Archive for the 'New York' Category



Let’s Not Even Think about a Quinn Endorsement for Mayor

(from the New Action leaflet distributed at the February 2013 UFT Delegate Assembly).
For a printable version click: NA/UFT 02/2013 leaflet

Bill DiBlasio, John Liu, and Bill Thompson may each be worthy of our consideration, but not Christine Quinn. The current City Council Speaker has acted as a sort of Bloomberg Mini-Me, spending the last six years greasing the skids for billionaire mayor. We should remove her from consideration for the United Federation of Teachers endorsement in the Democratic primary.

We win! No layoffs! (but the war with Bloomberg continues)

June, 28  2011

We won. Yesterday four thousand teachers were wondering how they would pay rent or mortgages this summer. And today they know – their jobs are safe.

We won by demonstrating, by phone banking, by winning over the City Council.

We have won a big battle. But the war with the mayor continues. He will come back at seniority next year. And school closings. And collocations. We are still working under an expired contract.

We need to keep pushing. We need to hammer away at the wasteful contracts. We need to mobilize as we have. But we also need to mobilize in a way that draws more of our members into the fight. New Action continues to call for school-level actions, including meetings and pickets, as appropriate. Picketing is not a panacea, but engagement by the entire membership is crucial.

 ATRs

Today’s agreement has a series of complicated-looking provisions that may help ATRs get regularly appointed. It would be fantastic if this works. But we have had contract language and side agreements designed to help ATRs get positions in the past, and the DoE has ignored or violated them (think about 18D!). We will need to watch how our brothers and sisters in the ATRs are treated very closely. If their conditions and positions do not improve, New Action will introduce a resolution (see reverse) for the next Delegate Assembly in October.

 Focus on conditions in the schools

Schools just had their budgets cut again yesterday. While this cut is not huge (average is under 3%) this is the latest in a series of cuts stretching back several years. The cumulative effect of is over 20% for some schools. Schools are bleeding not from a gash, but from a thousand paper cuts. And our children are losing necessary programs.

We will lose through attrition at least 2500 teachers. Again, this is on top of ten thousand more positions already lost in preceding cuts. Despite the CFE case, the DoE is forcing our students into larger classes.

Mayoral Control

Bloomberg’s brinkmanship over layoffs would not have occurred without the legislation that gives him direct control over the schools. It is time to end mayoral control.

Say no to school closures! Demonstrate, Wednesday, at Tweed

When:  5PM.
Date: Wednesday, December 15
Where: Tweed (52 Chambers) – march will start at 52 Broadway (UFT hq)
Why: once again Bloomberg is trying to shut schools that serve poor kids. We stopped him last year. It will be tougher this year.
Who: the UFT will call this protest, others may join us

Here are excerpts from the UFT resolution. It was passed by an e-mail vote of the Exec Board, and will almost certainly be adopted by the Delegate Assembly Wednesday just before 5:

RESOLUTION OF OPPOSITION TO MASS SCHOOL CLOSURES

WHEREAS      during the tenure of Mayor Bloomberg and Chancellor Klein, the NYC Department of Education has pursued a policy of mass school closures, near 100 to date, which has escalated in numbers and in sheer recklessness as the years have gone on, culminating in announcements December 6th and 7th that the DoE would seek to close another 25 schools, the most in one year to date; and

WHEREAS      Mayor Bloomberg has announced his intention to close an additional 100 schools in his final term of office, an arbitrary target set without consideration of or regard for the educational capacity of real schools, and Chancellor Klein changed the grading of the School Progress Reports to a curve that would guarantee that a certain portion of schools would receives ‘D’s and ‘F’s making them candidates for closure simply by virtue of their standing vis-à-vis other schools – demonstrating that the policy of mass school closures is not an educational policy, but a political plan to change the face of NYC public education by replacing existing schools with new schools and charter schools that reflect the ideological agenda of the city administration ; and

WHEREAS      during the tenure of Mayor Bloomberg and Chancellor Klein, the NYC Department of Education has consistently concentrated the students with the greatest academic challenges and socio-economic needs in the schools it then slates for closure, all the while failing to meet its obligations to provide the resources and supports necessary for successfully educating those students; and

WHEREAS      the burden of the policy of mass school closings pursued during the tenure of Mayor Bloomberg and Chancellor Klein has fallen most heavily on low income communities, and on the high needs students which are concentrated in those schools; and

WHEREAS      rather than providing the needed supports and resources it had promised the 19 schools slated for closure last year, the NYC DoE has systematically undermined these schools, deliberately under-enrolling them, slashing their budgets, excessing large numbers of their best staff and flooding them with over-the-counter students – in short, taking administrative steps to subvert the schools’ efforts to be viable and successful so that it could move to close as many of them as possible this year;

BE IT THEREFORE RESOLVED:

THAT     the United Federation of Teachers condemns the proposal of Mayor Bloomberg, Chancellor Klein and the NYC DoE to close 25 schools as devoid of educational merit and justification and as injurious and destructive to the communities those schools serve – most especially the students and families directly impacted; and be it further resolved

THAT     the UFT condemns the NYC DoE policy of mass school closings upon which this proposal was based as a policy that is not educational in design or implementation, but a reckless and destructive means of pursuing a political and ideological agenda for remaking NYC public education; and be it further resolved

THAT     the UFT call for a moratorium on the closure of any NYC public school where it has been demonstrated that the NYC DoE has not been provided that school with the resources and supports necessary for fulfilling its educational mission; and be it further resolved

THAT     together with local communities, students, parents, educational advocates and others, the UFT will build a grass roots movement of opposition to mass school closures, giving voice to the outrage that all of these civic organizations and citizens feel over this reckless and destructive policy of the NYC DoE; and be it further resolved

THAT     this grass roots campaign of opposition to mass school closures include, but not be limited to, school demonstrations and picketing, community engagement, lobbying of elected officials, and a mass demonstration at the Panel for Educational Policy meeting which will consider the proposed school closings; and be it further resolved

THAT     in recognition of the outrage this Delegate Assembly, representing the educators of all NYC public schools, feels about the proposal to close 25 schools, we hereby adjourn this meeting and reassemble for a mass protest at City Hall and the central offices of the NYC Department of Education.


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