it was noted here by the

       8      Chairman, $21.8 billion was invested in the

       9      Department of Education, which $9.15 billion came

      10      from Albany; or, 41 percent.

      11             So that is a majority -- if you were to

      12      compare it, that's a majority shareholder stake when

      13      it comes to education.

      14             So why shouldn't we, as state legislators,

      15      have a say, where we revisit on a much shorter time

      16      span, whether it's two or three years, to review

      17      mayoral control, to see how the system is going, see

      18      how it's playing out?

      19             Why not review the concept of mayor control

      20      on a timeline staggered, maybe a year after mayor

      21      elections so no one can say it is political, just to

      22      sort of see, how it's going?

      23             How the money is being spent; is it being

      24      spent wisely?

      25             Are the children moving forward?







                                                                   84
       1             Is the curriculum moving forward?

       2             Because I understand the Mayor comes here and

       3      he says that he wants seven years, but that's with

       4      the assumption he's going to be the mayor again.

       5             What if he's not the mayor again?

       6             Now we are stuck with a mayor who we have no

       7      say, if we are to give him seven years.

       8             We would have no say on how his curriculum is

       9      moving forward, we would have no say how the

      10      Education Department is moving, because we are

      11      stuck, and we gave him -- we've given him seven

      12      years.

      13             So why not the two-year or three-year, kind

      14      of similar to what the Assembly just passed

      15      yesterday?

      16             CHANCELLOR CARMEN FARIÑA:  Well, let me

      17      answer this two different ways.

      18             First and foremost, no matter what we do,

      19      I believe we're setting a foundation.

      20             No one's going to take away pre-K.

      21             No one is going to take away community

      22      schools.

      23             Also, evaluate us on our record, our

      24      promotion.

      25             Our graduation rate is growing.







                                                                   85
       1             Our dropout rate is lessening.

       2             Our attendance is moving.

       3             So those are successful things that anybody

       4      who comes after me has to continue or get better,

       5      because that's the foundation, that's the bottom

       6      line, that's the legacy.

       7             I think, also, certainly, as a former

       8      principal, I was a principal when, every two years,

       9      or one year and a half, we had a different

      10      chancellor.

      11             And why did we have a different chancellor?

      12             Because the chancellor and the mayor at the

      13      time got mad.

      14             One wanted one thing, one wanted another; it

      15      hit the papers.

      16             And all of a sudden, us and -- and I remember

      17      one situation particularly, where the principals got

      18      together, we had had a phone call in the district

      19      that I was principal in, "Okay, what do we do?"

      20             Do we stand up for the chancellor?  Do we try

      21      to take the wrath of the mayor at the time?

      22             It happened to be a chancellor that

      23      I particularly cared for, that I thought was doing

      24      really good work.

      25             And then, all of a sudden, the stability went







                                                                   86
       1      away and we were caught in the middle.

       2             I don't want the teachers and the principals

       3      to get caught in the middle of this.

       4             So I think, if we do a particularly good job,

       5      which I think we actually are doing better than

       6      good, that that foundation has to be for someone

       7      else to improve on and make better.

       8             No one, hopefully -- and that's, you know,

       9      one of the reasons I took on this job, and that's

      10      why I'm in a hurry to get it right, no one will undo

      11      what we say we've done and will work.

      12             SENATOR PERALTA:  And that's a very valid

      13      point.

      14             But, again, the chancellor serves at the

      15      pleasure of the mayor.

      16             So when the assumption is, when you're asking

      17      for seven years, is that you will be the next mayor.

      18             And what happens if he's not the next mayor,

      19      and the next mayor comes in and doesn't choose

      20      Carmen Fariña as the chancellor?

      21             And --

      22             CHANCELLOR CARMEN FARIÑA:  My husband will

      23      say "thank you."

      24                  [Laughter.]

      25             SENATOR PERALTA:  And then that next







                                                                   87
       1      chancellor will then have to work -- you're right --

       2      hopefully, with the foundation that you've laid out

       3      so they can build on it.

       4             But what if that chancellor just doesn't

       5      build on that foundation?

       6             Now we as state legislators will be stuck

       7      with the bill for the next four years of this

       8      individual's mayoralty.

       9             And that's why, again, I ask the question:

      10      Why not two years, why not three years, as opposed

      11      to seven?

      12             CHANCELLOR CARMEN FARIÑA:  I think

      13      (indiscernible) my statement, that what the Assembly

      14      said, with three years, certainly, to me, is a good

      15      starting point.

      16             Anything less than that, I think, would

      17      create more instability.

      18             But any mayor has the right to choose his

      19      commissioners.  You know, it's not just the

      20      chancellor, but, you know, the police commissioner,

      21      the fire commissioner.  It's the way it's been done

      22      forever.

      23             I think my job, and certainly the other

      24      commissioners' job, is to do the best job possible

      25      so everyone will be fighting against our record.







                                                                   88
       1             And I want to say publicly that I also think

       2      it's important that a chancellor be an educator.

       3             And that that be part of what I think

       4      Mayor de Blasio, from the very beginning, when he

       5      was running for mayor, he said, One promise I can

       6      make you is that I want an educator.

       7             And I think that's something the electorate

       8      holds the mayor accountable for.

       9             You know, if that's what you run on, then

      10      that's what you vote for.

      11             And if someone says, I want a CO, then that's

      12      what you vote for.

      13             But I do think the mayor has the right to

      14      make these decisions.

      15             SENATOR PERALTA:  Well, I just want to end by

      16      saying, (speaking in Spanish).

      17             CHANCELLOR CARMEN FARIÑA:  (Speaking in

      18      Spanish).

      19             SENATOR PERALTA:  (Speaking in Spanish).

      20             CHANCELLOR CARMEN FARIÑA:  (Speaking in

      21      Spanish.)

      22             SENATOR PERALTA:  Can I just say, thank you

      23      very much.

      24             I think she's doing a great job.

      25             SENATOR MARCELLINO:  I wish you guys wouldn't







                                                                   89
       1      talk Greek.

       2             Senator Stavisky.

       3             SENATOR STAVISKY:  Maybe I should say,

       4      (speaking in Spanish).

       5             You've touched on a question that I was going

       6      to ask you, and perhaps you can expand on it.

       7             If you were writing a job qualification for

       8      chancellor, what would you put on the list of

       9      required experiences or education or, whatever?

      10             CHANCELLOR CARMEN FARIÑA:  Well, obviously,

      11      an educator, but not a theorist.

      12             A practical educator.

      13             SENATOR STAVISKY:  Somebody -- my husband

      14      used to call them "educationists."

      15             CHANCELLOR CARMEN FARIÑA:  Well, I do think

      16      it's really typical of what we've done from the

      17      beginning.

      18             We've said, no -- no one can apply to become

      19      a principal who hasn't had seven years -- the first

      20      chancellor's reg that I put in place:  No one can

      21      become a principal without seven years pedagogical

      22      experience.

      23             It can be a combination of teacher, guidance

      24      counselor, whatever, but, seven years.

      25             Then we said, which is -- nobody thought we







                                                                   90
       1      would actually do:  All superintendents have to

       2      reapply for their job.  And only people who have

       3      been principals for a minimum number of years can

       4      become superintendents.

       5             Because how do you have credibility; how do

       6      you get -- how do you tell people to do their job if

       7      you haven't done part of it yourself?

       8             So I think qualification, and I'm not going

       9      to tell you how many years; but certainly, years, in

      10      terms of having served in some kind of educational

      11      program.

      12             I'd say another qualification: demonstrated

      13      experience in working well with others.

      14             And "others" could be elected officials,

      15      parents.

      16             Certainly, in my whole history, I've done all

      17      those things.  I've been able to talk to a variety

      18      of people.

      19             And I think that should be part of the

      20      qualifications for this job, because you need to be

      21      able to do that.

      22             And the other thing that I think -- I've

      23      thought a lot about in the past couple of years,

      24      particularly since I've taken on this job, being a

      25      good communicator.







                                                                   91
       1             I mean, we have added now, into all our

       2      professional development for administrators, a

       3      communications course.

       4             How to be able to write well, so when you

       5      communicate with your parents, and everything else,

       6      you can do that.

       7             How do you speak before an audience?

       8             I mean, that's part of the Common Core for

       9      our kids, but it should be part of us.

      10             It shouldn't be someone who doesn't think

      11      that they have to explain themselves.

      12             That's why I'm here today.

      13             I do believe being a good communicator, and a

      14      good listener, again, not always agreeing, but,

      15      listening, and being able to understand what people

      16      are saying in the context.

      17             So I think those are three qualifications

      18      that I think are crucial.

      19             SENATOR STAVISKY:  On another issue, along

      20      with Senator Marcellino, we were both high school

      21      teachers.  He just taught longer I did.

      22             But I've always had the idea that a school is

      23      run by the principal, and --

      24             SENATOR MARCELLINO:  The school is run by the

      25      secretaries.







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       1             CHANCELLOR CARMEN FARIÑA:  Oh, absolutely.

       2             SENATOR MARCELLINO:  Sorry about that.

       3             SENATOR STAVISKY:  No, no, you're right.

       4             CHANCELLOR CARMEN FARIÑA:  It's true.

       5             SENATOR STAVISKY:  It's true, because

       6      secretaries know where the bodies are buried.

       7             -- and they are supervised by

       8      superintendents.

       9             And at one point there were over 100 --

      10      I think 110 superintendents.

      11             We're down to 44.

      12             We have one for each of the 32 districts,

      13      plus two for District 75, and then miscellaneous

      14      ones in the boroughs.

      15             Are they impeding the ability of the

      16      principals?

      17             Is there a way where we can return some of

      18      the school authority to the principal to administer

      19      whatever the superintendent and chancellor,

      20      et cetera, hand down?

      21             CHANCELLOR CARMEN FARIÑA:  I think so, but

      22      I think autonomy needs to be earned, not given away;

      23      and let me tell you what I mean by that.

      24             Every superintendent was -- by the way,

      25      I meet with all the superintendents once a month,







                                                                   93
       1      and I spend at least an hour and a half.

       2             SENATOR STAVISKY:  You meet in a big room.

       3             CHANCELLOR CARMEN FARIÑA:  Well, 44 is not so

       4      bad.

       5             And, remember, that when they were

       6      (indiscernible), which was the prior system,

       7      although they had less schools, many of them did not

       8      have the rating power, as well as the support.

       9             So it was a little, you know, truncated in

      10      ways it shouldn't be.

      11             But these superintendents have the ability to

      12      both evaluate principals through the PPOs, as well

      13      as to visit schools and determine who needs more

      14      support.

      15             They've also been clearly instructed that

      16      there has to be the right principal in every

      17      building so that students and teachers succeed.

      18             But all the superintendents were told, and

      19      that's the way I've always run all my systems, to

      20      put their schools in tiers of three.

      21             Who are the principals that you basically

      22      leave, more or less, alone?  They make all their

      23      decisions.

      24             Who are the principals in the meaning -- in

      25      the middle, who you actually give a little bit more







                                                                   94
       1      support in the area they need it?

       2             Because, if I'm a principal, and I, all of a

       3      sudden, have to take on a special program that

       4      I know little about, I need support.

       5             And, who are the principals that need more

       6      supervision when making certain types of decisions?

       7             And one of the things we've said to look for,

       8      if you're a school with a, let's say, 30 percent

       9      turnover rate of teachers, I expect the

      10      superintendent to ask, Why?

      11             Why are teachers not staying beyond a certain

      12      amount of time?

      13             What are you doing as a principal that may

      14      not be encouraging teachers to stay, or supporting

      15      them, or whatever?

      16             So I do think it's a very individualized

      17      system.

      18             I do think that principals still have a lot

      19      of autonomy as a principal.  There are a lot of

      20      decisions.  Who you hire.

      21             The curriculum is not open for discussion in

      22      terms of, I expect certain things.

      23             You know, we had a few years where every

      24      teacher and every principal was doing their own

      25      thing.







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       1             So if you moved from an elementary school to

       2      a middle school, there was no continuity.

       3             If you had five feeder schools, for example,

       4      elementary schools moving into one school, those

       5      teachers had to figure out what school you came

       6      from, to figure out what math curriculum you were

       7      using, what literacy curriculum you were using.

       8             And that made middle school much more

       9      difficult, and it's already difficult enough.

      10             Middle school is, obviously, to me, the most

      11      difficult grades to teach.

      12             But you need to be able to have that

      13      consistency, so I think that's part of what the

      14      superintendents do.

      15             SENATOR STAVISKY:  Lastly, you spoke before

      16      about the gifted-and-talented programs, and those

      17      are programs that I happen to be interested in.

      18             I know we disagree on the issue of

      19      specialized high schools.

      20             But I am convinced that, with additional

      21      gifted-and-talented programs, particularly in the

      22      early grades, that it will become much less of an

      23      issue of diversity.

      24             And, how are you going to implement the

      25      additional gifted-and-talented programs that I think







                                                                   96
       1      really have to follow UPK?

       2             To me, it's a natural progression.

       3             CHANCELLOR CARMEN FARIÑA:  I totally agree

       4      with you, but let me tell how we're doing it a

       5      little bit different.

       6             I go back to the days when I was a teacher of

       7      gifted-and-talented, when it was called "IGC."

       8             And I was asked -- I said the other night,

       9      I must have a thing about people bringing me back

      10      from leaves.

      11             The superintendent asked me if I would give

      12      up my maternity leave, to come back and teach the

      13      first gifted-and-talented program at the time in

      14      Brooklyn, and it started in third grade, and there

      15      was a difference why it started in third grade.

      16             It started in third grade, because the

      17      ability to get the word out to all the parents of

      18      kids who were in second grade, across the district,

      19      because it wasn't just in one, school, were much

      20      better than if you started it younger.

      21             So, to me, we have four new

      22      gifted-and-talented programs starting in September.

      23             The other major difference, that is under,

      24      I guess, the State Legislature, now,

      25      gifted-and-talented teachers need to be certified.







                                                                   97
       1             There's a certification for

       2      gifted-and-talented, and very few universities

       3      actually give those courses.

       4             So we're working with the New York Historical

       5      Society and Hunter College to give that

       6      certification to the teachers we hope to hire for

       7      these programs.

       8             The other thing is in District -- let me

       9      see -- 7, 23, 16, I forgot the other one, but, there

      10      are four districts where we are going to be actually

      11      using multiple measures for all second-graders in

      12      that district.

      13             So we are going to be asking all

      14      second-graders to be eligible (indiscernible), and

      15      we will pick the ones that meet the criteria.  We

      16      have special rubrics.

      17             And it's all done, and I'm happy to share it

      18      with you.

      19             And those students will go to that

      20      third-grade gifted-and-talented, starting this

      21      September.

      22             The other thing I promised the -- and this we

      23      did in conjunction with the CEC presidents.  We had

      24      them all in on a Saturday, we discussed what the

      25      possibilities were to this.







                                                                   98
       1             And they will also have -- and it goes right

       2      to your issue -- honors programs in at least one of

       3      their middle schools for these kids who now will

       4      come up the pipeline.

       5             And then -- this is how I do think we will

       6      better prepare the kids to be able to get to

       7      screened programs, specialized high schools, because

       8      it will be a program.

       9             The reason I didn't do it in early childhood

      10      is, as a principal, I had a gifted-and-talented

      11      program.  And what we found is that a lot of

      12      students -- remember, and I don't know if it's

      13      true -- if you did it, it was, basically, based on

      14      verbal ability, and a lot of it had to do with

      15      socioeconomics, and it doesn't show long-term

      16      giftedness.

      17             So I would have, often, many students who

      18      would reach second grade, who still couldn't read

      19      and write, but were in that track.

      20             So, as a principal, we moved more to a

      21      school-wide enrichment model, overall.  And,

      22      actually, our test scores started zooming when we

      23      did that.

      24             So I do think there's a lot of ways to

      25      approach this, but I think honors classes in middle







                                                                   99
       1      school are crucial, advanced placement in

       2      high school is crucial.  And I think you're going to

       3      see a lot of more that of citywide.

       4             SENATOR STAVISKY:  Thank you.

       5             And, lastly, let me just say, I do appreciate

       6      your coming into the districts.

       7             We prefer that you come on a Thursday when

       8      we're in -- when we're not in Albany, but, you came

       9      to a CEC meeting in District 25 a couple of months

      10      ago.

      11             And I can testify, the Chancellor had cards;

      12      she read the questions, and then answered the

      13      questions.

      14             It was, obviously, not a pre-staged,

      15      whatever, and we thank you for that.

      16             SENATOR MARCELLINO:  Thank you, Senator.

      17             The Senator Perkins.

      18             SENATOR PERKINS:  Good morning.

      19             CHANCELLOR CARMEN FARIÑA:  Good morning.

      20             SENATOR PERKINS:  Thank you for being here,

      21      and for what you do for us, and for our children in

      22      the public schools.

      23             I'm not an automatic supporter of mayoral

      24      control.  It was born under the Bloomberg

      25      Administration, under a dictatorial approach.







                                                                   100
       1             And as a result, we have a -- you know, you

       2      started creating these charter schools, and they

       3      were not brought to our attention in terms of a, you

       4      know, sort of more open process.

       5             And, in fact, some of -- it was a period in

       6      which such schools were proliferating throughout the

       7      country, as a matter of fact.

       8             And, frankly, it turns out they -- most of

       9      the places where they existed, they didn't add up.

      10      And in many places they don't exist anymore.

      11             Nevertheless, we have them in the city.

      12             And -- so, first, I want to get an update,

      13      from your point view, about what's happening with

      14      the charters.

      15             And, you know, I'm a product of the New York

      16      City Public School System, and -- the old-school.

      17             So, I just want to get, sort of, your honest

      18      witness update on what's happening with these

      19      schools.

      20             CHANCELLOR CARMEN FARIÑA:  I think, you know,

      21      charter schools, like parochial schools, like public

      22      schools, are all different, and they all have

      23      different purposes, but they're all our kids.

      24             SENATOR PERKINS:  They're all our kids,

      25      there's no question about that.  That's why we all







                                                                   101
       1      are here.

       2             CHANCELLOR CARMEN FARIÑA:  And I visit

       3      charter schools to see, what are the things that we

       4      can learn from them?

       5             We've worked with two or three particular

       6      schools on certain things.

       7             And one of the pushes that I'm doing right

       8      now are in terms of using departmentalized

       9      instruction to teach math in fifth grade, which is

      10      one of the things I observed in a lot of the charter

      11      schools.

      12             One of the charter-school networks on Common

      13      has been particularly helpful in helping us with

      14      professional development of principals, in terms of

      15      the teacher feedback.

      16             And, also, I go to visit schools that, in

      17      many cases, particularly the independent charter

      18      schools that may need extra help and support, so --

      19      because if they're only one-of-a-kind, if I can put

      20      them in touch with another school that can help them

      21      in whatever area they need help.

      22             So I think it's, pretty much, an individual

      23      situation, based on the individual school,

      24      principals, and needs.

      25             But, again, it's parent choice.







                                                                   102
       1             There are other options.

       2             And I do think that, working together, we can

       3      help, you know, all kids succeed.

       4             SENATOR PERKINS:  So in that regard, what are

       5      the demographics of the students?

       6             Do you have a breakdown in terms of, you

       7      know, Black, White, Latino, et cetera?

       8             URSULINA RAMIREZ:  For our charter-school

       9      students, it is close to 50/50 in terms of

      10      male/female.  Approximately, 55 percent Black,

      11      37 percent Latino, 2.2 percent Asian, 4 percent

      12      White, and 2 percent Other.

      13             SENATOR PERKINS:  So 92 percent non-White.

      14             URSULINA RAMIREZ:  Correct -- or -- no.

      15             SENATOR PERKINS:  55 and 37 is, what?

      16             CHANCELLOR CARMEN FARIÑA:  You're close to

      17      75 percent.

      18             SENATOR PERKINS:  Huh?

      19             URSULINA RAMIREZ:  You're close to

      20      75 percent, 80 percent.

      21             SENATOR PERKINS:  55 and 37 is what --

      22      I thought I heard those numbers?

      23             URSULINA RAMIREZ:  Yes, that's correct.

      24             SENATOR PERKINS:  So 55 and -- I'm a

      25      public -- 55, 37.  92.







                                                                   103
       1             URSULINA RAMIREZ:  Yes.

       2             SENATOR PERKINS:  Right, 92.

       3             So that's sort of, like -- why is nobody else

       4      going to those schools if they're so good?

       5             Why aren't White parents sending their

       6      children to charter schools?

       7             CHANCELLOR CARMEN FARIÑA:  Well, remember,

       8      there are lots of options.

       9             You have independent schools, parochial

      10      schools, charter schools, and public schools.

      11             And I think, also, a lot of it is based on

      12      demographics, where you live in the city.

      13             I mean --

      14             SENATOR PERKINS:  Why are charter schools

      15      only in those places?

      16             CHANCELLOR CARMEN FARIÑA:  It's their choice.

      17             URSULINA RAMIREZ:  We have charter schools in

      18      some -- in neighborhoods that have predominantly

      19      White communities, including District 3 and

      20      District 2 and District 15.

      21             SENATOR PERKINS:  And in District 3, which

      22      I also represent, what are the demographics of those

      23      kids?

      24             URSULINA RAMIREZ:  I don't have the specifics

      25      on the demographics of the students in District 3,







                                                                   104
       1      but we can get back to you.

       2             SENATOR PERKINS:  Do you think it's any

       3      different than the general demographic picture?

       4             URSULINA RAMIREZ:  I can't make that the

       5      assumption.  I'd have to get back to you.

       6             SENATOR PERKINS:  Okay.

       7             Assuming that it isn't, why don't -- why are

       8      these schools only attracting parents of color?

       9             What is it that they're doing, or that

      10      they're not getting, in the traditional public

      11      school?

      12             CHANCELLOR CARMEN FARIÑA:  I mean, I think,

      13      to some degree, it's parent choice.

      14             Many of the schools have an extended time.

      15             And, you know, again, parents choose for all

      16      kinds of different reasons.

      17             SENATOR PERKINS:  Okay.  So -- but you have

      18      this significant disparity between where one group

      19      of parents send their children and another group of

      20      parents send their children.

      21             URSULINA RAMIREZ:  I also want to note that

      22      our -- as a system as a whole, the majority of our

      23      students are Black and Latino.

      24             SENATOR PERKINS:  So...?

      25             CHANCELLOR CARMEN FARIÑA:  In public schools.







                                                                   105
       1             URSULINA RAMIREZ:  In public schools.

       2             SENATOR PERKINS:  So...?

       3             So -- but that -- I understand that.

       4             You know, I'm a native New Yorker, so

       5      I understand that.

       6             But I'm trying to understand, what is it

       7      that -- why are White parents not using the

       8      so-called "charter schools"?

       9             CHANCELLOR CARMEN FARIÑA:  They are if

      10      they're in neighborhoods where they live.

      11             In District --

      12             SENATOR PERKINS:  What are the -- give me

      13      some statistics on that.

      14             CHANCELLOR CARMEN FARIÑA:  Well, I will tell

      15      you that there's one in my particular neighbor.

      16             SENATOR PERKINS:  But what are the

      17      percentage?  Give me some numbers.

      18             There's one in your particular neighborhood.

      19      Okay.

      20             URSULINA RAMIREZ:  I will get back to you on

      21      the specifics in the neighborhoods, so districts --

      22             SENATOR PERKINS:  Please do, when you get a

      23      chance, because I'm very concerned about that,

      24      because, you know, today is, you know, the day that,

      25      to some extent, we are acknowledging the civil







                                                                   106
       1      rights movement.

       2             And the fact that, if today is Malcolm X's

       3      birthday, and he, amongst others, like Dr. King,

       4      were concerned about these kind of disparities,

       5      because they tend to reflect some sort of

       6      second-class arrangements.

       7             You know, integration was an effort to get

       8      away from that.

       9             And I still see that, in this city, since the

      10      Bloomberg Administration, most of our children --

      11      most of the children who are in these schools are

      12      children of color.

      13             And why are these schools not in other

      14      communities?

      15             Why are these communities able to get what

      16      they need at a so-called "traditional public

      17      schools"?

      18             Whereas, these so-called "privatized" models,

      19      some of which are for-profit, are sort of where the

      20      parents have to go to get the same kind of -- the

      21      quality -- to get a quality education.

      22             CHANCELLOR CARMEN FARIÑA:  Well, my goal --

      23             SENATOR PERKINS:  And the question is, also,

      24      whether or not they are even getting that quality

      25      education.







                                                                   107
       1             CHANCELLOR CARMEN FARIÑA:  My goal is to make

       2      every school a school of choice.

       3             And I will tell that you one of the major

       4      things that we've tried to do, certainly in the last

       5      year and a half, is to put out grants, where charter

       6      schools and public schools in the same building

       7      would find ways to collaborate and work together.

       8             And that's, to me, where your issue of, how

       9      do you get people to work together and come

      10      together? is really, really important.

      11             But in terms of very specifics by district,

      12      we're very happy to provide that so you can see the

      13      breakdown by different parts of the city.

      14             SENATOR PERKINS:  Right, but has it ever

      15      occurred to you that there's this sort of picture of

      16      two types of systems, with two different types of

      17      populations?

      18             CHANCELLOR CARMEN FARIÑA:  I think, in

      19      neighborhoods, they tend to be pretty similar by

      20      neighborhood in terms of different parts of the

      21      city.  Some parts of the city may have more charter

      22      schools than others.

      23             But in terms of the ones that are within a

      24      geographical neighborhood, I think the numbers tend

      25      to be really rather -- pretty much the same,







                                                                   108
       1      ethnically.

       2             SENATOR PERKINS:  Can you -- can you -- you

       3      say you have that report?

       4             Could you generate that?

       5             URSULINA RAMIREZ:  We will get that for you.

       6             SENATOR PERKINS:  Yeah, please do, because

       7      I haven't seen that as I travel around my district

       8      and around other neighborhoods.  So -- and it

       9      bothers me, because it reminds me of an era that

      10      I think we want to -- we don't want to repeat.

      11             And so -- and I don't -- now, how are we

      12      doing with our charter schools?  How are they

      13      comparing?

      14             Do you have statistics that represent

      15      success?

      16             URSULINA RAMIREZ:  We'll get you the specific

      17      statistics, but we are seeing success in both our --

      18      some of our charter schools, and in our traditional

      19      public schools.

      20             SENATOR PERKINS:  And in terms of the

      21      charters, what do -- how do they compare?

      22             CHANCELLOR CARMEN FARIÑA:  To each other, or

      23      to the public schools?

      24             SENATOR PERKINS:  To the public schools,

      25      yeah, because --







                                                                   109
       1             CHANCELLOR CARMEN FARIÑA:  In terms of ELA

       2      scores, public schools are doing a little bit

       3      better.

       4             And in terms of math scores, the charter

       5      schools are doing a little bit better.

       6             SENATOR PERKINS:  So you have -- so you will

       7      send me that report?

       8             CHANCELLOR CARMEN FARIÑA:  Yes, we have that

       9      report.  It's public.

      10             SENATOR PERKINS:  Have you looked at what's

      11      happening with them in other parts of the country?

      12             CHANCELLOR CARMEN FARIÑA:  We've looked at

      13      some other cities, but all of them have implemented

      14      them a little differently.

      15             And I think the biggest lesson learned from

      16      us, is that there needs to be more sharing of

      17      practices between the charter world and the

      18      public-school world.

      19             SENATOR PERKINS:  Just give me an example of

      20      what you mean.

      21             CHANCELLOR CARMEN FARIÑA:  We looked at, what

      22      are some of the practices, or some of the

      23      bottom-line philosophies?

      24             I'll give you a two examples.

      25             Un-Common-schools network is doing a







                                                                   110
       1      particularly strong engagement with something called

       2      "relay college," that they actually formed, and that

       3      does very specific training of principals and

       4      teachers in professional development.

       5             And we have seen that some of those schools

       6      were getting good results, so we actually approached

       7      them about working, particularly in District 23, 19,

       8      and 17, I believe, in Brooklyn.

       9             And we're piloting this year -- we've been

      10      doing this for over a year -- to see if we have

      11      better success using this process.

      12             Another program that we hope to do, one of

      13      the other charter-schools networks is doing a

      14      particularly good job, not just of getting their

      15      high school kids into college, but keeping them

      16      there beyond freshman year.

      17             And we're looking to see what they've done

      18      particularly well, to be able to replicate some of

      19      that work within our own high school --

      20             SENATOR PERKINS:  Which charter school is

      21      that, by the way?

      22             CHANCELLOR CARMEN FARIÑA:  That's the

      23      KIPP charter schools.

      24             SENATOR PERKINS:  KIPP charter schools?

      25             And are there any others, other than KIPP?







                                                                   111
       1             CHANCELLOR CARMEN FARIÑA:  Well, one of these

       2      schools I visited, which was the all-girls prep, was

       3      doing some interesting work with departmentalization

       4      in math.

       5             And it was one of the places where we started

       6      thinking about doing departmentalization in some

       7      subjects, only in elementary school, which was not a

       8      normal practice.

       9             But I also want to say that I think they have

      10      a lot to learn from us as well.  There's a lot of

      11      things that we do well.

      12             So having them -- we've invited principals,

      13      who want to, to be part of our district principals

      14      conferences, if they choose to.

      15             There are several principals who actually

      16      come to the public-school principals' meeting so

      17      they have someone else to talk to.

      18             So I think there's a lot of common ground

      19      that we can learn from each other, and I look

      20      forward to seeing how else we might work together.

      21             SENATOR PERKINS:  So do you have a -- do you

      22      do any kind of a report when you make those type of

      23      analyses and those type of -- when you recognize

      24      those type of successes or even failures?

      25             Do you have reports that represent that?







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       1             CHANCELLOR CARMEN FARIÑA:  We haven't done --

       2             SENATOR PERKINS:  Because if you have --

       3      nothing, you said -- I'm sorry.

       4             CHANCELLOR CARMEN FARIÑA:  I said, we haven't

       5      done it up until now.  But --

       6             SENATOR PERKINS:  Well, why not?

       7             If you have a thing that's working --

       8             CHANCELLOR CARMEN FARIÑA:  Well, we get --

       9      because we get academic results.

      10             SENATOR PERKINS:  You get bragging rights, to

      11      be able to report that.

      12             CHANCELLOR CARMEN FARIÑA:  Yeah, okay.

      13             URSULINA RAMIREZ:  For the charters that we

      14      do authorize, because DOE is an authorizer for a

      15      handful of charters, we do have reports on their

      16      successes, and where they need areas of improvement.

      17             SENATOR PERKINS:  And the measures that --

      18      and what -- and the practices and procedures that

      19      have resulted in those --

      20             URSULINA RAMIREZ:  And their successes.

      21             SENATOR PERKINS:  -- then using the regular

      22      traditional public school system, as you were

      23      supposed to do when they were born there to begin

      24      with?

      25             Because, as you know, the whole purpose of







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       1      the charter movement --

       2             URSULINA RAMIREZ:  Yes, correct.

       3             CHANCELLOR CARMEN FARIÑA:  Yes, was

       4      innovation.

       5             SENATOR PERKINS:  -- was as an experiment,

       6      not to proliferate, but to share moments of success,

       7      practices of success, that would then improve the

       8      public -- the traditional public school system.

       9             In other parts of the country, that they did

      10      not -- they were not able to do that.

      11             URSULINA RAMIREZ:  And I think --

      12             SENATOR PERKINS:  You claim, in

      13      New York City, you've been able to do that.

      14             So do you have a report that represents how

      15      this charter school helped us understand how best to

      16      teach kids in the regular traditional public

      17      schools?

      18             Do you have bragging rights that you have

      19      compiled in terms of some kind of report?

      20             Because if you do, that would be a good

      21      thing, not just for New York City, but for other

      22      parts of the country as well.

      23             CHANCELLOR CARMEN FARIÑA:  Well, we just

      24      started, this year, the district-charter school

      25      partnerships -- which is, partially, to do exactly







                                                                   114
       1      as you say -- to ask charter schools and public

       2      schools to apply for these grants, where we can

       3      actually see how we each help each other.

       4             I do think that the things that we learn the

       5      most from are things that are truly innovative.

       6             Part of the reason why we started what we

       7      call the "PROS program," is to allow schools who

       8      want to try some of these innovative things, to not

       9      follow UFT rules, not follow DOE regulations.

      10             One of the schools that we're looking at for

      11      innovation is a school that decide to have four days

      12      a week -- teachers working four days a week.

      13             Students are in school five days, but the

      14      teachers work four days a week, up until 5:00.

      15             They have after-school programs that fit into

      16      the program.

      17             And to see if this indeed helps us with

      18      teacher retention, teacher recruitment.

      19             We have another school that is looking at a

      20      very different way to serve special-needs kids, in

      21      terms of extra support, but in a different way.

      22             So I think we're trying to be very innovative

      23      ourselves within our own framework.

      24             We have -- we will have, at the end of this

      25      year, 200 schools that are PROS schools, that are







                                                                   115
       1      going to be public schools trying something

       2      different than they have in the past.

       3             SENATOR PERKINS:  So I just want to be clear:

       4             So you have charter schools that have

       5      exemplified techniques, or other kinds of ways of

       6      success, that you -- that you have been able to

       7      bring toward -- to traditional public schools, and

       8      sort of replicate that success?

       9             Do you have reports on that?

      10             Because that's bragging rights.

      11             And it would seem to me, that if charter

      12      schools are doing wonderful things that can be done

      13      in the traditional public schools, where the vast

      14      majority of the kids are, then that should be

      15      something that's reported, that we who are

      16      interested in these schools should know about, and

      17      there should be a document, what we've learned from

      18      charter schools, and how they've improved our

      19      traditional public schools, and why we should

      20      continue in that regard.

      21             URSULINA RAMIREZ:  And what I --

      22             SENATOR PERKINS:  Kind of an idea.

      23             You understand what I'm trying to say?

      24             CHANCELLOR CARMEN FARIÑA:  Yes.

      25             URSULINA RAMIREZ:  We hear what you're --







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       1             SENATOR PERKINS:  But as long as they've been

       2      around, there's been no report that has said:

       3      Charter schools are doing wonderful things.  A, B,

       4      C, or D is what we've learned, and look at how we've

       5      been able to put that into the traditional public

       6      school, where the vast majority of kids are.

       7             URSULINA RAMIREZ:  And the Mayor made an

       8      announcement on his Equity and Excellence

       9      Initiative, which was the district-charter school

      10      partnership which the Chancellor just discussed.

      11             And it is getting -- it is being launched for

      12      this September of this upcoming year.

      13             And what we can do, is develop a report to

      14      talk about the successes, both from the -- and the

      15      learnings that are happening within that program.

      16             SENATOR PERKINS:  But why haven't we done

      17      that up to now?

      18             CHANCELLOR CARMEN FARIÑA:  Because it's

      19      individual strategies.

      20             SENATOR PERKINS:  The charter schools have

      21      been around here for how long?

      22             CHANCELLOR CARMEN FARIÑA:  I don't know.

      23             Ten years?

      24             URSULINA RAMIREZ:  Some around ten years.

      25             CHANCELLOR CARMEN FARIÑA:  About ten years.







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       1             SENATOR PERKINS:  Okay, it's been a decade of

       2      charters.

       3             Where's the charter report on success, in

       4      terms of how it has helped our traditional public

       5      schools, where the vast majority of the kids go, and

       6      where the whole idea of the charter was towards that

       7      end?

       8             That was the whole purpose of the charter:

       9      Not to expand the movement so that charter

      10      developments would get rich; but, rather, so that

      11      the children would get rich with education.

      12             So where is that report that says the riches

      13      have been shared?

      14             CHANCELLOR CARMEN FARIÑA:  Well, I will tell

      15      you that you will have it probably next year.

      16             But I will tell you that, in cases where

      17      there are successes, it's a particular

      18      methodology --

      19             SENATOR PERKINS:  But if you've been

      20      compiling this information for ten years, why are we

      21      now waiting till next year to get a report?

      22             What stage are we in?

      23             I'm just saying --

      24             CHANCELLOR CARMEN FARIÑA:  No, no,

      25      I understand.







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       1             SENATOR PERKINS:  -- because I'm bothered by

       2      it, because the children who, for the most part, in

       3      these schools, are children from neighborhoods that

       4      I represent, even in District 3, which is not quite

       5      Harlem, but it is the Upper West Side.

       6             But be that as it may, and I've looked at

       7      this in other countries -- not in other countries --

       8      in other cities and states, particularly in Albany

       9      where they all closed down, and other places of the

      10      country, they're all closed down.

      11             How come the ones in New York City stand, but

      12      never -- as a success model, but they don't --

      13      reports that brag about that, as it relates to our

      14      public schools in general?

      15             URSULINA RAMIREZ:  We will get back to you on

      16      the report.

      17             SENATOR PERKINS:  All right.

      18             Thank you.

      19             SENATOR MARCELLINO:  Thank you, Senator.

      20             We've been joined by Senator Krueger, but

      21      Senator Felder has a question.

      22             SENATOR FELDER:  Thank you.

      23             Thank you very much.

      24             My questions are in no particular order, so

      25      you'll have to forgive me.







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       1             I've been trying to listen.

       2             You've mentioned listening a number of times,

       3      so I've been trying to listen throughout the

       4      hearing.

       5             You mentioned that when you -- when the Mayor

       6      and you were up in Albany, you met with many people.

       7             Did you meet with Senator Stewart-Cousins,

       8      the leader of the Democrat Minority?

       9             CHANCELLOR CARMEN FARIÑA:  I did on the prior

      10      trip to Albany, yes.

      11             SENATOR FELDER:  I'm talking with the Mayor.

      12             When the -- when you -- and what about the

      13      Assembly Leader, Carl Heastie?

      14             CHANCELLOR CARMEN FARIÑA:  The Mayor met with

      15      Carl Heastie.

      16             SENATOR FELDER:  Okay.  And what about

      17      Senator Flanagan, the leader of the Majority in the

      18      Senate?

      19             CHANCELLOR CARMEN FARIÑA:  I met with him on

      20      a prior trip to Albany.

      21             SENATOR FELDER:  Did the Mayor meet with him

      22      when he come up to Albany?

      23             CHANCELLOR CARMEN FARIÑA:  I have no idea.

      24             SENATOR FELDER:  Can you ask somebody?

      25             I'm sure somebody knows the answer to that







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       1      question.

       2             CHANCELLOR CARMEN FARIÑA:  Not on the last

       3      trip.

       4             SENATOR FELDER:  Yeah.

       5             So I think -- I think -- I think -- I think

       6      that would have been a good thing.

       7             I think it would have been a good thing to --

       8      that the Mayor, since he's not coming to another

       9      hearing.  And I -- so far, I haven't heard anyone

      10      explain why, and I think people are disappointed

      11      that, when he was up in Albany, I think we can

      12      agree, that we -- that it would have been the right

      13      thing.

      14             You know, this -- the topic of mayoral

      15      control has become more political than -- than --

      16      than real.

      17             And the discussions about seven years,

      18      three years, one year, this is not, in my mind --

      19      I speak for myself, so I apologize to my colleagues

      20      in advance -- this is not a lower --

      21             SENATOR KRUEGER:  We know you don't speak for

      22      us.  It's okay.

      23             SENATOR FELDER:  Thank you.

      24             Thank you.

      25             SENATOR KRUEGER:  Thank you.







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       1             SENATOR FELDER:  You got me off track.  Now

       2      I don't know what I wanted to say.

       3                  [Laughter.]

       4             SENATOR FELDER:  Anyway, this is not a Lower

       5      East Side bargain, where you walk into a store -- at

       6      least used to -- you walked into the store and you

       7      say, "How much is this suit?

       8             The guy says, "200," because he wants 100.

       9             Then the other guy says, "I'm giving you 50,"

      10      because he wants to pay 75.

      11             So, you know, people who say, no, I --

      12      I mean, I've been looking at some of the -- the --

      13      you know, the testimony that's been given to us.  A

      14      lot of -- I've been trying to look through it.

      15             I would just suggest -- I'm going to have to

      16      leave soon as well -- but it would be very helpful,

      17      if I had stayed longer, for people who come up to

      18      testify to just start out by saying whether they're

      19      in favor, or not in favor, or, they're in favor,

      20      but...

      21             So -- because we kept on saying about that

      22      it's about the children.

      23             So the years, I -- I -- in my mind, it's

      24      pretty clear that we're in favor -- "we,"

      25      "Simcha Felder," I'm in favor of mayoral control.







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       1             And the only question is about improving.

       2      You know, highlighting the things that work well,

       3      and highlighting the things that can be improved.

       4             So the -- the -- a lot of the discussions --

       5      and I'm looking at you only because I'm about to ask

       6      you questions, but it's not addressed to you --

       7      I think this is -- a lot of the discussions that

       8      have been taking place are political dreck.

       9             And for those that don't know what that

      10      means, that's a Yiddish term for garbage, trash, or

      11      anything else you want.

      12             So, in my mind, I think that it's important

      13      to focus on the education issues specifically,

      14      because one of the -- one of the people who was

      15      testifying had something called a "report card," and

      16      I think it's pretty good.

      17             I don't necessarily agree with their

      18      assessment, but they go through items, such as,

      19      education, special transparency, accountability,

      20      special education, things like that.

      21             And that's what I think -- that's the focus.

      22             So having said that, and feeling a little

      23      better getting that off my mind, so what I wanted to

      24      know is, I'm curious, the mayoral-control issue,

      25      really, the groundwork for that was laid by







                                                                   123
       1      Mayor Giuliani.

       2             I think that, without that, Mayor Bloomberg

       3      would never have been able to do it.

       4             During that time -- I understand that you've

       5      been in education, an educator, for many, many

       6      years.

       7             During that time, were you in favor of

       8      mayoral control of the system?

       9             CHANCELLOR CARMEN FARIÑA:  I think in terms

      10      of the stability of the system, I've always wanted

      11      that to be part of it.

      12             I also --

      13             SENATOR FELDER:  Yeah, but that wasn't my

      14      question.

      15             CHANCELLOR CARMEN FARIÑA:  -- I think that,

      16      certainly, as a superintendent, I felt that it was

      17      important to not have a patronage system, where

      18      principals were often chosen for political reasons.

      19             So that mayoral control did take that away.

      20             SENATOR FELDER:  All right.  You and I know

      21      that you don't want to answer the question, so

      22      I won't ask it to you a third time.

      23             CHANCELLOR CARMEN FARIÑA:  No, I will say,

      24      yes, definitely, in the sense that there was too

      25      much patronage in the system, and people got jobs







                                                                   124
       1      they were not necessarily qualified for.

       2             And with mayoral control, I think putting

       3      superintendents in charge of picking principals is a

       4      much better system in education.

       5             SENATOR FELDER:  Okay.  I apologize.

       6             CHANCELLOR CARMEN FARIÑA:  No, that's okay.

       7             SENATOR FELDER:  Thank you for answering the

       8      question.

       9             What -- so -- you know, when you go on

      10      interviews, they always ask you, What's your

      11      weakness?

      12             Right?

      13             So I'd like to ask you:  What do you think

      14      are problems that have to be addressed in the

      15      education system as it is?

      16             CHANCELLOR CARMEN FARIÑA:  Oh, my goodness.

      17             We could have a whole other hearing on this.

      18             I think making sure that --

      19             SENATOR MARCELLINO:  Don't encourage me.

      20                  [Laughter.]

      21             CHANCELLOR CARMEN FARIÑA:  I think the most

      22      important thing is that everyone has to see

      23      themselves invested, and need to support public

      24      education.

      25             This is not parents who need to be invested.







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       1      This is everyone.

       2             The CEOs of companies.

       3             Public -- everyone has to see public

       4      education as an investment.

       5             And I think, for too long, we've only tried

       6      to get parents and educators involved.

       7             It's got to be everybody, and it's got to be

       8      everybody working together, because we're not going

       9      to have the workforce of tomorrow if not everyone is

      10      invested.

      11             So I would say that's one of the things that

      12      is a real challenge, and it's one of the reasons,

      13      also, we have expanded the groups of people we speak

      14      to.

      15             I actually meet with COs.  I meet with the

      16      New York City Partnership.

      17             Everyone needs to understand the importance

      18      of public education.

      19             SENATOR FELDER:  Okay.

      20             I don't want to forget to thank you, and

      21      thank the Mayor, for the good -- all the good work,

      22      clearly.

      23             And I just want to tell the Chair, I did get

      24      a response to my question.

      25             My mother always said I was special.







                                                                   126
       1             So, I did get a response to my question.

       2             But this question, you didn't answer me.

       3             I'm asking you, I want to know, what you

       4      believe are the weaknesses in your educational

       5      system at this time that should be improved.

       6             CHANCELLOR CARMEN FARIÑA:  Well, I certainly

       7      think our work with special-needs students and

       8      English-language learners needs, you know, more

       9      concentration.

      10             It's not because we're not trying, but it's

      11      just a very heavy lift.

      12             I think, also, you know, kids in temporary

      13      housing and homeless shelters; big, big issue.

      14             And with all the support we're putting in it,

      15      it's almost like something that requires 24/7 kind

      16      of attention.  So I think that's it.

      17             I think one of the other major challenges is

      18      also recruitment of the best teachers, and making

      19      sure, particularly teachers to work with

      20      special-needs kids and English-language learners, we

      21      want to increase our dual-language programs, but we

      22      don't have enough teachers who speak two languages

      23      in academic ways.

      24             So there's a lot of challenges.  There's

      25      enough challenges to keep me busy for a very, very







                                                                   127
       1      long time.

       2             But I think focusing on the successes,

       3      I mean, one of the things we've been doing a lot is

       4      partnering schools that are successful in something.

       5             So, learning-partner showcase schools; so

       6      schools that have solved a problem, that can be

       7      partnered with another school who has the same

       8      problem.

       9             But, challenges, there are more than enough

      10      to go around.

      11             SENATOR FELDER:  I would just say that, when

      12      somebody like me asks you what your weakness is,

      13      that may be a compliment, because it's clear to me

      14      that there have been many successes, without

      15      question.

      16             CHANCELLOR CARMEN FARIÑA:  Thank you.

      17             SENATOR FELDER:  On another topic:  Last

      18      time, when you were in Albany with the Mayor,

      19      I asked what the ratio of psychologists-to-student

      20      is in the system.

      21             I'm wondering whether you have that

      22      information?

      23             URSULINA RAMIREZ:  Actually I do.  One

      24      second.

      25             SENATOR FELDER:  Thank you.







                                                                   128
       1             So I'll go on to the next question.

       2             CHANCELLOR CARMEN FARIÑA:  And we've

       3      increased the number in this particular budget.

       4             SENATOR FELDER:  I'll go on to the next

       5      question while you find that.

       6             I am concerned that, although the City has

       7      invested tremendous amounts of money in protecting

       8      our children, the issue of terrorism is on

       9      everyone's mind.

      10             And at this point, in the city schools, we

      11      have security officers that do not carry guns.  They

      12      are unarmed.

      13             Now, I'm -- I -- I am very concerned that --

      14      that, you know, a Brinks truck picking up $1 million

      15      from a bank has two guys, carrying guns, and that

      16      the schools do not have officers carrying guns.

      17             I want to know what you think about that.

      18             CHANCELLOR CARMEN FARIÑA:  This would

      19      certainly not be one of the things that I would

      20      pursue.

      21             We -- when we have emergencies, we call our

      22      NYPD that we work very closely.

      23             But I don't think having school safety

      24      officers carrying guns is the answer to any of these

      25      problems.







                                                                   129
       1             SENATOR FELDER:  What do you think is the

       2      answer?

       3             CHANCELLOR CARMEN FARIÑA:  I think

       4      better-trained school safety officers, which we

       5      already have.

       6             Our crime is down 29 percent.

       7             You know, anything can happen at any time and

       8      anyplace.

       9             But I do believe that we have very good rules

      10      and regulations on how you enter a building.

      11             They know who I am, and yet I have to show ID

      12      when I go into a building.

      13             And I think that -- the things that we have

      14      in place right now are fine.

      15             Having more guns in schools is not the answer

      16      to this issue.

      17             SENATOR FELDER:  Well, I wasn't suggesting

      18      that the kids should have guns.

      19             I hope you know that.

      20             SENATOR MARCELLINO:  In terms of your other

      21      question, it's one to 133 students.

      22             SENATOR FELDER:  You have 1 psychologist for

      23      every 133 students?

      24             CHANCELLOR CARMEN FARIÑA:  That doesn't count

      25      guidance counselors and other -- and social workers.







                                                                   130
       1             Remember, there are many categories of

       2      student-support people.

       3             SENATOR FELDER:  And what was the number a

       4      year ago?  Do you know?

       5             URSULINA RAMIREZ:  I will get you the number

       6      from last year.

       7             SENATOR FELDER:  If you don't mind, I'll

       8      continue with the questions.

       9             I'm just curious, how many schools have you

      10      visited in my district?

      11             CHANCELLOR CARMEN FARIÑA:  Your -- I don't

      12      know specifically by district, but by this time,

      13      I have visited over 200 schools.  Probably more.

      14             SENATOR FELDER:  But I had to ask you a

      15      question that's self-centered entirely.

      16             CHANCELLOR CARMEN FARIÑA:  Be my guest.

      17             SENATOR FELDER:  You know that.

      18             So I want to know how many schools you --

      19             CHANCELLOR CARMEN FARIÑA:  Is there a

      20      specific school in your district you want --

      21             SENATOR FELDER:  No.  I just want to continue

      22      feeling special.

      23             I want to know how many schools you visited

      24      in my district.

      25             CHANCELLOR CARMEN FARIÑA:  I can't give you







                                                                   131
       1      that number.

       2             I mean, I have a school tracking record, that

       3      I actually write every school I visited to, so I'm

       4      happy to send that to you.  I can do it from --

       5             SENATOR FELDER:  Yes.

       6             But I don't want to know how many schools you

       7      visited.

       8             CHANCELLOR CARMEN FARIÑA:  No, no.  I will

       9      let you know, specifically in your district --

      10             SENATOR FELDER:  I want to know how many of

      11      Simcha's schools you visited, please.

      12             SENATOR KRUEGER:  Can I make a friendly

      13      amendment?

      14             SENATOR FELDER:  Yes.

      15             SENATOR KRUEGER:  Thank you.

      16             He's ceding time.

      17             We all want to feel special.

      18             So if you get him an answer, get us all

      19      answers.

      20             SENATOR MARCELLINO:  Okay, I will.

      21             SENATOR KRUEGER:  Thank you.

      22             SENATOR FELDER:  Why did you some come so

      23      early?

      24             SENATOR KRUEGER:  I thought I came quite

      25      late.







                                                                   132
       1             I thought you would be done, but, no.

       2             SENATOR MARCELLINO:  Move on.

       3             SENATOR FELDER:  You've been very helpful to

       4      me.

       5             Another -- one other issue, is the discussion

       6      about schools for children that will not to go

       7      college, and who are extremely talented, but don't

       8      have any patience to sit.

       9             I consider myself one of those people.

      10             So years ago, they had schools that taught

      11      trades.  And, you know, there's been so much

      12      discussion about Common Core.

      13             At the end of the day, a certain amount of

      14      the population will never do well on any of those

      15      tests because God did not create these kids to sit

      16      anywhere.  That they have their own talents, and

      17      will be brilliant plumbers, mechanics, painters, or

      18      whatever else.

      19             So I'm just wondering if there's anything

      20      that you can do or speak towards, bringing back some

      21      of that, so that -- so that a kid that may not be a

      22      mathematician, but will be a great contractor and

      23      earn a good livelihood, doesn't have to feel like

      24      there's something wrong with them when they go to

      25      school.







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       1             CHANCELLOR CARMEN FARIÑA:  I'm so glad you

       2      asked.

       3             We have invested in 40 new, and strengthening

       4      the ones we have, what we call "CTE" programs.

       5             CTE programs are multiple pathways.

       6             That means, that you can go to college,

       7      you're still college-ready, but, if you choose to go

       8      directly into a trade, that's fine.

       9             I mean, for example -- and, in fact, I think

      10      it was in your district, I went to something this

      11      Saturday, and I met with the head of the carpenters

      12      union.  And one of the things that he told me, which

      13      I did not know, that the carpenters union also

      14      includes the divers union, because divers are

      15      carpenters underwater.  And that jobs from the

      16      divers -- from divers start at $80,000 a year.

      17             So we -- right away, we exchanged cards.

      18      And, I already have someone meeting with him,

      19      because we not only -- and this is why I talk about

      20      everyone has to be involved -- we have to get the

      21      unions more involved in working in our high schools

      22      and in our colleges, because having a union card --

      23      the plumbers, the carpenters, union -- all these are

      24      jobs for the future, and I think it's really

      25      important.







                                                                   134
       1             Our CTE programs in pharma -- that's why

       2      I said I need your help.

       3             We can create even more CTE programs if the

       4      state laws would change to allow the degrees or

       5      licensing for people.

       6             Like, for example, if you have a pharmacy

       7      program, it's a classroom teacher, but it's a

       8      pharmacist.

       9             If it's a health program, it's someone in the

      10      health.

      11             And we cannot hire them long enough -- enough

      12      because the State has not processed these.

      13             So this is something we really want to work

      14      on.

      15             I definitely --

      16             SENATOR FELDER:  Yeah, I like the answer to

      17      that question, because I happen to have

      18      legislation -- proposed legislation on some of

      19      the -- what you discussed.

      20             So, again, I want to just end my questions by

      21      thanking you, and thanking the Mayor, for the good

      22      work that's been done, and look forward for -- to

      23      improvements.

      24             And thank you, Mr. Chair.

      25             SENATOR MARCELLINO:  Thank you, Senator.







                                                                   135
       1             At this point in time, all the members who

       2      have indicated they wish to question have done so,

       3      and we'll mercifully let you go, to get back to

       4      your -- the schools and running of the schools.

       5             I just want to reiterate:  I would have

       6      preferred -- no offense -- Mayor de Blasio being

       7      here.  His testimony, his answering these kind of

       8      questions, in concert with you, would have been much

       9      more helpful to this Committee, and would have

      10      spoken volumes about the system and about mayoral

      11      control.

      12             That was what we're here about:

      13             What is the Mayor's input?

      14             How does the Mayor handle this?

      15             What would the Mayor be doing?

      16             How has it made a difference to have mayoral

      17      control?

      18             Your testimony, fantastic.  I appreciate it.

      19             But we needed to hear from him.  We needed

      20      follow-up questions to be heard from him.

      21             We have questions, which we've given you

      22      copies of, that need to be answered; and, hopefully,

      23      we'll get them.

      24             You don't have to do it right now, but if you

      25      can get it to us, to my office, and I'll distribute







                                                                   136
       1      it to the members who have asked for them, make sure

       2      everybody gets a copy, what's proposed for them, so

       3      there's no loss in that.

       4             But, again, I reiterate:  It would have --

       5      this would have been a better situation if the Mayor

       6      were here to defend his -- and I don't mean defend

       7      in a negative way -- but to defend his running of

       8      the city schools; that, I think is an imperative for

       9      us.

      10             Thank you again.

      11             CHANCELLOR CARMEN FARIÑA:  Well, I thank you

      12      for the opportunity.

      13             And I know I speak for the Mayor as well when

      14      I say, in this particular situation, we really are

      15      very united in terms of wanting stability, and to do

      16      what's best for the students of the city of

      17      New York.

      18             So, thank you very much.

      19             I look forward to many more conversations.

      20             SENATOR MARCELLINO:  Moving right along, is

      21      Dennis Walcott here?

      22             I know he was here earlier.

      23             He left?

      24             Mark Cannizzaro, executive vice president of

      25      CSA?







                                                                   137
       1             Mark.

       2             MARK CANNIZZARO:  Good morning.

       3             Are you ready?

       4             SENATOR MARCELLINO:  We're ready.

       5             MARK CANNIZZARO:  Okay, great.

       6             Good morning, Senator Marcellino, members of

       7      the Senate Education Committee.

       8             SENATOR MARCELLINO:  Will the young lady

       9      who's leaning against the door jamb please stop,

      10      because you're turning lights on and off?

      11             Thank you very much.

      12             Is there a possibility of getting a piece of

      13      tape put over that switch?

      14             There is tape put over the switch?

      15             How about an electric prod?

      16                  [Laughter.]

      17             SENATOR MARCELLINO:  Thank you.

      18             I'm sorry.

      19             MARK CANNIZZARO:  That's okay.

      20             My name is Mark Cannizzaro.  I'm the

      21      executive vice president of the Council for School

      22      Supervisors and Administrators.

      23             We are the union that represents school

      24      principals and assistant principals, as well as

      25      educational administrators, here in New York City.







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       1             We thank you for this opportunity.

       2             We thank you for holding it in our backyard.

       3      It does, certainly, make it convenient for us.

       4             I will take Senator Felder's advice and tell

       5      you that we are in support of continued mayoral

       6      control of the school system.

       7             I will further take his advice and say that

       8      we are also in support of some refinements to the

       9      current system.

      10             We would like to see mayoral control

      11      extended, but not made permanent, at least not yet,

      12      if it is considered at some point.

      13             We are looking for some refinements to the

      14      composition of the -- what's currently called the

      15      PEP (the Panel of Educational Policy), per the

      16      board's bylaws.

      17             And we also are looking for some expansion of

      18      the authority of the current community education

      19      councils.

      20             Much of what I heard, while I was waiting,

      21      are some of the things that we support.

      22             We would like to see composition of the panel

      23      changed slightly, to a panel that has seven

      24      appointees by the Mayor, rather than eight; with the

      25      retention of the requirements that are currently







                                                                   139
       1      part of the panel's policy, to have at least two

       2      parents selected who have had children attend public

       3      schools and/or a student who was a public-school

       4      student within the last two years, to be part of the

       5      Mayor's selections.

       6             We would like to see continued appointees,

       7      one by each borough president; the five borough

       8      presidents each be able to select.

       9             And we would like the thirteenth selection to

      10      be a selection of the City Council.  We feel that

      11      this change would give the City Council a voice at

      12      all PEP meetings, and be able to directly influence

      13      policy before anything got to them for any type of

      14      debate.

      15             We support the continued authority of the PEP

      16      with mayor -- with the current statute, as far as

      17      relating to proposed regulations, capital plan,

      18      operating funds, allocations, and revenues --

      19                  (Audio/visual transmission stops.)

      20                  (Audio/visual resumes, in progress.)

      21             MARK CANNIZZARO:  -- closing and/or

      22      consolidation of schools in their districts.

      23             Again, their vote, either for or against,

      24      could be reversed by a majority vote of the central

      25      board.







                                                                   140
       1             We just feel that will increase their

       2      authority, and create a stronger connection to

       3      parents in the community, that we think is -- has

       4      improved, but is still a little bit lacking.

       5             For that reason, CSA would certainly like to

       6      see the continuation of mayoral control.

       7             We do strongly advocate for the changes that

       8      we've asked for.

       9             And, finally, we feel, probably, the

      10      number-one reason that we're advocating for this is,

      11      when we have a question, a problem, a suggestion,

      12      we're able to go to one place and have that

      13      discussion.

      14             Thank you.

      15             SENATOR ADDABBO:  Mr. Cannizzaro --

      16             SENATOR MARCELLINO:  Just before, make note

      17      of the fact that we did invite the UFT to attend

      18      both hearings.  They have declined to attend.

      19             SENATOR ADDABBO:  Mr. Cannizzaro, thank you

      20      very much for your time here today, and I really

      21      appreciate your suggestions, because like

      22      I mentioned to the Chancellor, when something like

      23      mayoral controls expires, we have the opportunity to

      24      certainly make improvements to the system.

      25             So I thank you for your suggestions.







                                                                   141
       1             We have seen many administrative changes over

       2      the years with mayoral control, one of them being

       3      the role of the principal.

       4             And all due respect to superintendents,

       5      superintendents have a lot of schools under their

       6      authority and a lot of schools to be interested in.

       7             But the principal has one school: their own.

       8             Can you see a change in the authority or the

       9      role the principal changes as we go through possibly

      10      improving mayoral control?

      11             MARK CANNIZZARO:  Well, I don't think that

      12      whether or not we have mayoral control speaks to the

      13      authority of the principal.

      14             We have, obviously, and always, been strong

      15      supporters on the principal being the person that

      16      makes the decisions for his or her building.

      17             You know, there's been a lot of talk about

      18      autonomy, and the autonomy of a principal.

      19             CSA believes that, when someone is selected

      20      as a principal, that means they've earned autonomy,

      21      and should be able to operate their buildings as

      22      such.

      23             Now, of course, just like we're asking for in

      24      mayoral control, checks and balances on everyone is

      25      certainly important and necessary.







                                                                   142
       1             But I think that that is more a -- that

       2      question that you've asked does not relate to

       3      mayoral control as much as it relates to

       4      philosophies and things of the times.

       5             So, you know, as far as mayoral control is

       6      concerned, we still think we -- there's certainly

       7      more autonomy and more ability to run a building

       8      than there was in the previous system, for those of

       9      us who have been around long enough.

      10             SENATOR ADDABBO:  I only mention because

      11      previous changes to mayoral control has had changes

      12      within the roles, not only the parents, but also

      13      teachers and administrators.

      14             So, that's why I had mentioned it.

      15             But, again, I thank you for your input and

      16      your insight, and for your time here today.

      17             MARK CANNIZZARO:  Thank you.

      18             SENATOR KRUEGER:  Thank you.

      19             Thank you very much.

      20             MARK CANNIZZARO:  Thank you, Senator.

      21             SENATOR KRUEGER:  I read your testimony

      22      before you got here, and I appreciated your

      23      recommendations for how we could make changes that

      24      would, I think, broaden the participation of others

      25      concerned about education.







                                                                   143
       1             So I am hoping that, in discussions of

       2      mayoral control, we might, some day, get to

       3      substance, and not just the politics, as my

       4      colleague Senator Feldman (sic) pointed out.

       5             But I'm curious:  You don't think that the

       6      Department of Education should be brought under the

       7      same standards as other city agencies for

       8      procurement?

       9             Because that's been one of my concerns: that

      10      procurement ought to go through the same process as

      11      other city agencies, with normal auditing and review

      12      process.

      13             The principals don't -- aren't concerned with

      14      that currently.

      15             MARK CANNIZZARO:  Well, I have to plead

      16      ignorance to knowing the exact, you know, procedures

      17      that the other agencies go through.

      18             But we don't -- we feel that by making any

      19      tweaks that we've recommended, we think we can keep

      20      those checks and balances in place.

      21             I do happen to agree a little bit -- a bit

      22      with the Chancellor, what she said earlier, is this

      23      particular PEP has been quite diligent when it comes

      24      to contracts and procurement, probably more so than

      25      we've seen in the past.







                                                                   144
       1             So, I don't -- wouldn't say that's been a

       2      concern, no.

       3             SENATOR KRUEGER:  And then, I think it was in

       4      a previous administration, there was, once upon a

       5      time, a proposal that principals would be provided

       6      a -- almost an administrative principal, to work

       7      side-by-side with them, so that you as principals

       8      could focus on the education, the students, the

       9      teachers, the classroom.  And then recognizing the

      10      enormous administrative responsibilities you have

      11      over the schools, provide you someone who could take

      12      on those challenges.

      13             I always thought that sounded like a great

      14      model.

      15             I am so admiring of the work that principals

      16      do.

      17             And I think all of us who work in our

      18      communities know, when you have a good principal,

      19      you have a school that functions; and when you

      20      don't, you have problems.

      21             So I'm wondering where you all are on that

      22      once-upon-a-time proposal?

      23             MARK CANNIZZARO:  Anything this body can do

      24      to help that along the way, we would certainly

      25      appreciate.







                                                                   145
       1             SENATOR KRUEGER:  And that model doesn't

       2      exist now anywhere?

       3             MARK CANNIZZARO:  No.  It -- some of the high

       4      schools have what we call "assistant principals in

       5      charge of organization," and they do a lot of the

       6      work that you're referring to; but, yet, the

       7      administrative burdens on a principal are so huge.

       8             We just sent a survey out, and the number-one

       9      comment about what could help folks improve their

      10      jobs, would be taking away some of the enormous

      11      workload, as far as paperwork and organization,

      12      administrative types of things.

      13             So, as far as a principal and instructional

      14      leaders in the building, other assistant principals

      15      being able to get in the classrooms and really help

      16      move instruction, something like that would be

      17      certainly welcomed with open arms.

      18             SENATOR KRUEGER:  Thank you.

      19             MARK CANNIZZARO:  You're welcome.

      20             SENATOR KRUEGER:  Thank you.

      21             SENATOR MARCELLINO:  Bill, do you have a

      22      question?

      23             SENATOR PERKINS:  You know, most folks are

      24      really preoccupied with salary and benefits, and so

      25      forth.







                                                                   146
       1             And as principals, you -- I guess you run the

       2      whole operation in the system.

       3             Do you -- so how do you all -- what is your

       4      take on these charters?

       5             I know it's about salaries and benefits, and

       6      such and so forth, but what's the story with -- how

       7      do -- how are charters doing with you guys?

       8             MARK CANNIZZARO:  So we -- first of all, CSA

       9      represents a small group of, I think, about nine

      10      charter schools.

      11             So --

      12             SENATOR PERKINS:  How are they measuring up?

      13             MARK CANNIZZARO:  Oh, they're doing quite

      14      well.

      15             The charters that we represent are

      16      independent charter schools, so they're all

      17      independent in what we call "conversion charters."

      18             So, at one point --

      19             SENATOR PERKINS:  Could you explain what that

      20      means?

      21             MARK CANNIZZARO:  Sure.

      22             So, they are single -- single operations.

      23      Okay?

      24             And they were converted from one -- at one

      25      time, they were New York City public schools.







                                                                   147
       1             Okay, so now they've converted into charter

       2      schools.

       3             Several years back, before I be -- before

       4      I came to CSA, is when they converted, but we've

       5      been working with them quite closely.

       6             We actually think that the conversation has

       7      to be a little bit more about what you were alluding

       8      to earlier, I think, Senator.

       9             We want to be able to put some of the

      10      rhetoric aside that we hear all the time.

      11             These -- the children that go to our schools

      12      are our kids, and they are learning.

      13             Some students, in both places, learning

      14      better than other students, and being given better

      15      opportunities.

      16             And we want to be able to have an open and

      17      honest discussion, without the politics and the

      18      rhetoric and all of these things that have seemed

      19      to -- seem to dominate the press lately.

      20             If there is something that can help my

      21      school, when I was a school principal, I don't care

      22      where I'm learning it from; I'm happy to learn it.

      23             And I think that most people feel that way.

      24             But we've gotten to this argument now, where

      25      one has to be better than the other, or not.







                                                                   148
       1             And that is what is dominating right now:

       2      It's, what's better?

       3             And I don't think one system is necessarily

       4      better; or one child, because they go to a

       5      particular brand of school, is getting a better

       6      education than another.

       7             I think we can all learn from each other, and

       8      we should all learn from each other.

       9             SENATOR PERKINS:  I guess I would agree with

      10      that, except that, at some point, you have to

      11      measure what folks are doing, to determine whether

      12      or not it's actually better.

      13             And then the fact, if it is, take that lesson

      14      and replicate it, so that those who are not doing so

      15      better can do better.

      16             MARK CANNIZZARO:  That's 100 percent correct.

      17             SENATOR PERKINS:  That's the genius of that

      18      opportunity.

      19             And, so, the whole idea of the charter school

      20      was that they would be better, and that they would

      21      teach us how to teach our children to do better.

      22             So there would be lessons learned that could

      23      be replicated and provided to the other students

      24      that might not have those opportunities.

      25             And so that's my concern, is what are we







                                                                   149
       1      learning from this model that is supposed to be

       2      there to teach us how to do better?

       3             MARK CANNIZZARO:  We're going to have a hard

       4      time -- we're going to have hard -- I agree with

       5      what you just said, as far as, you know, being able

       6      to learn and being able to measure.

       7             But we're going to have the hard time

       8      measuring anything, accurately and honestly, when

       9      the discussion is "us verse you," because everyone

      10      is trying to protect their piece of the pie when

      11      that happens, and that's not a good thing.

      12             And that's what's happening right now, it's

      13      that discussion.

      14             So no one is going to let their guard down

      15      and say, Hey, you know what?  Yeah.

      16             You know -- and that's the issue that we have

      17      right now.

      18             SENATOR PERKINS:  So with all due respect,

      19      I agree with you, but I don't think that that's what

      20      I'm saying.

      21             I'm just saying that, the whole idea of the

      22      charter movement was that it would be not a second

      23      set of per se; but, rather, an opportunity for us --

      24      for the educators to get some models of success that

      25      can be replicated; not necessarily a







                                                                   150
       1      one-size-fits-all, but, you know -- but, you know,

       2      what can work.

       3             And instead of learning from those, quote,

       4      labs of experimental opportunity, they've duplicated

       5      themselves, without letting us know what the benefit

       6      was that could be replicated.

       7             And, so, folks are making large salaries, and

       8      contracts, and -- but when you look at the success

       9      of the students, they're not measuring up.

      10             And I don't want to dismiss any of those that

      11      are, but, generally speaking, they're not

      12      competitive in the way that they were expected to

      13      be.

      14             MARK CANNIZZARO:  Well, I don't think we're

      15      disagreeing as much as you think we're disagreeing.

      16             I think a lot of what we're saying is the

      17      same, and I agree.

      18             Look, you're -- when you have any type of

      19      system, any type of new experimental type of things,

      20      different -- different procedures, different ways to

      21      educate children, not every one of those ways is

      22      going to measure up.  Right?

      23             And some of our schools in New York City are

      24      doing a wonderful job at a lot of things, and that

      25      needs to be replicated also.







                                                                   151
       1             SENATOR PERKINS:  Sure, sure.

       2             MARK CANNIZZARO:  Right?

       3             And that's one of the things that I think we

       4      are trying to do with some of the programs we have,

       5      both, interacting with charter schools, and that's

       6      just in the beginning, as well as interacting with

       7      each other, and to replicate some best practices,

       8      because best practices can be replicated in lots of

       9      different places and lots of different areas.

      10             But I do agree with you, that what the

      11      intention is, and was, needs to be brought back into

      12      focus, so that we can do exactly what we're supposed

      13      to do.

      14             And all children can benefit from something

      15      that is beneficial in any building, whether it's a

      16      traditional district school or a charter school or

      17      any other type of building where children are

      18      learning.

      19             SENATOR MARCELLINO:  The line of questioning

      20      is interesting, but, can we bring this back to

      21      mayoral control?

      22             SENATOR PERKINS:  Well, the essence of this

      23      stems from mayoral control, because, without it, you

      24      wouldn't have it.

      25             It was the dictatorial behavior of the







                                                                   152
       1      Bloomberg Administration that brought this into the

       2      system.

       3             That's why I'm bringing it up.

       4             And there's never really been the kind of

       5      review of it, to measure whether or not --

       6             SENATOR MARCELLINO:  That we could do -- we

       7      could do in another hearing, and I don't mind doing

       8      it, because I think --

       9             SENATOR PERKINS:  -- but I'm saying, mayoral

      10      control is --

      11             SENATOR MARCELLINO:  -- I think your point is

      12      well-taken --

      13             SENATOR PERKINS:  -- what's measuring -- is

      14      what -- is why we're at this point.

      15             SENATOR MARCELLINO:  How is this --

      16             SENATOR PERKINS:  And so this is one of the

      17      flowerings of mayoral control, which is the

      18      charters.

      19             But this is the Bloomberg's legacy that I'm

      20      talking about.

      21             MARK CANNIZZARO:  So if --

      22             SENATOR PERKINS:  This is what he was

      23      bragging about.

      24             MARK CANNIZZARO:  -- if -- if you --

      25             SENATOR PERKINS:  So I just want to make sure







                                                                   153
       1      that, if it works, then let's replicate it.

       2             And if it doesn't work, then, that's it.

       3             MARK CANNIZZARO:  -- if the concern is about

       4      one person having too much authority and control,

       5      then I think some of the suggestions that we've

       6      placed in here does help to --

       7             SENATOR PERKINS:  Let me -- let me -- in

       8      response to that, let me just be -- it's not about

       9      the control.  It's about whether or not the model

      10      works.

      11             Not control.

      12             MARK CANNIZZARO:  Right.

      13             SENATOR PERKINS:  Okay?

      14             If this model works, it has lessons, it has

      15      practices, it has procedures, whatever -- however

      16      you want to describe it, that can be replicated.

      17      Right?

      18             Let's -- where is that at?

      19             MARK CANNIZZARO:  That's what I -- I just

      20      told you, we need to do better at replicating

      21      everywhere.  Not just there, but everywhere.

      22             SENATOR PERKINS:  No, but that was

      23      specifically what that was for.

      24             MARK CANNIZZARO:  Okay.

      25             SENATOR PERKINS:  That was what the folks







                                                                   154
       1      thought was gonna happen, and that way, it would be

       2      replicated throughout the system.

       3             MARK CANNIZZARO:  Right.  Like I said,

       4      I think we're agreeing more --

       5             SENATOR PERKINS:  Where is the report that

       6      says:  A, B, C, we learned.  X, Y, Z.

       7             MARK CANNIZZARO:  You asked that question

       8      earlier, and, you know, that report is not going to

       9      come from the CSA.

      10             But I believe that report should be

      11      forthcoming, hopefully, from another agency.

      12             SENATOR PERKINS:  Thank you.

      13             MARK CANNIZZARO:  You're welcome.

      14             SENATOR MARCELLINO:  How many times do you

      15      meet with the mayor, relative -- or any other union,

      16      colleagues, relative to mayoral control, relative to

      17      the city schools?

      18             MARK CANNIZZARO:  So Earnest Logan, our

      19      president, meets with the Mayor from time to time.

      20             To be honest with you, I couldn't give you a

      21      specific number, but I wouldn't say that it's less

      22      than four or five times in the last year.

      23             SENATOR MARCELLINO:  Specifically dealing

      24      with non-contract mayoral control?

      25             MARK CANNIZZARO:  Dealing with a host of







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       1      issues, and I'm sure that that is included, yes.

       2             SENATOR MARCELLINO:  All right.

       3             Thank you.

       4             MARK CANNIZZARO:  Thank you very much.

       5             SENATOR MARCELLINO:  Any other questions?

       6             Thank you for your testimony.  We appreciate

       7      your coming.

       8             MARK CANNIZZARO:  And thank you for your

       9      time.

      10             SENATOR KRUEGER:  Thank you very much.

      11             SENATOR MARCELLINO:  The next group would be,

      12      Teresa Arboleda, Ellen McHugh, and Mona Davids.

      13             And again I would ask, the people testifying,

      14      that we not read the testimony.

      15             We have it.  It will be made part of the

      16      record.

      17             But we would appreciate it if you could

      18      summarize it, so we can get to the questions, and

      19      I think that would be the most important part of it.

      20             Thank you.

      21             Start whenever you wish.

      22             TERESA ARBOLEDA:  Good afternoon.

      23             My name is Teresa Arboleda, and I was a

      24      former school-board member, a former CEC member, and

      25      now I'm the chair of the Citywide Council on







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       1      English-Language Learners.

       2             As Carmen Fariña, I'm also a former

       3      English-language learner, although I was born and

       4      raised here.  And my parents were also immigrants

       5      from Spain.

       6             I'm also the president of the -- the chair of

       7      the legislative committee of the Education Council

       8      Consortium.  It's a group that was formed,

       9      I believe, in early 2013, and it's comprised of

      10      members of the CECs and citywide councils, and we

      11      meet regularly with the Chancellor, and we address

      12      issues that affect the schools and communities in

      13      all the boroughs.

      14             The ECC, we were made aware about mayoral

      15      control expiring, and we decided to form a committee

      16      and explore, and discuss, the ramifications and pros

      17      and cons about mayoral control.

      18             And after a lot of discussion, we developed a

      19      resolution, and -- on May 23, 2015, before the last

      20      expiration.

      21             And the basic idea is that, while we're not

      22      supportive of extending mayoral control, we do offer

      23      amendments in case it is renewed.

      24             And the ideal situation would have been to

      25      hold extensive hearings with parents and schools,







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       1      and get different ideas, but, I don't think that is

       2      happening.

       3             The issue of mayoral control cannot be about

       4      a particular mayor.  It should be about the

       5      students.

       6             And any system of governance must have checks

       7      and balances.

       8             And we cannot have a new school system every

       9      time there's a new mayor.

      10             It's not about the mayor.

      11             It's important for the parents to know where

      12      to go when they have problems.

      13             And the best way to do that is to have local

      14      districts and local staff, local superintendents,

      15      within the geographical area of where people live

      16      and the schools.

      17             When mayoral control was first implemented,

      18      it was -- the system was turned upside down.

      19             Parents didn't know what was happening.  They

      20      didn't know what was going on.  It was barely

      21      explained.

      22             That's why we are so concerned about the

      23      governance of mayoral control, the system.

      24             It's not about the mayor.

      25             We cannot have a corporate structure.







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       1             The next mayor may want to have a corporate

       2      structure like the previous mayor.

       3             We believe that students are not just data.

       4      They are people, and they're not to be passed around

       5      like chess pieces.

       6             I mean, the enrollment procedures that were

       7      in effect was, they were just numbers.

       8             Oh, this kid fits here.  This kid fits here.

       9             No paying attention as to what that child's

      10      needs were.

      11             We can't fall into the trap of

      12      one-size-fits-all.

      13             We believe the present administration has

      14      made positive changes, and these changes should be

      15      firmly established by the law so that we can

      16      maintain stability and not be thrown into turmoil

      17      again.

      18             Some of these changes that we like, these are

      19      not the only ones, but these are very important

      20      ones:

      21             The appointment of a chancellor who was an

      22      educator.

      23             The increased parental access to parents in

      24      the local geographic district.

      25             Sensitivity to the needs of English-language







                                                                   159
       1      learners.

       2             I can speak to that as president of the

       3      council.

       4             They have expanded interpretation and

       5      translation services.  There are more English

       6      classes for parents who don't speak English.

       7             And, there's a less-contentious process for

       8      co-locations.

       9             I'm a parent.  I was on the CEC in District 3

      10      when all the co-locations so-called "hearings" were

      11      conducted, and I can tell you it was not fun.

      12             The resolution that you have before you, it

      13      reflects the wide opinions of the ECC members, but

      14      these are the most important points that we want to

      15      make.

      16             And we hope the Legislature considers these

      17      amendments to the law.

      18             The law should provide for the appointment of

      19      the PEP members to fixed terms.  This will allow the

      20      PEP members to vote independently and not be afraid

      21      that they will be removed for a vote.

      22             People who have been in the system for a

      23      while remember the "Monday Night Massacre."

      24             I think you all know about it.

      25             A vote was scheduled, and there were







                                                                   160
       1      X numbers on the panel.  And then, when we went to

       2      the meeting, they were gone, and they were replaced.

       3             We cannot have a mayor with absolute power.

       4      They're not a dictator.

       5             Also, the public advocate has a report which

       6      agrees with this recommendation.

       7             She also recommends that parents representing

       8      English-language learners, special ed, and a

       9      public-advocate appointee also be added to the PEP

      10      as members.

      11             The method of electing parents to the CEC is

      12      not democratic.

      13             You only have three officers of the PTA, or

      14      PA, voting for members.

      15             Some people get on with just one vote.

      16             Not that they beat other people by one vote.

      17             By just one vote.

      18             They just get one vote, and they get on, and

      19      that's very undemocratic.

      20             So I think we should have all the parents of

      21      the geographical district under the superintendent

      22      be able to vote, just the public-school parents.

      23             Also, the role of the superintendent, it must

      24      be clearly defined that they are the educational

      25      leader of that district -- of that geographical







                                                                   161
       1      district.

       2             You cannot have network leaders who are in

       3      Manhattan, traveling to Queens, Staten Island,

       4      The Bronx, whatever.

       5             So that is very important because, then, now

       6      the parents know that if they have a problem, it's

       7      in their local district.

       8             Half the time, the parents didn't know who

       9      the network leader was.

      10             Also, the law should be amended.

      11             I know, right now, they say the chancellor

      12      must be an educator and needs a waiver.

      13             We don't think there should be a waiver.

      14             The chancellor must be an educator.

      15             They know -- only an educator knows what to

      16      do with the schools.

      17             And, also, the public-advocate report also

      18      indicates that they favor this.

      19             Also, the two-year terms that now are in the

      20      law, we believe strongly that they should be changed

      21      to three years, because a lot of parents don't know

      22      what's going on.  They don't realize, this is what

      23      I can do, this is what I can't do.

      24             And by the time they know what to do,

      25      there -- the -- there's another election.







                                                                   162
       1             So I remember, when I was on the school

       2      board, it was a three-year term.

       3             So I just think that would be more feasible.

       4             Also, I -- I, as an English-language-learner

       5      advocate, when the councils -- when the law was

       6      changed the last time for the councils to allow for

       7      a seat on each local district, and when the Citywide

       8      Council on English-Language Learners was formed, it

       9      was very difficult to get parents, because,

      10      according to the law, you needed to be an ELL

      11      parent.

      12             And most of them are not aware.  You know, if

      13      they're immigrants, or they don't speak English,

      14      they're not aware of what they can do to participate

      15      to engage.

      16             So a couple years ago, we proposed a change

      17      in the law.

      18             And, Denny O'Donnell, and it was co-sponsored

      19      by Senator Lanza, we changed the law, that parents

      20      be allowed to serve after they've been out

      21      two years, you know, after they've received

      22      services.

      23             It's much better, but, it's still not that

      24      great.

      25             We believe that a parent who has been an ELL







                                                                   163
       1      at any time.

       2             In other words, if the parent is in the

       3      eighth grade now, the kid is in the eighth grade,

       4      and they want to go, or, the sixth grade, and they

       5      were ELLs in the third grade, and now they're not.

       6             We think that parents -- I mean, I -- I'm a

       7      grandma, and I'm still interested in that issue.

       8             So I don't think they will lose at -- you

       9      know, the desire to advocate for those parents

      10      because they're out of the system, the ELL services.

      11             And, there's also -- there are also issues on

      12      special ed that my colleague Ellen McHugh will

      13      address, and there two are different areas that she

      14      will address.

      15             And I will read this:

      16             Mayoral control cannot be made permanent, and

      17      must be reviewed periodically.  We cannot have the

      18      budget dance when mayoral control is included as a

      19      part of the budget.

      20             The governance policy, where the mayor

      21      controls the New York City public schools, must be

      22      thoroughly debated on its own.

      23             The over one million students in

      24      New York City public schools cannot be held hostage

      25      to whatever political winds are blowing at the time.







                                                                   164
       1             As an entity with knowledge and experience

       2      with New York City public schools, the ECC is

       3      committed to working with the New York State

       4      Legislature to achieve the most equitable and fair

       5      governance system that will benefit the students in

       6      our public schools.

       7             And we can be contacted; we would love to

       8      work with you.

       9             ELLEN McHUGH:  Flexibility is the hallmark of

      10      parent cooperation.

      11             My name is Ellen McHugh.

      12             I currently serve as one of the

      13      public-advocate appointees to the Citywide Council

      14      on Special Ed.

      15             A good deal of what Theresa has said is

      16      always also what I would have said, although, and

      17      I thank you for the invitation.

      18             I'm really surprised I'm here, unless it's to

      19      echo what Teresa is saying, which is a compliment,

      20      and I thank you for inviting us.

      21             One of the problems with mayoral control, as

      22      I see it now, is the issue of whimsy.

      23             On the whim of a mayor in the past, actions

      24      by the Citywide Council on Special Education were

      25      ignored.







                                                                   165
       1             On the whim of a mayor now, actions by the

       2      Citywide Council on Special Education were accepted.

       3             One of the examples that we use in the

       4      testimony is SESIS (the special-education student

       5      information system), which is managed across the

       6      city, about $356 million in lost funding, because a

       7      system that was supposed to be developed to provide

       8      adequate information to staff and updates to parents

       9      about how their children with IEPs were

      10      progressing is cumbersome at best.

      11             It takes a great deal of time to input, and

      12      created a situation in some schools, where, if you

      13      plugged in the toaster, you couldn't get on SESIS.

      14             If you unplugged the toaster and plugged in

      15      the coffee machine, SESIS would blow up the coffee

      16      machine.

      17             So there wasn't a lot of infrastructure to

      18      support SESIS.

      19             Past administration refused to admit it.

      20             Current administration asked to work with us

      21      to say, What can we do?

      22             It's a benefit to us as parents to have that

      23      information.

      24             In this, it was whimsy.

      25             There wasn't any directive in the law that







                                                                   166
       1      they had -- that the mayor had to pay any attention

       2      to us.

       3             There was only the whim of one mayor to

       4      agree, and another mayor to say, no, I'm not going

       5      to pay attention to it.

       6             I've got to read this, because this recent

       7      report from the Center for American Progress finds:

       8             That mayoral-controlled school districts have

       9      improved districtwide performance relative to

      10      average school-district performance statewide.

      11             Mayoral governments is most effective when

      12      the mayor is active on the issue of education.

      13             Mayors must be ready to engage stakeholders,

      14      leverage resources, and facilitate a positive policy

      15      environment to overcome barriers to school

      16      improvement.

      17             A city must adapt mayoral control to their

      18      unique local context, variation in local cultures,

      19      and politics must be considered.

      20             The idea of considering politics is

      21      something, I think, New York City and State engages

      22      in with great glee.

      23             Mayoral control may require reinvention,

      24      which I think is where we are right now, and in

      25      order to continue to show gains over time, mayors







                                                                   167
       1      may need to revamp their strategies and practices as

       2      necessary.

       3             We are encouraging, and hope, that we can

       4      spend time in a civil public discourse that includes

       5      parents, CEC members, education experts and

       6      advocates, principals and teachers, students, and

       7      other stakeholders in the discussion.

       8             We must be deliberate in our conversations

       9      and respectful of opinions.

      10             This will take time.  Maybe two years, maybe

      11      more.

      12             I do believe that the constructive and civil

      13      public discourse can develop a system of school

      14      governance that is reflective of the needs of the

      15      students of New York City.

      16             One of the subsets of the resolution is an

      17      expansion of the Citywide Council on Special

      18      Education.

      19             This is CCSE special-education wonk stuff.

      20             If I get boring, stop me.

      21             Prior to this, the CCSE was made up of only

      22      parents whose children were being served by a

      23      specific district, District 75, which is a construct

      24      that only exists here in New York City.

      25             It doesn't exist across the state.







                                                                   168
       1             It doesn't exist in any other state that

       2      I know of, and I've asked.

       3             I would like to see the current CCSE expanded

       4      so that the District 75 parents would have, and the

       5      CCSE parents would have, one council to attend

       6      instead of having two.

       7             I think having -- this is me, I think having

       8      two councils can be -- can dilute the power or the

       9      impact of either council.

      10             If we elect people across the boroughs to

      11      represent those special-education programs that are

      12      district-based, and those district programs that are

      13      District 75-based, we can create the commonality,

      14      and we can create a model, hopefully, of

      15      cooperation.

      16             One of the problems that exists in this

      17      current school system is the division of, I don't

      18      know, administration, I guess is the best way to

      19      describe it, between District 75 principals and

      20      general-ed principals; between District 75 staff and

      21      general-ed staff.

      22             We have schools that are co-located that have

      23      different bells, different doors, different PD,

      24      different parent-teacher dates.

      25             It's just different.







                                                                   169
       1             And I think, in the long run -- well, I know,

       2      in the long run, that research has shown that the

       3      integration of students with special needs into

       4      classrooms or buildings has created a positive

       5      effect for both the child with the general-education

       6      need and the child with the IEP.

       7             And after all, you can't develop leaders if

       8      leaders have never seen or been with people who are

       9      not like them, because they are going to be

      10      representing individuals who are disabled as those

      11      individual students age-up.

      12             My son is -- for background, my son is deaf.

      13      He's 37, despite my youthful appearance, and he's

      14      married, thank God, to a girl from Colombia.

      15                  [Laughter.]

      16             ELLEN McHUGH:  They're both fully employed.

      17             It is also something that is a result of

      18      their public-school education because, in the world

      19      of disability, less than 30 percent of the

      20      individuals who are disabled are employed, and of

      21      that number, only 33 percent are considered to be

      22      employed up to their ability.

      23             So most of them are underemployed, even

      24      though they've gone through college, high school,

      25      career- and tech-ed training, whatever.







                                                                   170
       1             I hope that this has explained some of the

       2      reasons for the testimony we've offered.

       3             And if you have questions, we would love to

       4      engage.

       5             I like to talk.

       6             SENATOR MARCELLINO:  Okay.

       7             MONA DAVIDS:  That's right, because I believe

       8      in order.

       9             Good afternoon, Senator Marcellino, and

      10      members of the Senate Education Committee.

      11             My name is Mona Davids.

      12             I am a public-school parent, and I am also

      13      the founder and president of the New York City

      14      Parents Union.  We were founded in 2011.

      15             For those that are watching, that may not

      16      know of our organization, we are proud to say we are

      17      unbought and unbossed, and we're a grassroots

      18      organization of parent volunteers who assist other

      19      parents in navigating the school system, and

      20      ensuring that their children receive equal access to

      21      a high-quality education.

      22             It's funny, being back in this room,

      23      Senator Marcellino.

      24             A few years ago, actually, in, I think it was

      25      2010 --







                                                                   171
       1             Was it 2010, Senator Perkins, for the

       2      charter-school hearings?

       3             Yes.

       4             -- in 2010, I attended a hearing.

       5             I was then the founder and the president of

       6      the New York Charter Parents Association.

       7             And many of the charter-school reforms,

       8      including the request for that hearing, was made by

       9      me to Senator Perkins.  And that was a brutal fight,

      10      but it was about ensuring that --

      11             SENATOR MARCELLINO:  Well, Senator Perkins

      12      isn't that bad.

      13             MONA DAVIDS:  No, no, no.

      14             It was a brutal --

      15             SENATOR PERKINS:  I lost the fight.

      16             MONA DAVIDS:  -- it was -- I don't think we

      17      lost the fight.

      18             We were successful in getting quite a number

      19      of reforms, which the charter lobby has embraced.

      20             And one of the things that also helped the

      21      district schools -- just for -- just to talk about

      22      that for one second -- is that we were able to make

      23      sure that district schools received matching funds

      24      when charters renovate and they co-located in a

      25      public-school building.







                                                                   172
       1             We were also able to put into the legislation

       2      that they serve a fair share.

       3             So, you know, it -- it -- I believe it was

       4      successful.

       5             No system is perfect.

       6             The district school system is certainly not

       7      perfect, and neither is a very young system like the

       8      charter system.

       9             In addition to that, the New York City

      10      Parents Union has been involved in quite a bit of

      11      legislation -- I'm sorry, quite a bit of litigation.

      12             Some of the litigation that we are involved

      13      with currently is what many call the "teacher

      14      tenure" lawsuit.  That's called Davids verse

      15      New York -- I am Davids -- filed in Richmond County.

      16             I am here with two other plaintiffs in the

      17      "Davids verse New York" lawsuit, and our members,

      18      Sam Pirozzolo and Jacqueline Colson over there.

      19             In addition to that lawsuit, other lawsuits

      20      that we've been involved with was a few years ago,

      21      when New York City, Michael Mulgrew -- Mike and

      22      Mike -- couldn't come together on the

      23      teacher-evaluation plan, and Cuomo decided to punish

      24      our children with the $250 million penalty.

      25             I, Jacqueline, Sam, and other parents, with







                                                                   173
       1      the support of Mike Rubel (ph.), we successfully

       2      filed and got that injunction, stopping Cuomo from

       3      punishing our children because the adults couldn't

       4      get along.

       5             That being said, we've been involved in other

       6      lawsuits, where there is inBloom (ph.) co-locations.

       7             We -- if you look up, when it comes to

       8      school-litigation lawsuits, you'll either see my

       9      name or the New York City parent's name, and our

      10      parent-members names.

      11             So I'm going to talk about our

      12      recommendations.

      13             We support the concept of mayoral control.

      14             Unfortunately, mayoral control under

      15      Mayor de Blasio is not working.

      16             And we are recommending from you, if you do

      17      renew it, you only renew it for one year, and that

      18      steps be taken to provide some kind of checks and

      19      balances.

      20             You've heard what the other parent-advocates

      21      have said.

      22             The way it's structured now, it's a

      23      dictatorship, and a dictatorship leads to abuse, and

      24      that is what's going on in our school system.

      25             And I will elaborate further when I speak







                                                                   174
       1      about the problems.

       2             We strongly believe in accountability when it

       3      comes to our school system.

       4             Unfortunately, mayoral control, at this

       5      juncture, is not about accountability.  It's

       6      about whatever Mayor de Blasio, Chancellor Fariña,

       7      and the United Federation of Teachers, which I call

       8      "de Blasio, Inc.," wants.

       9             With the political support of the

      10      United Federation of Teachers, Chancellor Fariña,

      11      and Michael Mulgrew, in our opinion, have reversed

      12      some positive gains, especially contractual gains,

      13      that we had under Mayor Bloomberg.

      14             Now, people in this room will know I am not a

      15      Mayor Bloomberg fan, nor was I a Klein or Walcott

      16      fan.  But one thing we knew was that, despite all of

      17      our disagreements, Bloomberg II was unbought and

      18      unbossed.

      19             And Bloomberg, no matter what, was going to

      20      do what was in the best interests of our children.

      21             How we got there was another story.

      22             That being said, you have my testimony.

      23             That's not what's happening now.

      24             This is what we recommend to deal with

      25      "de Blasio, Inc." to, hopefully, continue to have a







                                                                   175
       1      strong mayoral-control system that respects parents,

       2      that ensures that every child receives equal access

       3      to a high-quality education, and also complies with

       4      the law.

       5             The six things I'm going to speak about, very

       6      briefly, is:

       7             Number one:  The credit-recovery scheme and

       8      the free diplomas.

       9             You showed up.

      10             You showed up.

      11             Everybody showed up.

      12             If this was a New York City high school, we'd

      13      all get free diplomas because of the credit-recovery

      14      scheme.  Everybody gets a diploma.

      15             The "New York Post" has highlighted so many

      16      stories, reported by teachers -- not by parents;

      17      not, at first, by students -- by teachers, who are

      18      reporting that:  We are feeling pressure.  We are

      19      forced to do a cover-up.  Even though these kids

      20      don't attend school, do no schoolwork, do no

      21      homework, do not sit for exams, we have to pass

      22      them.

      23             That is a problem, because that is all part

      24      of "de Blasio, Inc.'s" agenda in being the

      25      "progressive messiah," as we call him, and to ensure







                                                                   176
       1      that the public thinks he's doing a great job in our

       2      schools, which, as you'll hear from other

       3      parent-advocates, that's not the case.

       4             The second thing, what we call the "union

       5      job-protection scheme," also known as "renewal

       6      schools."

       7             The renewal schools are a failure.

       8             In the renewal schools we have credit

       9      recovery.  We continue to have students who are

      10      pushed out, graduating, going to city university of

      11      New York or any other college, and forced to take

      12      remedial classes.

      13             I don't exactly have the numbers, but

      14      probably somebody like Leonie or someone here would

      15      know exactly how much our per-pupil funding is for

      16      New York City public students, general-education

      17      students.

      18             What is it, about $16,000 a year?

      19             Why is it that our children are in the school

      20      system, the school district, the state, where the

      21      most, the highest amount, is spent on education, and

      22      our children are forced to go into debt so that they

      23      can take these remedial courses after getting their

      24      free diplomas?

      25             The next thing is school safety.







                                                                   177
       1             There has been a surge, an explosion, of

       2      weapons; weapons, including loaded guns, in our

       3      schools, machetes in our schools, and other weapons.

       4             And instead of addressing that problem,

       5      "de Blasio, Inc." -- UFT, Fariña, and

       6      Mayor de Blasio, because they're all one in the same

       7      -- "de Blasio, Inc." covers it up.

       8             Not only do they put the safety of our

       9      children in jeopardy, they have the audacity to lie

      10      to parents and say, Oh, no, our schools are safe.

      11             Well, the last time I checked, there are no

      12      guns being found in city hall; there are no guns

      13      being found at One Police Plaza, except for the guns

      14      the police officers are required to wear; and there

      15      certainly are no guns found at the Department of

      16      Education.

      17             But all three of those places -- One Police

      18      Plaza, city hall, and Tweed -- all have metal

      19      detectors.

      20             So, if you have metal detectors to protect

      21      yourself, and there aren't guns and loaded weapons

      22      and machetes being found every day, why can't we

      23      have that for our children in the public school

      24      system?

      25             Because Mayor de Blasio, "de Blasio, Inc.,"







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       1      doesn't want the public to know about the surge in

       2      weapons.

       3             The other issue is, Mayor de Blasio has also

       4      decided, unilaterally, without engaging parents, to

       5      change the school suspension policy and the

       6      discipline policy.

       7             So, pretty much, what that means, we call

       8      that the "Kumbaya approach."

       9             Oh, okay, you picked up a chair and you hit a

      10      student with the chair?

      11             That's okay.  Just don't do it next time.

      12             Oh, you punched a student?

      13             Oh, you spat on a teacher?

      14             Oh, that's okay.  Don't do it next time.

      15             We'll send you home with a note to your mom,

      16      just letting them know what you did, but don't do it

      17      next time.

      18             And because of this ridiculous suspension

      19      policy that's in place, it's resulted in a lot of

      20      assaults of students and an increased amount of

      21      bullying in the schools.

      22             And when parents go to the DOE, when they

      23      call 311, when they call the superintendents, when

      24      they speak to the principal, they're given the

      25      runaround, because the principals can no longer







                                                                   179
       1      suspend students under the "Kumbaya policy."  They

       2      have to get permission of the superintendents.

       3             The superintendents cannot suspend the

       4      students either because she has to get permission of

       5      Fariña.

       6             Fariña and "de Blasio, Inc." are not

       7      suspending students because they want to continue to

       8      mislead the public that the schools are safe, so

       9      that they can cover up that -- this -- these new

      10      policies of theirs that they put forth, without

      11      parents' consultation or engagement, is working.

      12             Parents' intimidation and retaliation, this

      13      is what happens when you have a dictatorship; when

      14      you have an abusive dictatorship.

      15             I think, probably, Leonie is -- may talk

      16      about this as well, and other people have spoken

      17      about the PEP (the Panel for Educational Policy.)

      18             We call it the "rubber stamp."

      19             We called it the "rubber stamp" when

      20      Bloomberg was there, and we're calling it an even

      21      bigger rubber stamp now.

      22             One of the members, The Bronx PEP member

      23      brought up the fact that the DOE is not complying

      24      with state education law in disclosing all of the

      25      information about the contracts; posting the







                                                                   180
       1      contracts online, as they're required to do, so that

       2      the public can see and folks can do their

       3      investigation.

       4             And then when PEP members, such as

       5      Mr. Powell, started asking, "Well, okay, I see

       6      something on the agenda about ABC contract.  Nobody

       7      sent me ABC contract.  I'm on the contract

       8      committee.  What's going on?"  Guess what?

       9             Instead of answering the man's questions, who

      10      is there, supposed to represent the parents and

      11      community and the public, and to ensure that there's

      12      no financial mismanagement or chicanery or bad

      13      deals, parents like him, and many other parents

      14      throughout the school system on every level, are

      15      isolated.

      16             They're then intimidated by DOE, by their

      17      principals, by their superintendents.

      18             And it's gotten to the point where it's a

      19      regular occurrence, where if you speak out or if you

      20      ask any question, all of a sudden, you'll have a

      21      knock on your door that night or the next night and

      22      it will be ACS, because that's what they're doing to

      23      intimidate the parents.

      24             And you need to think about that, because

      25      this really impacts parents.







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       1             It -- it's unconscionable to do that to any

       2      parent who is simply seeking accountability, or

       3      asking questions about the education their children

       4      are receiving, or other problems in the school.

       5             The other intimidation tactic that they use,

       6      "de Blasio, Inc." -- de Blasio, UFT, and Fariña --

       7      is that they are now calling the police on parents.

       8             So if a parent, who they think is a problem

       9      parent because the parent asked questions; or in the

      10      case of the Brooklyn father, the parent wanted to

      11      know why that teacher kept on letting his son soil

      12      himself and sit for the whole day in his own

      13      excrement, for that parent to ask that teacher a

      14      question, they were rewarded with being arrested in

      15      front of their child, in front of the school,

      16      because that's what they do.

      17             Not just him, he's not the only one.  We have

      18      other parents.

      19             It's one of their number-one tactics.

      20             So once that arrest has happened at the

      21      school, the parents can no longer enter the school

      22      building.  The parent cannot be involved in their

      23      child's education.

      24             It's not one case, it's not two cases, it's

      25      not three, it's not four.







                                                                   182
       1             This is a serious problem.

       2             And then when you dig deeper, these parents,

       3      all of them, have questioned either the governance

       4      of the school system or the running of the school or

       5      brought up situations and demanded answers about why

       6      the kids in their schools are failing.

       7             So we have a problem here, and parents have

       8      no recourse, we have nobody to turn to, because,

       9      once a year, or every few years, when mayoral

      10      control may be renewed, you have this hearing, but

      11      what happens in the meantime?

      12             When a parent is arrested at the school,

      13      who's going to take the child home?  Who's going to

      14      take care of the child?

      15             But this is what's happening in our schools.

      16             And this is a real problem.

      17             SENATOR MARCELLINO:  Before you go on, the

      18      number about State aid per pupil, the best we could

      19      come up with is, the State puts in about $9100 per

      20      pupil.

      21             The City of New York has its own number and a

      22      contribution to that.  They add to that.

      23             But it varies, from district to district, and

      24      school to school.

      25             So we do not have a solid number that we can







                                                                   183
       1      give you at this point in time, relative to the City

       2      contribution, and what the total amount combined is

       3      (indiscernible).

       4             It's going to be different from place to

       5      place.

       6             We probably could work that out over time,

       7      but we don't have a lot of time right now.

       8             MONA DAVIDS:  Thank you, sir.

       9             The other problem with mayoral control, we

      10      have Mayor de Blasio.

      11             Before we had Public Advocate de Blasio.

      12             Public Advocate de Blasio believed in

      13      transparency.

      14             Public Advocate de Blasio demanded of the

      15      Bloomberg Administration that they answer FOILs in a

      16      timely fashion.

      17             Public Advocate de Blasio made so many

      18      pronouncements about how he was going to be

      19      transparent.

      20             But there's no transparency within the

      21      Department of Education.

      22             Right now, I know I do, I know probably quite

      23      a number of reporters here, and probably a number of

      24      parent-advocates on both sides, are waiting on

      25      FOILs.







                                                                   184
       1             Our freedom-of-information requests are

       2      hardly ever answered.

       3             I'm waiting on FOILs that are over a year

       4      old.

       5             I'm sure other people are waiting on FOILs

       6      that are just, you know, as old.

       7             And what happens is, we continue getting

       8      these, oh, you know, timely letters saying that, we

       9      need more time, we need more time, we need more

      10      time, because they know we parents and we

      11      parent-advocates don't have the resources now to go

      12      and get an attorney to file a lawsuit to compel them

      13      to comply with the Freedom of Information Law.

      14             It's another abuse under mayoral control.

      15             The compliance, when it comes to

      16      open-meetings law, I'm sure Leonie Haimson, from

      17      Class Size Matters, is going to speak about it, and

      18      I have it, briefly, talking about it in my

      19      testimony.

      20             But to summarize:

      21             Mayor de Blasio and "de Blasio, Inc." have

      22      decided that they're going to close

      23      school-leadership team meetings; that they're now

      24      private, because they don't want the community and

      25      the public.







                                                                   185
       1             And this is an administration that says:

       2      We're open.  Everybody's welcome.  We want everyone

       3      to be involved.

       4             But they've closed school-leadership team

       5      meetings, forcing parents, parent-advocates,

       6      advocacy groups, and the public advocate to file a

       7      lawsuit, to force -- to try to force them to

       8      actually follow your law.

       9             Even though the judge agreed with

      10      Class Size Matters and Public Advocate James,

      11      "de Blasio, Inc." -- Fariña, de Blasio, and UFT --

      12      are still not opening the meetings and complying

      13      with the law, until they complete their appeal.

      14             Since they were so successful at closing SLT

      15      meetings, they've now decided that they're going to

      16      close parent-association and

      17      parent-teacher-association meetings.

      18             So, now, they're doing the same thing.

      19             Oh, well, you know, we don't care.  It's a

      20      PA meeting.  It's not open to the public.

      21             Well, yes, it is open to the public.

      22             We've had, Robert Freeman, who you know from

      23      the Committee of Open -- Committee on Open

      24      Governments, he's done an opinion on it.

      25             It's in the law.







                                                                   186
       1             You know.

       2             But, "de Blasio, Inc." doesn't have to comply

       3      with it because, what can we do, what can reporters

       4      do, and what can you do?

       5             Our recommendations, to close -- oh, sorry.

       6             Number seven, before I close:

       7             As I mentioned earlier, when it comes to

       8      charter schools, I firmly believe in holding them

       9      accountable.

      10             When it comes to our children, I firmly

      11      believe that we must do, always, what is in the best

      12      interests of the children.

      13             And I believe in school choice, because

      14      I don't see why anyone must be forced to send their

      15      child to a burning building.

      16             But I do agree, sometimes you don't know

      17      that, you know, the other building has structural

      18      problems too.

      19             That being said, Mayor de Blasio and

      20      "de Blasio, Inc." are carrying out a vendetta.

      21             With the parents union, we go up against the

      22      education-reform lobby, we go up against what we

      23      call the "status quo," the unions, because, no

      24      matter what, if you look at our history and what

      25      we've done, we're about what's in the best interests







                                                                   187
       1      of all children.

       2             The Charter Schools Act governs charter

       3      schools.

       4             I'm a firm believer in following the law.

       5             Charter schools are autonomous.  Charter

       6      schools are their own districts.  They're their own

       7      LEA.

       8             "De Blasio, Inc.," because of mayoral control

       9      that you have given him, is carrying out a personal

      10      vendetta against Eva Moskowitz.

      11             And everybody in this room that knows me know

      12      I don't always agree with Eva.

      13             As a matter of fact, I think I've been on

      14      just about every co-location lawsuit, fighting Eva,

      15      before the law was changed.

      16             The charter-rent lawsuit, I was on it,

      17      parents union was on it, and other parents in this

      18      room.

      19             But it's always about what's in the best

      20      interests of the children.

      21             Withholding the $750,000 -- illegally

      22      withholding the $750,000 -- for those students,

      23      those Black and Latino students in success academy,

      24      is not fair.

      25             It's an attack on those families, it's an







                                                                   188
       1      attack on those children, and it's just to get even

       2      with a personal vendetta.

       3             There is no justification for withholding

       4      that pre-K money.

       5             That money came from you; it came from the

       6      Governor; it came from the state budget.

       7             Charters are their own LEA.

       8             Just because the City disperses the funds to

       9      CBOs and to their district schools under their

      10      authority, doesn't mean mayoral control gives

      11      Mayor de Blasio and "de Blasio, Inc." the right to

      12      do a vendetta against one woman, but punishing

      13      thousands of students.

      14             And I'm going to read this.

      15             In closing:

      16             Allow me to note that all of us have been

      17      learning about the true meaning of mayoral control

      18      as we watch a second mayor utilize it.

      19             Our challenge, is to fashion an

      20      education-governance system that can work well

      21      with -- and for any mayor and all parents and

      22      students.

      23             We have yet to achieve this.

      24             In my testimony, I have solid recommendations

      25      on an independent oversight board that consists of







                                                                   189
       1      parents and community stakeholders.

       2             I have, step-by-step, what we're seeking.

       3             Metrics to be made; milestones.

       4             Quarterly meetings with this legislative

       5      board, with the DOE, so that when situations, like

       6      what I've just shared with you that is going on with

       7      parents in the school system, you can bring that up

       8      at those quarterly meetings with whoever the mayor

       9      is and whoever his chancellor is.

      10             Mayoral control is supposed to be there to

      11      serve the needs of the children, to educate the

      12      children, to make sure that someone is held

      13      accountable.

      14             Right now, mayoral control is not working.

      15             So, we may support the concept, but we

      16      certainly do not support "de Blasio, Inc."

      17             Thank you.

      18             SENATOR MARCELLINO:  Okay.  Thank you very

      19      much.

      20                  [Applause.]

      21             SENATOR MARCELLINO:  Thank you.

      22             If I could, if you might stay for a moment,

      23      just to --

      24             MONA DAVIDS:  Sorry.

      25             SENATOR MARCELLINO:  -- if my colleagues may







                                                                   190
       1      have...

       2             We heard directly from Chancellor Fariña that

       3      suspensions would occur if someone had a weapon or

       4      brought a weapon, because I brought up the "Post"

       5      article that recently -- or, either yesterday or the

       6      day before, talked about the increase in the number

       7      of weapons picked up in schools, and the police

       8      commissioner actually telling the parents to

       9      pat-down their kids before they leave the house,

      10      which is something I've never heard in my life, and

      11      I taught for 20 years -- 20-plus years in the city

      12      of New York in those schools.

      13             So it was interesting, though, she did say

      14      that there would be suspensions.

      15             You're saying there are no suspensions?

      16             MONA DAVIDS:  There are no suspensions for

      17      bringing the weapons into the school.

      18             I would be glad to send you some information

      19      about some of these cases that were highlighted in

      20      the "Post," where, if your staff,

      21      Senator Marcellino, wants to follow up and hear for

      22      yourself, from those sources --

      23             SENATOR MARCELLINO:  I would appreciate that.

      24             MONA DAVIDS:  -- confirmed sources, they're

      25      not suspending the kids.







                                                                   191
       1             SENATOR MARCELLINO:  Okay.  Please do, send

       2      us specific examples, and we'll try to follow up on

       3      that.

       4             With respect to the open-meetings law, the

       5      only way you can be excluded to a meeting is if

       6      they're talking about personnel issues or

       7      negotiations in a contract.

       8             Those are the only two ways people can be

       9      excluded from a public meeting from a public entity.

      10             So, saying that you cannot attend -- a member

      11      of the general public cannot attend a school-board

      12      meeting or PTA meeting, is simply not the case,

      13      unless --

      14             MONA DAVIDS:  That --

      15             SENATOR MARCELLINO:  -- personnel matters are

      16      being discussed, or unless we are talking about

      17      private contract -- you know, negotiations, or union

      18      contract, or something to that extent.

      19             So if you're saying that's occurring, if we

      20      can get something on that in writing, we'd

      21      appreciate that.

      22             MONA DAVIDS:  I will send that to you in

      23      writing.

      24             I can -- not just that, I can speak

      25      personally.







                                                                   192
       1             I was on an SLT.

       2             My SLT, after Carmen Fariña put out this

       3      edict, started keeping people, the public, out.

       4             Speaking, when it comes to parent

       5      associations, because of the fact that I am the lead

       6      plaintiff in Davids verse New York, you can imagine

       7      the pushback and the attacks that I have personally

       8      experienced, as well as our other plaintiffs.

       9             That being said, even with my school, and one

      10      of the examples for Bob Freeman was my school, they

      11      refused to let in a reporter.  They refused to let

      12      in a representative from StudentsFirst.

      13             And then parents like myself, who are parents

      14      in the school, they called the police and had us

      15      removed.

      16             And before they did that, they checked with

      17      Tweed.

      18             So -- and I'm just one example, and I know of

      19      this happening to other parents.

      20             And it's not like Chancellor Fariña doesn't

      21      know.  She knows everything, because we document

      22      everything.

      23             And that is why we even had the reporter

      24      there and we had other witnesses there.

      25             So this is -- this is a problem.







                                                                   193
       1             And they can get away with it because no one

       2      is holding them accountable.

       3             "De Blasio, Inc." is not here, Senators.

       4             UFT, the Mayor, they're not here.  They've

       5      made their deal.

       6             But it's our children in the school system.

       7             And I appreciate so much, you allowing us to

       8      be here and talk about how mayoral control has

       9      impacted our children.

      10             I hope that, going forward, you have more

      11      communication and outreach with the parents.

      12             I've looked at your speaker list.

      13             And, just looking at your speaker list,

      14      I think there are, maybe, two speakers on that list

      15      with children currently in the school system.

      16             Two.  And I'm one of them.

      17             So there's a problem here, and I'm pretty

      18      sure the other parent is going to say something

      19      similar to what I've said.

      20             And at your Albany hearing, again, you had

      21      one parent who had a child in the school system.

      22             So if we parents, who are the real

      23      stakeholders, who manage to get invited to this,

      24      parents with children who are still in the school

      25      system, parents of children who reflect the







                                                                   194
       1      demographics of children condemned to failing, if we

       2      are saying this system is not working, and if you

       3      are seeing how you yourself have been treated today

       4      with "de Blasio, Inc." missing, there is a problem

       5      here.

       6             So, again, we support mayoral control.

       7             I urge you to please look at our

       8      recommendations about the independence monitor, and

       9      to really engage the parents; truly engage the

      10      parents.

      11             And to give us some contact of someone that

      12      we can reach out to when we are ignored by this

      13      Mayor and by this Chancellor.

      14             There needs to be some types of checks and

      15      balances, and there simply are none.

      16             SENATOR MARCELLINO:  We thank you very much.

      17             MONA DAVIDS:  Thank you, sir.

      18                  [Applause.]

      19             SENATOR MARCELLINO:  Just as a matter of

      20      clarifying things, and making sure everybody is

      21      fully aware:

      22             When I taught, I was a UFT delegate, and a

      23      chapter chairperson for my high school.

      24             And as I said to you before, the UFT was

      25      invited.







                                                                   195
       1             They declined to attend both hearings.

       2             That's their call.

       3             And when I was an assistant principal, board

       4      administration, I was a member of the CSA.

       5             So -- so everyone knows where we are coming

       6      from.

       7             SENATOR ADDABBO:  Can I say something?

       8             SENATOR MARCELLINO:  Sure.

       9             SENATOR ADDABBO:  Also, Mr. Chair, I do want

      10      to encourage all parents and those interested in

      11      this issue, it doesn't take a hearing, it doesn't

      12      take a press conference, or a trip up to Albany.

      13             E-mails, phone calls, visiting your electeds,

      14      parents need to be heard.  Parents have a vested

      15      interest in their children's education.

      16             And from now, until the time that we decide

      17      on mayoral control, or not, I do encourage all

      18      parents to reach out to their elected officials.

      19             SENATOR MARCELLINO:  Absolutely.

      20             The next panel will consist of Tenicka Boyd,

      21      Martha Zornow, Khari Shabazz, and Jacob Mnookin.

      22             If they could come, please.

      23             And as I said to you -- the prior people, if

      24      you could summarize, it would be helpful, since we

      25      have copies of your written testimony, and that will







                                                                   196
       1      be put into the record, in its entirety.

       2             So, you have no fear of that.

       3             Whoever is going speak first.

       4             TENICKA BOYD:  Good evening -- or, good

       5      afternoon.

       6             I'm Tenicka Boyd.  I'm the senior director of

       7      organizing at StudentsFirstNY.

       8             I guess I'm the second New York State

       9      public-school parent.  My daughter attends PS 321 in

      10      Brooklyn.

      11             I work at StudentsFirstNY.  We're an advocacy

      12      organization.  We organize traditional district

      13      public-school parents in 16 communities across

      14      New York City; so that's communities in Jamaica,

      15      Queens; Harlem; east New York; Brownsville; and

      16      communities like that.

      17             I really want to center this idea in the

      18      magnitude of what we're talking about here.

      19             We're talking about 1.1 million students that

      20      Mayor de Blasio is in charge of, and, also, many of

      21      those students are students of color.  Many of those

      22      students, also, are legally zoned to historically

      23      and persistently failing school.

      24             So the magnitude of that is really, really

      25      great.







                                                                   197
       1             One out of 340 Americans is a New York City

       2      public-school student.

       3             So when we talk about mayoral control, we

       4      really need to center the lives marginalized in

       5      low-income students, especially students of color.

       6             There's about seven things that I think that

       7      we really need to look under the hood when we talk

       8      about mayoral control under Mayor de Blasio, and

       9      I'll be, I think, much quicker than Mona.

      10             So, a few things.

      11             SENATOR MARCELLINO:  Bless you.

      12             TENICKA BOYD:  Thank you.

      13             So, the Mayor has talked a lot about making

      14      sure that all second-graders can read by 2026.

      15             The Mayor will be long gone after that, and

      16      so I really think we need to think about the

      17      deadlines that the Mayor has set for himself and the

      18      students of New York City as we think about mayoral

      19      control.

      20             Another thing, we're still dealing with a

      21      tremendous amount of dropout factories.

      22             We have students from Boys and Girls High

      23      School, Automotive High School, Clinton High School

      24      in the Bronx, where 46 percent of children are

      25      graduating in four years.







                                                                   198
       1             Of the 46 percent of those students, only

       2      13 percent of those students are graduating with a

       3      high school diploma that means anything.

       4             So we're still giving students these

       5      meritless diplomas and these empty credentials.

       6             Another thing, 8 out of 10 New York City

       7      public-school students who are graduating are also

       8      taking remedial courses; again, so they're not

       9      college-ready.

      10             They don't have the skills to be successful

      11      and really raise themselves out of intergenerational

      12      poverty, which is something that is essential for

      13      any public school system.

      14             Also, one of the first things that

      15      Mayor de Blasio did as an act of mayoral control, is

      16      he cut the school day by 2 1/2 hours a week.

      17             Right?

      18             And so when we think about things that we

      19      know are good for students, it's -- really, it's

      20      more instructional time and longer school days.

      21             And this mayor has been consistent in cutting

      22      the instructional time of students, and students in

      23      low-income communities and communities of color, our

      24      most marginalized students who need it the most.

      25             Also, this mayor is ignoring solutions.







                                                                   199
       1             We know that school choice and expanding

       2      school choice is something that is very important.

       3             It has allowed students who, again, are zoned

       4      to legally and persistently failing schools,

       5      opportunities to have a different pathway for

       6      success and career-readiness.

       7             And this mayor has not done that.

       8             Also, accountability is really non-existent.

       9             So the Mayor has a school-renewal plan, and

      10      the school-renewal schools where 93 percent of the

      11      students are still failing.  Many of those students

      12      are, again, low-income students and students of

      13      color.

      14             So you're talking about plans like washers

      15      and driers and glasses, all of which sounds very

      16      nice and, I'm sure, socially conscious.

      17             But what's really important for those

      18      students is to be able to have the skills -- the

      19      reading and math skills, and the Mayor has yet to

      20      put forth a plan to address that 2 1/2 years in.

      21             So, what I'll say, in closing, is I really

      22      want to center the lives of a few parents that

      23      I work with each and every day.

      24             One of those parents is Nikea (ph.) Porter.

      25      She's the mother of a second-grader from PS 305 in







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       1      Bed-Stuy, which is a part of the Mayor's

       2      school-renewal plan.

       3             Her son is a year away from taking the state

       4      and math test, but she doesn't feel like he's

       5      properly prepared.

       6             That school only has 3 percent --

       7      3 percent -- of the students who are reading at

       8      grade level.

       9             She is deeply concerned.

      10             She's been an advocate as long as I can

      11      remember.

      12             She's sent e-mails, she's appeared on NY1,

      13      really encouraging the Mayor to raise the standards

      14      for students in this renewal-school plan.

      15             Camille Artimas (ph.) is a mother who stood

      16      outside of this very building this morning and

      17      talked about her daughter, who, in the past

      18      2 1/2 years, she's transferred to three different

      19      schools, from everywhere from Bed-Stuy, to Bushwick,

      20      to find a quality school for her child.

      21             She's wait-listed for high-performing charter

      22      schools, but there are not enough seats, and so she

      23      is stuck with persistently and failing schools.

      24             And she is really afraid of the number of

      25      vacancies in her daughter's school, and the Mayor is







                                                                   201
       1      replacing some of these teachers who are leaving the

       2      school system with "ATR" teachers; teachers from the

       3      absent teacher reserve.

       4             That's a system where we're spending

       5      $100 million a year on teachers who are not teaching

       6      in the classroom.  These are excess teachers, many

       7      of whom are from failing schools.

       8             And those teachers are not in Park Slope

       9      where I send my daughter to school.

      10             They're going to places where marginalized

      11      parents are left to live in far -- you know,

      12      Far Rockaway, east New York, and Brownsville, and

      13      communities like that.

      14             And the Mayor needs to be held accountable

      15      for the lack of quality teachers that he's placing

      16      with our most marginalized and vulnerable students.

      17             Nikea and Camille's stories -- you know,

      18      they're sad, and they're stories that I hear every

      19      day; but, unfortunately, they're not unique.

      20             They're stories of many New York City

      21      public-school parents, and they're stories that

      22      I really think that we should center as we think

      23      about how we extend mayoral control to this

      24      particular mayor, and, also, as we think about

      25      accountability.







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       1             Thank you.

       2             MARTHA ZORNOW:  Good afternoon, Senators.

       3             My name is Martha Zornow.  I'm the founding

       4      principal of Girls Prep Bronx Middle School, a

       5      public charter school located in District 8 in

       6      The Bronx.

       7             We are one of the options that parents have

       8      to choose a high-quality education in their

       9      neighborhood.

      10             We're part of the public prep network, a

      11      non-profit network of schools serving 1500 students.

      12             We had a bunch of our parents here today.

      13             We have a few hearty ones left.

      14             And one of our hallmarks is that our parents

      15      come out to support, because having the choice of a

      16      high-quality public school for their children is

      17      very important in their lives.

      18             I've been an administrator for over

      19      seven years, and an educator for fifteen.

      20             I started in The Bronx as a New York City

      21      teaching fellow, but after a few years in a

      22      struggling school, I left for public schools in

      23      Westchester to learn how to be a teacher.

      24             Most recently, I served as the tenured

      25      principal of Seven Bridges Middle School in







                                                                   203
       1      Chappaqua for four years, but I left to run

       2      Girls Prep Bronx Middle School in 2014.

       3             I felt deeply that the discrepancy between

       4      what was available in Chappaqua and what was

       5      available in District 8 was absolutely unfair, and

       6      it was incumbent on me to come down and do what I

       7      could.

       8             At public prep, our philosophy is to start

       9      early with the end in mind:  To put all of our

      10      students on a path to college completion.  No

      11      remedial courses, go to high school, ready to go.

      12             Our curriculum is as rich and strong as

      13      anything available in Westchester.

      14             We want to ensure that our students attain

      15      high levels of achievement across academic

      16      disciplines, but also in the arts, music, theater,

      17      dance, that they do original science, while also

      18      helping our skills -- helping our students to

      19      develop the character skills and core values that

      20      they need to overcome the inevitable hurdles on the

      21      way to college.

      22             We serve students across New York City, but

      23      we're deeply proud to be part of a vibrant community

      24      in the South Bronx.

      25             We just finished our random lottery for the







                                                                   204
       1      2016-17 school year; and, yes, we do, even in middle

       2      school, admit new students.

       3             There were 176 applications for 25 open

       4      seats.

       5             As proud as I am that so many families want

       6      to come, I'm horribly disappointed that we cannot

       7      meet the demand of the community to serve more

       8      children, desperate for a quality public education,

       9      in their neighborhood.

      10             We believe that your ZIP code should never

      11      determine the quality of your education.

      12             This means that we need to disrupt the

      13      systems that perpetuate education equality in our

      14      city.

      15             The de Blasio Administration claims to have

      16      similar goals, but, we have to question the unequal

      17      treatment by us by Mayor de Blasio.

      18             If the Mayor had had his way, Girls Prep

      19      Bronx Middle School would never have opened.

      20             From the outset, he challenged our ability to

      21      co-locate with another public school -- actually

      22      two.

      23             We fought this with our vibrant parent

      24      community, and we have gone on to build a collegial

      25      relationship with both the Zone Middle School and







                                                                   205
       1      the District 75 School with whom we share our

       2      building.

       3             Mayor de Blasio's unequal treatment did not

       4      stop at co-location.

       5             Funding for traditional public schools has

       6      gone up six times faster than funding for public

       7      charter schools, and Mayor de Blasio does not

       8      support fair funding for us.

       9             We -- while Chancellor Fariña speaks about

      10      the importance of the arts, space is not available.

      11             You cannot run a band or a visual-art program

      12      on a cart in a classroom; and, yet, there is no

      13      space to do that.

      14             We -- initially, our network was not given

      15      the opportunity to serve 4-year olds in UPK, and we

      16      really had to fight for that.

      17             We were initially excluded from offering

      18      after-school programs for students in Grade 6, and

      19      we had to fight to participate in that so that our

      20      students can have the rich range of enrichment

      21      opportunities after school in a safe place, until

      22      6:00, that they deserve.

      23             This fits a troubling pattern that public

      24      charter-school leaders have encountered, in which

      25      the Mayor claims to care deeply about providing







                                                                   206
       1      programs and opportunities for all children, but

       2      then goes on to exclude our children from the same

       3      neighborhoods.

       4             This is a political choice by the Mayor.

       5             He's influenced by status quo interests

       6      instead of New York parents and families.

       7             Today's hearing is about accountability.

       8             As a public-school charter leader, this is

       9      something we are very familiar with.

      10             We have to justify our continued operation to

      11      our authorizers in a renewal process every three or

      12      five years, and we have annual accountability; and

      13      we think the Mayor should face the same.

      14             This rigorous system accountability keeps us

      15      sharp, and we know that if we deviate from our

      16      mission, we lose the privilege of serving children.

      17             We believe that mayoral control is the

      18      correct policy, but, the Mayor really needs to face

      19      the same kind of rigorous accountability that our

      20      school face, with clear, annual, or more frequent,

      21      milestones and metrics.

      22             When a mayor, any mayor, favors one type of

      23      public-school student over another and faces no

      24      consequences, this problem must be addressed through

      25      hearings like this one.







                                                                   207
       1             And you as state leaders can hold the Mayor

       2      accountable just as the State holds us accountable.

       3             I hope this Committee will use today's

       4      hearing to force the Mayor to be more accountable to

       5      the families of the South Bronx desperate for a

       6      great public school, and have a more-inclusive

       7      approach to meeting those families' needs.

       8             To do this, the Mayor must be a leader who

       9      puts the needs of all public children first,

      10      including those who attend public charter schools.

      11             Thank you so much for having me here today.

      12             KHARI SHABAZZ:  Good afternoon.

      13             SENATOR MARCELLINO:  Good afternoon.

      14             KHARI SHABAZZ:  My name is Khari Shabazz.

      15      I'm currently the principal of Success Academy,

      16      Harlem West, located on 114th Street, between

      17      7th and 8th.

      18             I also come to you as a parent, a single

      19      father, in Harlem, where I raised my son, who is now

      20      22, and a graduate of the University of Albany.

      21             I went to his graduation this weekend.

      22             And I did not keep him in New York City

      23      public schools because of some of the brutality and

      24      the dangers that you've heard today.  But, we do

      25      live in Harlem.







                                                                   208
       1             And like all public schools, we have our kids

       2      come to us through a random lottery.  There's high

       3      demand for spaces in our school.  About -- at the

       4      high level, about 10 applications for every one

       5      seat.

       6             And, we're here today to talk about how

       7      mayoral control sort of affects my school in very

       8      large ways.

       9             We do agree that mayoral control allows for

      10      efficiency, it allows for accountability, and we do

      11      believe that it provides for stability; however, it

      12      can be abused in many ways, as you heard today.

      13             And, specifically, as related to success,

      14      Mayor de Blasio prevented some schools from

      15      co-locating.  He rolled back promises, and as a

      16      result, our children were homeless, and, in search

      17      of a school.

      18             And as you can know, that is definitely

      19      emotionally harmful to children and families.

      20             As a principal, I need the resources to run

      21      my school; however, I get less than the

      22      public-school counterparts, the traditional

      23      public-school principals, in my school, and we think

      24      that's unfair.

      25             We need to have a mayor who understands that







                                                                   209
       1      all school principals, all schools, need to have

       2      equitable funding, and the per-pupil expenditure

       3      should be the same.

       4             When speaking about that, Mayor de Blasio in

       5      particular said that, "We do not support initiatives

       6      that take away from one group and give to another."

       7             And that is very divisive and misleading,

       8      because that's not how it works.

       9             And instead of taking that opportunity to be

      10      for all children, he decided that he was going to be

      11      part of the machine that you've heard about today,

      12      in terms of being connected to the UFT, and not his

      13      own man.

      14             Our school day starts at 7:15 in the morning;

      15      we end school at 5:15.

      16             We have incredible curriculum, where our

      17      children are getting a world-class education.  And

      18      to not get the same per-pupil funding is rather

      19      disrespectful to our children and families.

      20             Mayoral control even impacts us in ways

      21      profoundly, as you heard earlier today, in terms of

      22      our discipline, and in terms of school safety.

      23             At success academies, we do have a policy

      24      where we suspend children; however, I'm in a

      25      building where there are kids who are dangerous to







                                                                   210
       1      the building itself, and they're there day after

       2      day.

       3             In terms of making sure that we are safe, we

       4      are located on the fifth floor of a building that

       5      has four -- has five floors, and we have to expend

       6      adult energy to make sure that our children are able

       7      to travel through the school, and through a

       8      neighborhood, quite frankly, that's particularly

       9      violent.

      10             One of the things that I love about working

      11      for success, giving those issues that we have, is

      12      that our children are getting a world-class

      13      education.  They're deconstructing myths and they're

      14      smashing stereotypes.

      15             They perform in the top 1 percent in math, in

      16      the top 3 percent in ELA across, and that's in the

      17      state, and, they are doing fantastic things in our

      18      classrooms.

      19             We want to make sure that we remove the

      20      politics, so we, too, also call for the Mayor to

      21      have some accountability for what he is doing with

      22      control of New York City schools.

      23             I want to thank you for taking this

      24      opportunity to hear about success academies and

      25      about the role that we have, and I appreciate the







                                                                   211
       1      opportunity to talk to you today.

       2             SENATOR MARCELLINO:  Thank you.

       3                  [Applause.]

       4             SENATOR MARCELLINO:  Next panel will be --

       5             JACOB MNOOKIN:  Excuse me, I'm sorry.

       6             SENATOR MARCELLINO:  I'm sorry.

       7             One more.

       8             JACOB MNOOKIN:  I'll be quick.

       9             Good afternoon.

      10             Thank you very much for having me.

      11             My name is Jacob Mnookin.  I'm the founder

      12      and executive director of Coney Island Preparatory

      13      Public Charter School.  We serve almost 800 students

      14      across our elementary, middle, and high schools.

      15             When I founded Coney Island Prep, in just

      16      four rooms at a local New York city Housing

      17      Authority community center, we were the only charter

      18      school in south Brooklyn.

      19             Before we even had our own building, we

      20      received hundreds of applications.

      21             The stories we heard from parents painted a

      22      clear picture of a community where many families did

      23      not feel that their traditional public school could

      24      keep their children safe and allow them to learn.

      25             As a leader -- as a school leader in







                                                                   212
       1      New York City under multiple administrations, I've

       2      seen the success of mayoral control.

       3             Strong mayoral leadership is best for

       4      New York City's children, far better than the

       5      previous system of school-board leadership; however,

       6      educators like myself, as you have heard today, have

       7      concerns about the actions of the current

       8      administration.

       9             That's why today's hearing is so important.

      10             It is through hearings like these that the

      11      Mayor is held accountable for his management of the

      12      city schools, where his leadership team must prove

      13      themselves worthy of the privilege of extended

      14      control of our schools.

      15             It is unfortunate that the Mayor did not

      16      attend the hearing today to hear these concerns.

      17             The current administration has consistently

      18      proven that it does not wish to treat all

      19      public-school students equally.

      20             Public charter schools have been forced to

      21      fight tooth and nail for resources, while, at the

      22      same time, they have been mischaracterized and

      23      attacked by the Mayor and the city's Department of

      24      Education.

      25             Coney Island Prep was forced into a combative







                                                                   213
       1      relationship with the Mayor and his allies for space

       2      for our students after his election.

       3             Since then, we've continued to struggle with

       4      the Mayor's Administration, which seems to believe

       5      that co-located charters owe extra rent money than

       6      traditional schools do not.

       7             Because of the Mayor's attitude and divisive

       8      approach, the cooperative relationship the DOE used

       9      to have with charters has become a combative one.

      10             Together with parents, we have spoken out

      11      against the unfair treatment of our kids.

      12             Despite public outcry, the Mayor and his

      13      administration have worked tirelessly to build

      14      roadblocks, slowing the growth of public charter

      15      schools.

      16             More than eight times as many students

      17      applied for our kindergarten program than we have

      18      seats; almost four times as many for fifth grade.

      19             New York families are desperate for the

      20      opportunity to choose charters.

      21             By reinforcing inequality in school

      22      resources, the Mayor has not only limited

      23      opportunities for students, but he has also

      24      eliminated the -- limited the opportunity for

      25      partnership between the administration and public







                                                                   214
       1      charter-school leaders.

       2             This division helps no one, and hurts

       3      students most of all.

       4             Playing politics in this way has real

       5      consequences for students and families.

       6             As an educator, students are my greatest

       7      concern.

       8             All public-school students deserve to be

       9      treated equally no matter what politics are at play.

      10             The Mayor must address these inequalities

      11      present in the public school system of

      12      New York City.

      13             These hearings provide that opportunity.

      14             I do not wish to see control of the school

      15      system returned to a school board, but this

      16      administration, and future administrations, must

      17      prove themselves worthy of mayoral control by

      18      representing all children in our city.

      19             Thank you.

      20             SENATOR MARCELLINO:  Thank you.

      21                  [Applause.]

      22             SENATOR MARCELLINO:  Next panel,

      23      Kathyrn Wylde -- hope I'm pronouncing the names

      24      correctly -- Marcus Winters, Laura Altschuler, and

      25      Leonie Haimson.







                                                                   215
       1             Come up and share the microphones.  There's

       2      only two mics, but, as they speak, but you're more

       3      than welcome to move a chair, sit it next to the

       4      table.

       5             Please.

       6             KATHRYN WYLDE:  Thank you,

       7      Senators Marcellino and Addabbo.

       8             I appreciate you taking the time to make this

       9      much focus on New York City schools.

      10             I'm Kathyrn Wylde, president and CEO of the

      11      Partnership for New York City.  We represent the

      12      city's business leadership.

      13             Yesterday we released a letter from more than

      14      100 top CEOs in the city.

      15             Our members employ over a million

      16      New Yorkers, and feel very strongly in support of

      17      the continuation of mayoral control as a solid

      18      governance system that holds the Mayor accountable

      19      to the voters, to parents, and employers.

      20             We had experience, for more than 40 years, of

      21      chaos in the governance of our school system through

      22      the '60s and for years beyond.

      23             Those who have been around know that that

      24      system was -- did not work, not only for the

      25      children in the schools where we saw consistent







                                                                   216
       1      decline in performance, but it also was a time

       2      during which we saw more than a million middle-class

       3      New Yorkers leave the city, most of them parents,

       4      looking for decent schools for their kids.  We saw

       5      many of our leading employers leave the city at the

       6      same time.

       7             So this is not just an issue that's important

       8      from the standpoint of the education of the kids.

       9      It's also an issue that's important to everyone in

      10      the city.

      11             And I want to reiterate that, and that's the

      12      lens through which the business community looks at

      13      education.

      14             In addition, they look at this as, in terms

      15      of the future:  Where are these kids going?  How

      16      well are these kids going to be prepared for jobs,

      17      college, careers, and advanced training and

      18      education.

      19             And we think, again, that mayoral control

      20      provides the basis for establishing strong

      21      partnerships.

      22             Between the -- 1968 and 2003, we, basically,

      23      opened no career- and technical-education programs.

      24      And it's only post mayoral control that there has

      25      been a real effort to engage employers in skills,







                                                                   217
       1      training, and development.

       2             In fact -- and then, in fact, that area is

       3      being greatly expanded now, and we're very hopeful

       4      that that will continue to be another area that we

       5      can improve.

       6             The ability to employers to work -- employers

       7      to work efficiently with the school system, again,

       8      really depends on a good governance system, a solid

       9      governance system.

      10             And we think it's imminently clear that

      11      current the system is far better than anything

      12      that's gone before it.

      13             We're very concerned that, regardless of who

      14      was mayor, regardless who is chancellor, that there

      15      be a way that we can see who is responsible.

      16             Under the old system, no one was in charge.

      17             So that's, basically, our message.

      18             We feel very strongly on this subject.

      19             We have, over the years, been advocates for

      20      increased investment in the schools: for stronger

      21      school leadership, for charter schools, for school

      22      reform.

      23             We've been very active in Albany on all those

      24      topics, and this is one that we've been involved

      25      with for long before it was enacted, because the







                                                                   218
       1      problems were obvious.  And we worked with the

       2      Legislature to craft the legislation that developed

       3      this -- the system we have now.

       4             We strongly support its extension.

       5             MARCUS A. WINTERS:  Good afternoon.

       6             Thank you for the opportunity to testify on

       7      this important topic.

       8             My name is Marcus Winters.  I'm an economist

       9      who studies education policy as a senior fellow at

      10      the Manhattan Institute, and also as an associate

      11      professor in the College of Education in the

      12      University of Colorado in Colorado Springs.

      13             I've studied several aspects of

      14      New York City's public school system, including as

      15      related to school choice and accountability, in

      16      charter schools and accountability.

      17             I want to begin my remarks by saying, as you

      18      suggested to start with, that I do recommend

      19      extending mayoral control of the city schools for a

      20      substantial period of time.

      21             I believe mayoral control in New York City

      22      has proven to be a far better system than what we

      23      had before.

      24             Put simply, a mayor is in a better position

      25      to lead and be held accountable for the performance







                                                                   219
       1      of a major urban school system than as any other

       2      body.

       3             That said -- and my endorsement of mayoral

       4      control comes, despite the fact that I'm a vocal

       5      critic of many of the policies of this current

       6      administration.

       7             That said, I do think there are areas that

       8      the body -- that this body should discuss with the

       9      Mayor within the current conversation of mayoral

      10      control.

      11             I'm going to focus my testimony today on the

      12      issue of school accountability, and what's happened

      13      with the accountability system in New York City.

      14             School assessment accountability system is

      15      extremely important to any urban system, especially

      16      one the size, complexity of -- and importance of New

      17      York City's.

      18             The aspects of the accountability system

      19      represents the district's view of what makes for an

      20      effective school.

      21             And it provides the district with an

      22      opportunity to push its lowest performers to

      23      improve.

      24             Under the previous administration, the city

      25      schools were assessed according to student







                                                                   220
       1      performance and growth on standardized tests, along

       2      with surveys of parents, teachers, and students.

       3             And at the end of this, they received a

       4      grade, from A through F, that assessed their overall

       5      performance on all these measures.

       6             Over time, the current administration has

       7      fund -- has changed its accountability system in a

       8      way that has fundamentally altered the city's vision

       9      of what makes for an effective school.

      10             The first, and most obvious, change to the

      11      accountability system was the decision to end the

      12      practice of presenting each school with a letter

      13      grade.

      14             In fact, the current system doesn't provide

      15      the summary measure of the school's overall

      16      performance at all.

      17             That decision to eliminate the summary letter

      18      grade was made, despite empirical evidence that

      19      schools who received a failing grade under the prior

      20      system made substantial improvements the following

      21      year.

      22             That was the finding of some of my work, with

      23      my colleague, Joshua Cowen (ph.) at Michigan State

      24      University, and another -- by economist

      25      Jonah Rockoff (ph.) at Columbia, and Leslie Turner







                                                                   221
       1      who's now at the University of Maryland.

       2             In our paper, we also show that the

       3      improvements that came from the upgrade stuck with

       4      the kids a couple years later, suggesting that there

       5      were real gains made by the students not caused by

       6      testing manipulation.

       7             In a forthcoming report, I returned to the

       8      issue of New York City's school-grading system, and

       9      what my analysis shows is that, the test-scores

      10      improvement following the F grade, that we saw early

      11      in the policy, was still detectable the last year

      12      the grades were given.

      13             So there was still a positive effect from the

      14      policy that was going on.

      15             And then what I further show is that this

      16      effect dissipated immediately following removement

      17      of the summary letter grades.

      18             So, basically, what we're seeing is that

      19      there was a positive-treatment effect.  The F grades

      20      were working to make the worst schools better.

      21             Once those F grades were gone, that positive

      22      treatment went away.

      23             To a great degree, New York City's prior

      24      accountability system met many of the criteria that

      25      we need of an effective accountability system.







                                                                   222
       1             Schools were ranked according to a

       2      well-understood grading system.  The results were

       3      wildly reported.

       4             And what we saw from research is that that

       5      policy was working to help the most -- the system's

       6      worst schools to improve.

       7             The most recent manifestations of New York

       8      accountability system lacks that under --

       9      well-understood scale that we saw in the prior

      10      system.

      11             At least as important as issuing the summary

      12      letter performances, and I think that's of

      13      tremendous importance, are the factors that underlie

      14      the district's assessment of school quality.

      15             And that also has changed from -- in this

      16      current administration in ways that I think are

      17      problematic.

      18             So when the City first removed the letter

      19      grades, they actually reported almost identical

      20      information about school quality.

      21             That has been changing over time.

      22             So, the year after that, the school -- the

      23      City fundamentally changed the parent surveys.

      24             So, that used to be very focused on the

      25      parents' perceptions of the school's expectation for







                                                                   223
       1      the child's performance and how they're reaching

       2      that.

       3             Most of -- all of those questions have been

       4      replaced with, I think, questions that I think are

       5      less helpful about the parents' perception.

       6             More problematic, in my opinion, are the

       7      planned upcoming changes that have been signaled by

       8      the Administration.

       9             According to the technical documents of last

      10      year's school-quality reports, the Administration

      11      plans to phase out important measures of student

      12      achievement -- student academic progress on

      13      standardized tests from the school-quality reports,

      14      starting next year.

      15             Despite the controversy surrounding them,

      16      these measures of student test-score growth are

      17      essential for separating the school's contribution

      18      to student learning from that of family background.

      19             To put the extent of the change into context,

      20      measured student progress on the tests accounted for

      21      60 percent of the school's overall score under the

      22      prior accountability system.

      23             Now that said, the old system wasn't perfect,

      24      and, in fact, it was tweaked over time.  And not all

      25      the changes this current administration has done is







                                                                   224
       1      all bad.

       2             In particular, a central feature of the

       3      current system is the focus of reviews of

       4      experienced educators who spend time in the schools.

       5             I think that's a helpful thing.

       6             There are things that qualitative assessments

       7      of school quality can tell us that test scores and

       8      surveys might miss.

       9             That said, objective measures of school

      10      performance are essential for anchoring that

      11      accountability system.

      12             Without the grounding of student test-score

      13      growth, these quality -- qualitative assessments

      14      could be rubber stamps over time, just as subjective

      15      teacher evaluations were for so long.

      16             Now -- so I would strongly suggest that this

      17      body keep control of New York City schools in the

      18      Office of the Mayor, but I would also suggest that

      19      the Legislature make clear its expectations that,

      20      whoever is mayor, operates the schools within a

      21      framework that prioritizes student learning and

      22      presents the public with useful and actionable

      23      information about school performance.

      24             Thank you very much.

      25             LEONIE HAIMSON:  Thank you,







                                                                   225
       1      Senators Marcellino and Addabbo, for allowing me to

       2      testify today.

       3             My name is Leonie Haimson.  I'm the executive

       4      director of Class Size Matters, a citywide advocacy

       5      organization dedicated to providing information on

       6      the benefits of smaller classes.

       7             I'm also the co-chair of the national

       8      organization Parent Coalition for Student Privacy;

       9      on the steering committee of the statewide coalition

      10      New York State Allies for Public Education; and on

      11      the board of The Network for Public Education.

      12             I'm also a member of NYC Kids PAC, which

      13      released an education report card for the Mayor

      14      yesterday, copies of which you should have received

      15      along with my testimony.

      16             This report card grades the Mayor in several

      17      education categories, based primarily on whether he

      18      followed up on his campaign promises.

      19             The members of NYC Kids PAC include four

      20      sitting presidents of citywide and community

      21      education councils, three past presidents of CECs,

      22      and one sitting member of the Panel for Educational

      23      Policy.

      24             So I hope you take these -- this report card

      25      seriously.







                                                                   226
       1             It exhibits particular disappointment with

       2      the lack of parent input at the school district and

       3      citywide levels.

       4             Citywide and community education councils

       5      remain largely disempowered, with little or no say

       6      as to co-locations and space planning, and DOE has

       7      argued in court that school leadership teams have

       8      only advisory powers, in an effort to keep their

       9      meetings closed to the public.

      10             As Mona mentioned, we're one of the

      11      plaintiffs on that lawsuit, which we won in the

      12      State Supreme Court, which the DOE has now appealed

      13      to the Appellate Court.

      14             School overcrowding and class size also

      15      continue to be major concerns.

      16             For the purpose of this testimony, however,

      17      I speak only for my organization Class Size Matters.

      18             I have opposed mayoral control, and have done

      19      so since its inception in 2003.

      20             Unlike others who have switched their

      21      positions depending on who was mayor and what

      22      policies he espouses, I have been consistent in my

      23      views.

      24             I was part of the parent commission on school

      25      governance that issued a report in 2009, that







                                                                   227
       1      recommended a school board without a mayoral

       2      majority, replaced, in part, by six parents to be

       3      selected by CECs.

       4             Last year I co-authored a column in the

       5      "Gotham Gazette," with Shino Tanikawa, the president

       6      of the NYC Kids PAC, and the community education

       7      council in District 2 in Manhattan, in which we

       8      pointed out many of the weaknesses in the system.

       9             And that op-ed is appended to this testimony.

      10             I also want to mention that I think it's

      11      unfortunate that more parent-leaders were not

      12      allowed to testify today, including Shino, who

      13      represents a school district that I think is

      14      composed of four Senate Districts, it's that large.

      15             So I really would appreciate if you allowed

      16      more parents to testify, and you opened up this

      17      hearing more to the public.

      18             Why have we consistently opposed this

      19      governance system?

      20             Mayoral control, as it exists here, in

      21      Chicago, and a few other cities around the country,

      22      is inherently undemocratic, and provides no real

      23      checks and balances to autocratic rule.

      24             As a result, it has too often suffered from

      25      insufficient input from parents and community







                                                                   228
       1      members closest to the ground; the result being

       2      damaging policies and unwise spending.

       3             Our entire system of democratic rule, from

       4      the federal government, on down, relies on the

       5      separation of powers.

       6             Can you imagine if our Governor decided to

       7      dismiss the State Legislature on the grounds that it

       8      was an inefficient governance system?

       9             I don't think you guys would like that very

      10      much.

      11             It is simply unacceptable, and I think

      12      racist, that the only places where mayoral control

      13      currently exists have student populations that are a

      14      majority of students of color.

      15             Suburban/rural, cities and towns in the rest

      16      of the state, and the country, would never accept

      17      such a system which disempowers voters, including

      18      the towns that many Senators represent; and neither

      19      should we in New York City.

      20             I would add that nearly every poll that has

      21      surveyed New York City voters have found that a

      22      majority are against mayoral control, and in favor

      23      of the executive sharing power with an independent

      24      school board or the city council.

      25             And we're not alone.







                                                                   229
       1             In Chicago where mayoral control was first

       2      instituted, there is now a big push, including

       3      legislation, to replace the governance system with

       4      an elected school board.

       5             The same is happening in Detroit which has

       6      suffered under one-man rule by the governors and

       7      elected emergency manager.

       8             Both cities have suffered a real lack of

       9      accountability in the top-down management of their

      10      schools.

      11             What about the record here in New York City?

      12             Despite claims of great progress, we analyze

      13      the test scores of city students on the NAEPs, the

      14      most reliable national assessments that exist.

      15             When gains in student test scores, since

      16      mayoral control was instituted in 2003, are

      17      disaggregated by race, ethnicity, and economic

      18      status, it is apparent that New York City schools

      19      have come out second-to-last among the 10 cities in

      20      terms of improved achievement.

      21             Though it's true that graduation rates have

      22      increased, our gains mirror increased rates

      23      nationally, and many have also argued that it's the

      24      increased pressure on our schools to inflate their

      25      figures through discredited methods, such as credit







                                                                   230
       1      recoveries and the like, that have achieved these

       2      rate increases.

       3             The justification for mayoral control is

       4      often that the previous system was scandal-ridden

       5      with corrupt local school boards exhibiting

       6      patronage and the like.

       7             But the reality is, that the community school

       8      boards had the power to hire and fire taken away

       9      from them in 1996, which was years before mayoral

      10      control was instituted.

      11             Moreover, the waste and fraud that continues

      12      under the current system far outstrips what occurred

      13      previously.

      14             There were multiple multimillion-dollar

      15      no-bid contracts awarded under Mayor Bloomberg, that

      16      subsequently were found out to be wasteful and/or

      17      corrupt.

      18             One of the largest related to a contract

      19      awarded Custom Computer Specialists, to provide

      20      Internet wiring, with the vendor hired by

      21      Ross Lanham, a DOE consultant.

      22             As a 2011 report from the special

      23      investigators found, Lanham and CCS were involved in

      24      a massive kickback scheme that stole millions from

      25      the DOE.  The CEO of CCS and Lanham also started a







                                                                   231
       1      real-estate business together.

       2             Lanham was later indicted and sent to jail,

       3      and the FCC excluded the DOE from more than

       4      100 million of E-rate funds because of the

       5      (indiscernible) scandal.

       6             Yet, in 2015, I learned that a new contract,

       7      amounting to $1.1 billion over 5 years, renewable to

       8      2 billion over 9 years, was about to be awarded to

       9      the same vendor for more Internet wiring and

      10      equipment.

      11             After the media was alerted, the contract was

      12      hurriedly renegotiated by DOE, down, in 24 hours, to

      13      627 million, suggesting how inflated it was in the

      14      first place.

      15             Yet, the Panel for Educational Policy

      16      rubber-stamped the contract, 10-to-1, with the only

      17      The Bronx representative voting no.

      18             Luckily, city hall was alerted to the

      19      controversy through the media, and, subsequently,

      20      canceled the contract.

      21             They later rebid the contract to other

      22      vendors, at a savings estimated between a hundred

      23      sixty-three and seven hundred twenty-seven million

      24      dollars.

      25             An E-rate consent decree was issued by the







                                                                   232
       1      FCC, imposing a $3 million fine on what they called

       2      "massive fraud," and ordering that an independent

       3      monitor and auditor be hired at city expense, while

       4      warning the DOE to refrain from engaging with any

       5      companies previously involved with Lanham.

       6             Yet, as we recently learned, the DOE has

       7      awarded nine new contracts to CCS since the special

       8      investigator report, worth more than 20 million, and

       9      seven of them are current.

      10             In fact, we learned that the company has

      11      received over 158,000 in payments from the DOE and

      12      the School Construction Authority in just the last

      13      two weeks.

      14             Since the CCS controversy, along with former

      15      member Patrick Sullivan, we formed a citizens'

      16      contract-oversight committee, and we've identified

      17      many wasteful contracts, including several awarded

      18      companies previously found to have overcharged the

      19      City and the State by millions of dollars.  These

      20      include a contract, approved just last night to the

      21      PEP, to a special-ed vendor found to have submitted

      22      nearly $3 million in non-reimbursable expenses to

      23      the State, according to a December audit from the

      24      State Comptroller's Office.

      25             Yet never, to my knowledge, has the PEP voted







                                                                   233
       1      to reject a single DOE contract.

       2             So when Senator Peralta asked about that, I

       3      think what the DOE was responding to was the five

       4      co-location proposals that were either revised, and

       5      one of them was canceled; not the contracts.

       6             I've asked a current member of the PEP if

       7      they've ever actually voted down a contract, and

       8      I've also asked past PEP members, and they both said

       9      no.

      10             In addition, as has been recently reported,

      11      the PEP members have never been provided with the

      12      minimum of six hours of training on their

      13      financial-oversight accountability and fiduciary

      14      responsibilities required of all school-board

      15      members by a 2005 state law, despite requests to

      16      receive this training from at least one board

      17      member; nor does the board has an internal audit

      18      committee, as the law requires.

      19             The lone member who voted against the

      20      CCS contract recently resigned under pressure, and

      21      both he and another former member,

      22      Norm Fruchter (ph.), have stated publicly for the

      23      record, that the panel does not provide sufficient

      24      checks and balances to mayoral control.

      25             I would be remiss if I didn't speak about







                                                                   234
       1      class size, the top concern of parents, according to

       2      the DOE's own surveys.

       3             In -- June 20 -- 2003, the Campaign for

       4      Fiscal Equity case, the state's highest court found

       5      that students were deprived of their constitutional

       6      right to a sound, basic education because class

       7      sizes were too large.

       8             In 2007, the Contracts for Excellence law was

       9      passed by the Legislature, which required

      10      New York City to reduce class sizes in all grades;

      11      yet, class sizes sharply increased, and, now, in --

      12      Grades K through 3 are more than 14 percent larger

      13      than when the original decision was made.

      14             Though average class sizes have stabilized

      15      since 2013, the number of students in classes of

      16      30 or more in the early grades continues to go up.

      17             This fall, there were over 48,000 students in

      18      classes of 30 or more in the early grades, more than

      19      350,000 students in classes that large in all

      20      grades -- more than one-third of all public-school

      21      students in gen ed, inclusion, and gifted classes.

      22             In their C4E plan, the DOE said they would

      23      now focus their class size-reduction efforts on the

      24      renewal schools; yet, our analysis showed that

      25      nearly 40 percent of these schools did not reduce







                                                                   235
       1      class size one iota.  About 60 percent continue to

       2      feature classes of 30 or more, and only 7 percent

       3      have capped class sizes at appropriate C4E levels,

       4      of 20 in K through 3, 23 in Grades 4 through 8, and

       5      25 in core high school classes.

       6             And, honestly, I do not think the program can

       7      succeed with classes as large as they continue to be

       8      in these schools.

       9             So what should be done?

      10             I would like to propose, as our parent

      11      commission did seven years ago, that an office of an

      12      inspector general be created to report on -- to the

      13      public on any case of malfeasance, corruption, or

      14      mismanagement by school-system employees;

      15             As well as an ombudsperson, to address and

      16      resolve parents complaints, and provide regular

      17      reports on how services and policies could be

      18      improved.

      19             CEC should also be given the authority to

      20      approve co-locations, as they currently do have

      21      in-school rezonings.

      22             I also think it would be useful for the city

      23      comptroller and the public advocate to have their

      24      own appointees on the panel.

      25             As to the school board itself, if its members







                                                                   236
       1      cannot be elected directly by the citizens of

       2      New York, as happens in the rest of the state, at

       3      the very least, the DOE should be made subject to

       4      city law.

       5             Currently, the Department of Education is the

       6      only city agency exempt from laws passed by the city

       7      council, other than oversight legislation.

       8             I don't think many people realize what a

       9      unique position the DOE is in, in not having any

      10      local checks and balances in this way.

      11             The police department, housing, and

      12      children's services, all the other city agencies,

      13      are under the mayor's control; and, yet, subject to

      14      the checks and balances of the city council.

      15             Yet, I've never heard anyone claim that this

      16      system unacceptably dilutes the mayor's authority

      17      when it comes to addressing either crime or the need

      18      for more housing.

      19             Why should our public schools be any

      20      different?

      21             Why should they have fewer checks and

      22      balances than any other city agency?

      23             Thank you for your time, and I'd be happy to

      24      answer any questions you might have.

      25             SENATOR MARCELLINO:  Thank you.







                                                                   237
       1             LAURA ALTSCHULER:  Thank you.

       2             First of all, Senator Marcellino and

       3      Senator Addabbo, thank you for your time and

       4      patience.

       5             Education is important to us, and we all

       6      appreciate it.

       7             I'm Laura Altschuler, a past president of the

       8      League; currently on the board of directors.

       9             As you know, the League operates on three

      10      levels.  And the national League of Women Voters

      11      really began building a foundation to equal access

      12      to public education; followed by the state League,

      13      which was also part of the strong push for financing

      14      education and the campaign for fiscal equity; and

      15      here in the New York City League, we actually did a

      16      study on how the schools should best be served.

      17             And -- I'm paraphrasing my testimony, but you

      18      won't object, I'm sure.

      19             SENATOR MARCELLINO:  Bless you.

      20             LAURA ALTSCHULER:  We didn't support mayoral

      21      control initially, but we concluded, after

      22      observation and study, that making the City

      23      Administration responsible for the operation of the

      24      school system afforded much greater transparency and

      25      accountability.







                                                                   238
       1             And I would like to say, when we say

       2      "control," we really mean responsibility.

       3             Someone who was here earlier mentioned that

       4      there should be more parents here, you know, who

       5      have children in the schools.

       6             I attended the New York City public schools,

       7      my children went to the New York City public schools

       8      and, currently, my grandchildren are.

       9             And I think it's important that people

      10      continue to be interested in education whether or

      11      not they have children in the public schools.

      12             And we at the League are very much -- you

      13      know, feel that that needs to continue.

      14             We actually urge the renewal of mayoral

      15      control for six years; and the reason why, we think

      16      the children and our schools as are important as our

      17      infrastructure, for building bridges or replacing

      18      water mains.

      19             There's is -- there are certain things that

      20      take a very long time to achieve, and they don't

      21      happen with one year or two years of change.

      22             And that's why I like the word "mayoral

      23      responsibility."

      24             Since I just told you how long I have been

      25      involved in education in the city, you will know







                                                                   239
       1      I've lived through teacher strikes,

       2      decentralization.  Before that, centralization.  And

       3      then, again.

       4             And you have to have someone who continues to

       5      be responsible, and people need someone that they

       6      can go to, whoever is in charge, the assistants, or

       7      whatever.

       8             But you cannot have what we had before, and

       9      that's why we think, whether you call it "mayoral

      10      control" or "mayor responsibility and control," it

      11      must continue.

      12             But there's always time for improvement, and

      13      with your permission, I just want to make a few

      14      specific recommendations.

      15             Fixed terms for the members of the Panel of

      16      Educational Policy:

      17             They should serve fixed terms of two or

      18      three years.

      19             Right now, they serve at the pleasure of the

      20      mayor or the borough president who appointed them.

      21             Now, we're assuming that they were appointed

      22      because of expertise and judgment.  And they should

      23      be free to study, review, vote, on educational

      24      policy without fear of being replaced by, or

      25      disagree with, an appointing official.







                                                                   240
       1             This happened, to the detriment of the school

       2      system, in an earlier administration.

       3             The Department of Education should follow the

       4      procurement rules and regulations which apply to

       5      other city agencies, including, but not limited to,

       6      publicly advertising contract opportunities, and

       7      holding hearings on non-competitively-bid contracts.

       8             We're not talking about what individual

       9      principals or school system might need, but these

      10      large citywide contracts should abide by the same.

      11             And, the meetings of the Panels of

      12      Educational Policy and community district

      13      educational council should be public and subject to

      14      the state and city public-meeting laws.  Agendas

      15      should be published in advance on the department's

      16      website, and meetings webcast.

      17             And on -- the community district educational

      18      councils should be consulted before any school,

      19      traditional or charter, elementary, middle, or

      20      high school, is open, closed, consolidated,

      21      restructured, renamed, or collated within district.

      22             Everyone in the community, and especially the

      23      parents, need to be involved in this.

      24             And the provisions of mayoral control in

      25      school governments approved by the State of New York







                                                                   241
       1      should be made a part of the New York City Charter.

       2             Most people do not know that the Department

       3      of Education is not in the city charter.

       4             We've been sort of wanting that every time

       5      there was a change in city government.

       6             So in designating the mayor as the New York

       7      City official responsible for the operation of

       8      New York City's public schools, the State of

       9      New York has recognized the department as a city

      10      agency; and, as such, it belongs in the New York

      11      City Charter.

      12             At present, there is no delineation of powers

      13      or responsibilities of the Department of Education

      14      in the New York City Charter.

      15             This was justified by the temporary nature of

      16      the government structure; but "temporary" is now

      17      15 years, and going on.

      18             There is ample opportunity to amend the

      19      charter if changes in governance are enacted, but to

      20      ignore the existence of an agency which accounts for

      21      20 percent of the city's budget cannot be justified.

      22             And an overly extended debate about mayoral

      23      control is problematic, and no one has suggested a

      24      reliable alternative.

      25             And we're certainly not proposing a return to







                                                                   242
       1      the previously-constituted board of education.

       2             In fact, a failure to renew mayoral control

       3      will result in reversal to a system which no longer

       4      exists.

       5             More than one million children attend our

       6      city's public schools.  Their education is of

       7      primary importance to their and our future, and the

       8      governance of our schools should not be part of

       9      negotiations over issues which really have nothing

      10      to do with education.

      11             Extending investment tax credits to wealthy

      12      New Yorkers who contribute to private and parochial

      13      schools will not improve public education.  If

      14      anything, it will reduce in -- result in reduced tax

      15      revenues which the State uses to fund our schools.

      16             And we really appreciate the time that you

      17      have taken to listen to the League's testimony.

      18             And, I'm not going ask if you have any

      19      questions, because I have a feeling that I'm the

      20      last speaker, and that's probably the last thing

      21      that you want.

      22             But we are here to answer you today; or, if

      23      you -- we have people in the state who are always

      24      available from the League of Women Voters.

      25             Thank you so much.







                                                                   243
       1             SENATOR MARCELLINO:  Appreciate you coming,

       2      and we appreciate your testimony, but you're not the

       3      last speaker.

       4             LAURA ALTSCHULER:  Oh, okay.

       5             SENATOR MARCELLINO:  We do have two more to

       6      come.

       7             LAURA ALTSCHULER:  Oh, I was just looking at

       8      the list that I read.

       9             SENATOR MARCELLINO:  Thank you very much,

      10      though, for your testimony.

      11             We appreciate you coming.

      12             LAURA ALTSCHULER:  Thank you.

      13             SENATOR MARCELLINO:  Let's call

      14      Richard Kahan.

      15             RICHARD KAHAN:  I think I owe you both a

      16      drink.

      17             It's very kind of you to stay this long and

      18      listen to all of the testimony.

      19             SENATOR MARCELLINO:  That's why they pay us

      20      the big bucks.

      21             RICHARD KAHAN:  And I do have a fond memory

      22      of working with the State Senate when

      23      Warren Anderson was the head.

      24             A lot of people think that we have a

      25      convention center in Battery Park City here, because







                                                                   244
       1      of the -- because we had a democratic mayor and a

       2      democratic governor at the time, Hugh Kerry and

       3      Koch.

       4             Not at all true.

       5             It's Warren Anderson that made the things

       6      possible, on his time table.

       7             I appreciate the opportunity to testify in

       8      favor of mayoral control.

       9             The Urban Assembly has 21 schools,

      10      9,000 students.  We have no screening whatsoever.

      11      20 percent special ed, et cetera.

      12             A very underprivileged population, we've done

      13      very well with that.

      14             We have graduation rates that exceed the

      15      city's significantly, and given our

      16      African-American, Latino, population, by about

      17      13 percent for that population.  80 percent of our

      18      kids are going to college.

      19             And I dare say, that many never would have

      20      gone to college, let alone graduate, were it not for

      21      small schools, which is what we are.

      22             In addition, our colleagues at New Visions

      23      and Outward Bound, and international schools, who

      24      you heard from, Joe Luft (ph.), in Albany, shared

      25      the same view.







                                                                   245
       1             We are all predominantly small schools that

       2      came out of the reforms made possible in the

       3      Bloomberg Administration.

       4             And I will say that I'm not an educator.

       5      I've watched from a distance for most of my life,

       6      until the last 10 or 12 years.

       7             And what I heard one mayor after another say

       8      was:  If I had control over this, I'd fix it.  But,

       9      I don't have control.

      10             "I'd blow up 110 Livingston," that was a

      11      direct quote from one of the mayors, "if I had

      12      control over the DOE."

      13             Then, all of a sudden, came along the man

      14      that said:  I want control, and I want you to hold

      15      me accountable.

      16             I thought that was the craziest political

      17      statement I ever heard, and at one point I told him

      18      that.

      19             But he meant it, and I think it made all the

      20      difference in the world.

      21             And, personally, that was the point at which

      22      I looked and said, You know, I'd like to get

      23      involved in education now, because this is serious.

      24      Nobody is passing the buck anymore.

      25             So without mayoral control, those reforms,







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       1      and other reforms, would not have taken place.

       2             I give this administration credit for

       3      pre-K -- universal pre-K.  If they did nothing else,

       4      that is a great legacy.  For the renewal schools,

       5      community schools.

       6             But it's is not just about this

       7      administration either.

       8             There will be other administrations.  None of

       9      them will have the opportunity to and the time to

      10      create sustainable reform programs without a number

      11      of years to do it in.

      12             If you have an idea today, it will take a

      13      year or two to implement it.  Then you want to test

      14      it and you want to measure it, and you want to see

      15      what's wrong, you want to fix things, you want to

      16      tinker.

      17             And at the end of that process, you have

      18      something else you'd like to do to raise the bar

      19      even higher.

      20             That is not a one-year process, and it's not

      21      a two-year process.

      22             It takes time, and we can't do it without

      23      multi-year mayoral control.

      24             I thank you very much.

      25







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       1             SENATOR MARCELLINO:  Thank you.

       2             Mr. Walcott.

       3             DENNIS WALCOTT:  How are you?

       4             SENATOR MARCELLINO:  Okay.  Good to see you.

       5             DENNIS WALCOTT:  Thank you, sir.

       6             SENATOR MARCELLINO:  Thank you for coming

       7      back.

       8             DENNIS WALCOTT:  Oh, my pleasure.

       9             No, I had to run across the street to testify

      10      before the city council for my regular job now.

      11             SENATOR MARCELLINO:  Did you see the Mayor

      12      over there?

      13             DENNIS WALCOTT:  I did not.

      14                  [Laughter.]

      15             DENNIS WALCOTT:  I went straight in, and

      16      testified before the city council about libraries

      17      today.

      18             So...

      19             SENATOR MARCELLINO:  Bless you.  Worthy

      20      places.

      21             DENNIS WALCOTT:  I totally agree with you.

      22             And in Queens, as Senator Addabbo knows, we

      23      have 63 great libraries.

      24             But I'm not here today to talk about

      25      libraries for this building.







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       1             And I want to say, good afternoon to you,

       2      Chair, and to Senator Addabbo, and to all the other

       3      Senators here earlier.

       4             As you know, my name is Dennis Walcott,

       5      former New York City schools chancellor; and, also,

       6      former deputy mayor of education under

       7      Mayor Bloomberg; and current president and CEO of

       8      the Queens Library System.

       9             And I want to thank you for the opportunity

      10      to discuss this critical issue of mayoral control of

      11      the schools; or, really, dealing with school

      12      governance, and what it actually means.

      13             And as you may know, my history with school

      14      governance goes back to the beginning of this prior

      15      administration, in 2002.

      16             But my involvement with education, both,

      17      formally, was not through Mayor Bloomberg, but

      18      really started before then, when I was appointed to

      19      the old Board of Education by Mayor Dinkins, back in

      20      1992, 1993.

      21             And then, in the mid-1990s, I was appointed

      22      by Chancellor Rudy Crew, as a trustee of a local

      23      school board, the one up in district Harlem,

      24      District 5, that had been suspended, and I became

      25      president of that trustee board.







                                                                   249
       1             And I have the unique and dubious distinction

       2      of having served as the last Board of Education

       3      president, from June 30th to August 11th of 2009.

       4             So when I was here earlier and I heard

       5      Senator Addabbo's question about, what's next if

       6      it's not renewed? that was what was next, and it had

       7      lapsed at that particular point, as you remember,

       8      and there was a lot of horse-trading on who would be

       9      on the board, and, the Board of Education back then,

      10      who would become the president?

      11             And I became the Board of Ed president as a

      12      result of the votes of Mayor Bloomberg, and

      13      Helen Marshall, who was borough president of Queens

      14      at that time.

      15             And it shouldn't be that way.

      16             In 2002, when Mayor Bloomberg sought

      17      school-governance reform, we aimed to achieve

      18      accountability and responsibility for the schools,

      19      not just as a prize for any one mayor in particular,

      20      but as a fundamental change in the governance

      21      structure that would secure the future of our city's

      22      1.1 million schoolchildren.

      23             The state's resulting historic

      24      school-governance legislation provided an

      25      unprecedented opportunity to transform a largely







                                                                   250
       1      underperforming bureaucracy into an exemplary system

       2      focused on what is best for children.

       3             The school system we inherited was a deeply

       4      troubled one, which, despite the best intentions and

       5      the good work of many dedicated people, did not

       6      provide and meet the needs of our children with

       7      education that they needed and deserved.

       8             The seven-member Board of Education, beset by

       9      competing agendas, failed to provide the kind of

      10      coherence and accountability and effectiveness

      11      needed to ensure a high-quality education for every

      12      child across the city.

      13             And as you know, you indicated you were a

      14      teacher, and we were all involved.  You had a

      15      disjointed system that was dysfunctional.  And you

      16      had one district that operated one way, another

      17      district that operated another way.

      18             And it was really total chaos.

      19             Instead, equity, patronage, and waste, and

      20      dysfunction plagued the system back then.

      21             School funding was based on more on who you

      22      knew in the politics than based on the need.

      23             Many teachers had to wait months for a

      24      paycheck.

      25             I'm not sure exactly when you started, but







                                                                   251
       1      I know when we became in place, in 2002 --

       2             SENATOR MARCELLINO:  '68.

       3             DENNIS WALCOTT:  1968.

       4             -- and I know when we started in 2002, before

       5      control was given, teachers still had to wait up to

       6      two to three to four months, sometimes, to get paid,

       7      and that was across the system.

       8             And that shouldn't be that way, and we were

       9      able to address that right away.

      10             Our poorer students were trapped in

      11      lowest-performing schools in the city and had few

      12      options.

      13             Only half of the students were graduating at

      14      some schools, and the rate was closer to 20 percent

      15      at some of the other schools.

      16             School-governance reform gives New York

      17      City's mayors the ability to develop and implement a

      18      clear and bold vision for teaching and learning, to

      19      plan strategically to bring together the resources

      20      and agencies of the city around education and put

      21      the children's interests first.

      22             As a result, since the establishment of the

      23      school-governance system, dropout rates have plunged

      24      by half; graduation rates have risen from, on

      25      average, 50 percent, to now, as the Chancellor







                                                                   252
       1      indicated earlier, to, roughly 70.5 percent -- a

       2      significant increase after stagnation under the

       3      prior governance structure.

       4             Rather than being consigned to failing

       5      schools, students have benefited from the best

       6      school-choice system, that can always be improved

       7      on; teachers are paid on time; we've allocated funds

       8      throughout our schools more equitably to meet the

       9      needs of our students; and students' achievements

      10      have increased across the board.

      11             The fate of control should not depend on the

      12      policy of the programs of any particular

      13      administration.

      14             That's why I'm here today.

      15             It's not about one mayor or another mayor.

      16             It is about this mayor, the prior mayor, and

      17      future mayors to come.

      18             And, it should always be debated, but at the

      19      same time, governance is extremely important as it

      20      exists.  It is a system that we need to maintain.

      21             The governance structure we have today makes

      22      clear with whom the debate should take place, which

      23      was impossible with the multi-headed hydra of the

      24      old Board of Education.

      25             Mayoral control is about making the mayor,







                                                                   253
       1      elected by the people of New York City, take

       2      responsibility for the education of our city, and

       3      effectuate the best education possible for our

       4      children.

       5             The school-governance structure the State

       6      established in 2002, and has since renewed, must

       7      outlive any mayoralty if we are to continue the

       8      tremendous progress over the 14 years.

       9             We must not add layers of bureaucracy to the

      10      checks and balances.  We have systems in place, like

      11      your Committee, and other committees, as well as the

      12      State Education Department, as well as the

      13      comptroller and the state comptroller, to do the

      14      appropriate monitoring and provide the

      15      check-and-balance system to the current system.

      16             And we must try to maintain that.  The future

      17      of our children and city depends on it, and the

      18      accountability should rest with the mayor.

      19             And that's why I'm here today.

      20             And thank you for the opportunity to testify

      21      before, you, Senator Addabbo, and also the others

      22      who were here before.

      23             SENATOR MARCELLINO:  Thank you very much,

      24      Mr. Walcott, for coming and being here.

      25             Your experience and expertise is respected,







                                                                   254
       1      and your testimony is appreciated.

       2             DENNIS WALCOTT:  Thank you, sir.

       3             SENATOR MARCELLINO:  If there was one thing

       4      that you could change in the current system of

       5      mayoral control, what would it be?

       6             DENNIS WALCOTT:  Great question.

       7             I think more regular meetings than you may

       8      have them, but from a committee structure, with the

       9      Department of Education, I think that type of

      10      information going back and forth.

      11             And as I heard the Chancellor indicated, and

      12      I indicated, that Albany was my sixth borough, on

      13      the regular dialogue between Albany and the DOE is

      14      extremely important, as well as with city hall.

      15             And so, to me, I think increasing that; and,

      16      therefore, that would, both, increase the

      17      accountability mechanisms, but more importantly,

      18      provide the regular information to the elected

      19      officials that they need to have.

      20             So that would be one thing.

      21             I think, and I think the Chancellor talked

      22      about this as well, always finding new ways to

      23      improve transparency of information.

      24             People are starving for information.

      25             And while we did it in our administration,







                                                                   255
       1      I know the current mayor is doing it, always looking

       2      for new ways to get information out to our parents,

       3      to empower them, to make sure that they're fully

       4      invested.

       5             And people always talk about parental

       6      involvement.

       7             And I know that we try very hard, the current

       8      administration is working hard at it.

       9             Finding new ways to deal with parental

      10      involvement in the accountability is extremely

      11      important.

      12             I think the ability to make sure that the

      13      Chancellor, through the Mayor, has the ability to

      14      have the coherent system that's in place, and was in

      15      place before, and making sure you always deal with

      16      the coherence of the system, is extremely important

      17      in how you constantly ramp that up.

      18             And as Mayor Bloomberg always said to all of

      19      us, about the next administration, and future

      20      administrations, is to build on the success, and how

      21      to learn about what happened before, and analyze it

      22      and build off of that.

      23             I think all those are parts of next steps to

      24      make the system better, to serve the needs of the

      25      children.







                                                                   256
       1             And I think with the debate that's going on

       2      with Albany right now, especially with the State

       3      Education Department, once we have a system that is

       4      in alignment with SED, and dealing with a curriculum

       5      that everyone signs on to as an approved of, that's

       6      at high standards, I think that then allows that

       7      next step to take place as well.

       8             And, to me, with that, then you get to a

       9      higher milestone, as far as education outcomes for

      10      our children.

      11             SENATOR MARCELLINO:  Thank you.

      12             DENNIS WALCOTT:  Thank you, sir.

      13             SENATOR ADDABBO:  Thank you, Mr. Chair.

      14             I want to thank Mr. Walcott for being here,

      15      and I want to wish you much success on your new

      16      position --

      17             DENNIS WALCOTT:  Thank you, sir.

      18             SENATOR ADDABBO:  -- with the Queens

      19      libraries.  And I do look forward to working with

      20      you in that respect.

      21             I really appreciate your insight here,

      22      because, again, that resumé of yours runs the gamut,

      23      as, you know, a member of the old -- the head of the

      24      old Board of Ed, deputy mayor of education,

      25      chancellor of education.







                                                                   257
       1             Again, I think this is a great moment for us

       2      to get this kind of input.

       3             Take us back to 2009, when there was the work

       4      to renew mayoral control, and at the time.

       5             Because I mentioned it earlier, when you got

       6      this moment of an expiration, we have this

       7      opportunity to improve.

       8             And back in 2009, there were improvements.

       9             We improved the role of the PEPs, the CECs,

      10      the parental input.

      11             Take us through that process of renewal, as

      12      we grapple with it now.

      13             DENNIS WALCOTT:  Sure, I mean, I would love

      14      to.

      15             And I remember it very well, in that, we

      16      didn't necessarily see eye-to-eye back then.

      17             And people had their inputs, as far as what

      18      should be the role of parent-coordinators, the role

      19      of the CECs, the role of the PEPs.

      20             And there was a lot of debate, as you well

      21      know, and that's why it lapsed at that particular

      22      point in time.

      23             But I think out of that process came a system

      24      that was healthier.  We established the arts

      25      council, the arts committee, of the PEP, and had to







                                                                   258
       1      have regular reports.

       2             And also, financially, we were in a different

       3      position than this current mayor is in right now,

       4      having more money to fund things.

       5             But I think it allowed for more robust debate

       6      to take place, and then from that debate, we did

       7      some fine-tuning to the CEC, we did some fine-tuning

       8      to the PEP as well.

       9             And I think the Chancellor alluded to that

      10      this morning, as far as those next steps that were

      11      taken, to try to improve engagement of the parents

      12      itself.

      13             But I also remember the downside of it, and

      14      that it did lapse, and it was an unknown, what was

      15      going to happen, because, it was the end of June

      16      through August, if I'm not mistaken, around it

      17      lapsing, and the old Board of Ed.

      18             And I can tell you, quite frankly, the

      19      trading that took place around making sure who was

      20      appointed to the board, and that scares me more than

      21      anything else.

      22             And I think, for an improvement plan, if

      23      you're asking about that, I think the Chancellor hit

      24      on a lot of things.

      25             I think what this administration has done has







                                                                   259
       1      built on what we started and established.

       2             And, Senator, I'm not sure if you mentioned

       3      it, or I heard it somewhere else, but, I mean, the

       4      system is still relatively new.

       5             If you remember the old system existed for --

       6      since '68 to 2002, with the decentralized model.

       7             And so this has been in place now, 14 years,

       8      and I think it's important that we take a look at

       9      it, and always try to fine-tune.

      10             But I think that where we're at right now is

      11      pretty good.  I mean, we didn't ignore a lot from

      12      the renewal back in 2009.

      13             And, quite frankly, I think it's extremely

      14      important for it to go way beyond the year,

      15      two years, and, quite frankly, even beyond the

      16      three years, because whether it's this mayor or

      17      another mayor, for planning purposes, for coherence,

      18      for stability of the staff patterns, to make sure

      19      that people know what's coming up in the future for

      20      even accountability, they need to have a multi-year

      21      renewal to address that, but I think just

      22      fine-tuning around the edges.

      23             And I think part of the frustration is that,

      24      there just needs to be more information flow, more

      25      sharing of information, making sure that information







                                                                   260
       1      is going out there.

       2             And I understand the political dynamics and

       3      all that, but, quite frankly, I think the dynamics

       4      of pedagogy and instruction have to trump the

       5      dynamics of any of the politics that may exist.

       6             And, quite frankly, now, not being in city

       7      government, I have the ability to just say that.

       8             But I think it's more important to always

       9      focus the attention, as you've done as a teacher,

      10      and as you've done in serving your respective

      11      communities, on the outcome for students, and how we

      12      increase the outcome, from an educational and

      13      pedagogical point of view.

      14             SENATOR ADDABBO:  Thank you for your

      15      testimony, and for highlighting what would happen

      16      should mayoral control lapse and us going backwards

      17      to another structure.

      18             So, thank you very much.

      19             DENNIS WALCOTT:  Thank you, sir, for the

      20      question.

      21             SENATOR MARCELLINO:  Thank you very much.

      22             DENNIS WALCOTT:  Thank you, Mr. Chair.

      23             I appreciate it very much, and thank you.

      24             Have a good afternoon.

      25             SENATOR MARCELLINO:  Before we adjourn, as







                                                                   261
       1      you just -- you've heard from other speakers, and my

       2      colleagues here, too, we're all deeply disappointed

       3      that we didn't get the Mayor here.

       4             We would have all liked to have heard him,

       5      and we all would like to have been able to ask him a

       6      few follow-up questions to the last meeting.

       7             So I think an opportunity was missed by the

       8      Mayor, by not showing up, and, I don't know how to

       9      fix that.

      10             But, I thank the people who came and offered

      11      their testimony, and their written testimony will be

      12      part of the public record.

      13             And I am told that, anyone who would like

      14      to -- where can we see this?

      15             This is -- oh, this video of this hearing

      16      will be available -- if anyone wants to go to sleep

      17      at night, the video of this hearing will be

      18      available at the Senate Finance Committee website.

      19             So, that could be -- you can hear this all

      20      over again.

      21             Thank you, and the meeting is adjourned.

      22                  (Whereupon, at approximately 3:23 p.m.,

      23        the public hearing held before the New York State

      24        Senate Standing Committee on Education concluded,

      25        and adjourned.)