Archive for the 'Uncategorized' Category



UFT Silent on COVID 19

Yesterday, New Action chapter leaders and delegates (along with our other friends from United for Change) showed up at the DA ready to ask questions about COVID-safety and motivate a resolution about healthcare (among other things). We weren’t given the chance to speak there, so see our literature below. (Don’t worry, we’ll be back next month).

New Action/UFT

…a caucus of the United Federation of Teachers

615 77th Street, Brooklyn, New York 11209

September 2021

UFT Silent on COVID 19

This year the UFT membership already faces another difficult year with the spread of COVID in the schools. The response to the COVID 19 virus showed the lack of leadership in our Union. At the beginning of the pandemic our in-service members were forced to go into unsafe schools for 3 days putting themselves and their families at risk. Today our union is going along with Mayor de Blasio’s claim that our schools are safe. The DOE’s own statistics give the lie to this claim. On the first day of school, 83 positive cases of COVID were reported (33 students and 50 staff members). By September 19 there were 976 cases with over 440 classroom closures. One public school has already gone back to remote learning. All of this with only 10% in the schools being tested. This is not meant to panic the public or UFT staff. But our union president should not be sitting silently. Schools that are unsafe should demand that the union step in and safeguard the safety of students and staff. And only then consider staying out of unsafe schools.

The Health Care of In-Service Members Is at Risk

The attack on our health care is yet another example of the lack of leadership that currently exists because of one party (Unity Caucus) control of our Union. NYC retirees on Medicare only discovered in mid-May that the administration of their Medicare benefits was being privatized and would be changed to Medicare Advantage. At no time during the past year of negotiations between the City (Office of Labor Relations) and Municipal Labor Committee, were the 250,000 NYC retirees ever informed about impending changes. At a recent town hall meeting to discuss the changes for retirees, UFT President Michael Mulgrew, announced that in 2022 the health care plans of all in-service members will be renegotiated. These negotiations have still not been publicized. New Action/UFT adamantly insists that our UFT notify and inform all in-service members of just what changes are being negotiated. Unlike the recent experience of NYC retirees, no plan should be implemented without at least 6 months of public debate among our in-service members. We need your help! If you are an in-service member we need you to distribute New Action literature in your school. You have the right to do so. Please contact either:

Michael Shulman, Chair New Action/UFT 718 238-8030 mikeifish@aol.com or

Greg Di Stefano, Head of Organizing 718 757-4552 unionuftgreg@yahoo.com

VISIT us on Facebook at: UFT/ New Action Caucus

13 Reasons Why We Should Have An Electronic Voting Option In the Spring UFT 2022 Elections – even if Mulgrew And Company Want To Stop You From Having It.

Yesterday, Michael Shulman spoke at the Executive Board meeting in favor of electronic voting. The Unity-controlled board voted it down. Please read Daniel Alicea’s article below (of Educators of NYC) for reasons why we need electronic voting this year. 

https://educatorsofnyc.substack.com/p/13-reasons-why-we-should-have-an?fbclid=IwAR0SytcsFd0j4UhA4j29TxpOn8W2NFYUKwnGip3asC4ioyDctB-9iKasuPA

Is APPR a Public Health Hazard?

Is APPR a Public Health Hazard?

Even on a good day, our APPR system is heavily flawed. During a pandemic, it’s frankly a public health hazard. 

As all teachers who have worked in an NYC school anytime in the last decade knows well, lectures are out, and groupwork is in. Though we can debate the merits of forcing teachers to impose jarring ‘collaborative structures’ on their students (especially older students) on a daily basis, some amount of  student-student interaction is undoubtedly a good thing. But groupwork as envisioned by many of the APs writing our observations is almost impossible to do at a safe distance during an airborne pandemic. 

During the 2020-2021 school year, this problem presented itself, but with 6 feet of distance required between students, competent administrators had no choice but to be somewhat flexible with scoring. Enter the 2021-22 school year: New Action has received reports of teachers being mandated or ‘strongly encouraged’ to seat students facing each other in adjoined groups of four. Even with the DOE’s dubiously ‘generous’ interpretation of the CDC’s suspiciously halved ‘3 feet rule’, this sort of seating arrangement is a disaster waiting to happen. As teachers well know, students aren’t stationary. And groupwork in close quarters pushes students to get closer to each other for interaction.  Moreover, given that the DOE mandates students be facing away from each other when masks are off during meals, you’d think administrators wouldn’t de facto encourage the reverse. But with limited mask compliance, and with eating/drinking occurring throughout the day in most classrooms, this means that–realistically–some administrators are asking for precisely that.

Many students, a large fraction of whom are unvaccinated, are terrified of COVID. They don’t want to be put at further risk than they have to be. But, even when given this argument, administrators have reportedly doubled down on the packed group seating expectation. At least one school we know of that was pushing groupwork is currently under investigation to potentially close due to growing COVID-rates. An astute observer might think there’s a connection. Some New Action chapter leaders have pushed to get groupwork mandates thrown out. But the fact remains that our APPR system is written for a pre-pandemic era. Thus, even in schools with good union representation, teachers–especially probationary teachers–feel the carrot of higher scores on their observations and a better chance at tenure. Seat your students in densely packed groups and watch your MOTP scores soar from 1 or 2 to 3 or 4. 

Our current APPR system, at least as executed by some administrators, has therefore become a public health issue. Teachers shouldn’t have to choose between their observation scores and their students’ health. In districts like Los Angeles, where the union is strong, teachers don’t have to make that choice this year. Teachers in New York deserve the same. As part of its platform, United For Change–the coalition of caucuses (including New Action) running against Unity this year–supports dramatic reforms to both our observation system and our safety protocols. Remember to vote United for Change on your ballot in the next UFT election.


Learn more about

our UFT Caucus

Content Policy

Content of signed articles and comments represents the opinions of their authors. The views expressed in signed articles are not necessarily the views of New Action/UFT.
Follow New Action – UFT on WordPress.com
March 2026
M T W T F S S
 1
2345678
9101112131415
16171819202122
23242526272829
3031  

Blog Stats

  • 404,758 hits