Thursday, May 02, 2019

SCHOOL ON MONDAY, DECEMBER 23 A MAJOR UFT SCREW UP THAT WILL RECUR

We've done the research on school being open on Monday, December 23, 2019 for the first time ever when Christmas Eve falls on a Tuesday. We thought President Michael Mulgrew's remark that the Department of Education was "adhering to contract" was rather cryptic so with some help from the commenters, we looked it up and discovered the UFT made a big mistake by neglecting the calendar in contract negotiations and so now everyone will have to pay the price.

The New York City Department of Education and the State Education Department have long since not really been on the same page on whether passing time between classes should count as instructional time. The city DOE believes it should and SED has traditionally been silent but let the DOE slide as long as there were a minimum number of 180 instructional days in the calendar. That is until April 2018 when the State Education Department put out new regulations on the minimum number of instructional days and instructional hours required in a school district's calendar. The state Union, New York State United Teachers (NYSUT) put out a Fact Sheet on the regulations that was updated in September 2018 when the Regents approved the new regulations.

From the Fact Sheet:

The new regulations change to a yearly instructional hour construct that requires grades K-6 to have a minimum 900 hours of instruction per year and grades 7-12 to have a minimum of 990 instructional hours spread out over a minimum of 180 days. A half-day Kindergarten program is required to have 450 instructional hours over a minimum of 180 days.  
Sounds like no big change, right? Well no because the next paragraph defines what counts as instructional time and then explains how passing time between classes does not count.
While we are still awaiting field guidance from the Department, SED has produced a spreadsheet to provide districts with the methodology to calculate their instructional time over the course of a school year.  This spreadsheet (a link to this document is at the end of this Fact Sheet) indicates that “passing time” between periods and homeroom do not count as instructional time. In the past SED had only specified that recess and lunch were excluded from a typical school day to determine the length of the “instructional day.”  
You can review the spreadsheet yourself as there is a link to it on the NYSUT Fact Sheet.
It is clear, as NYSUT says, they are excluding passing time from instructional time.

New York City Public School teachers work a 6 hour and 20 minute day with the students and then there are 155 minutes of extended time each week for Professional Development, Parent Outreach and Other Professional Work. Let us do the math ourselves based on the 6 hours and 20 minute regular day to see if we are in compliance with the regulations.

990 hours (secondary schools) for a school year÷180 days=5.5 hours of instruction per day.

I am no expert but I cannot see what the issue is in an elementary school. There is not passing time so there are still 50 minutes for lunch and elementary schools only require 900 instructional hours. They look to be easily in compliance.

For secondary schools, it is a bit more complicated. 5.5 hours is 330 minutes of instructional time. 330÷7 periods= 47 minutes per instructional period. That leaves 50 minutes for lunch and passing in a 6 hour and 20 minute school. 2x7=14 for passing and there are 36 minutes for lunch. I see where it can be an issue in many schools with multiple lunch periods but it looks like an easy fix. 

If we are short one day according to the SED or maybe more in future years when Eid and the Lunar New Year don't fall in August or on a weekday, take 10 minutes from Monday and  from Tuesday's extended time and change them into instruction and all of a sudden we have an extra day 2+ days of instruction. Nobody would notice the change, believe me. Maybe some kids would be helped by the extra few minutes. 145 minutes are still left for those "extremely important" Professional Development and other activities. We have enough time in our work day if DOE is really interested in adjusting this. Add 12.5 minutes to be certain and I think we have a full three days of added instruction and still 140 minutes of extended time each week.

For a big school with a 6 hour and 50 minute day, it is easy to get in 330 minutes for instruction ÷7 periods =47 minutes per class. Add another 47 for lunch and 28 for passing (4×7) and we still have 5 left over to make the State Education Department extra happy. Obviously, passing time could be reduced to make the State Ed Department ecstatic. They have three minutes for passing at Queens Technical where my wife works. They are well in compliance it seems.



The hundreds of different schedules in New York City schools didn't seem to work for the State and so instead of fighting them or negotiating an adjustment to the daily schedule with the UFT, the DOE added December 23 as a school day. This is why Mulgrew said the DOE was "adhering to contract."


Since the UFT knew these were the new state regulations in September of 2018, why did they agree to a contract that didn't address the time issue? This is a huge error on the part of Mulgrew and company. Look at the final paragraph of the NYSUT Fact Sheet:


Existing Collective Bargaining Agreements
The regulations provide that no existing collective bargaining contract need be altered to comply with the new regulations. However, this does not absolve a district from complying with the 180 day statutory requirement and these regulations. As a result, if a district has less than 900/990 instructional hours in a year and if the contract is not altered then the district will incur a financial penalty in the 2018-19 school year.  State law provides that school districts will lose 1/180th of their Foundation Aid for each day the district is short of 180 instructional days.  Future collective bargaining agreements will need to comply with these regulations.
The UFT was fully aware they had to comply with the new regulations in September of 2018. At that time the UFT and the City/DOE were negotiating a contract due in February 2019 that they instead agreed to early in October of 2018 without dealing with the calendar issue.  The UFT agreed to keep the time schedules from the previous contract instead of being 100% sure they were adhering to new state regulations.


Hence, we are stuck with more days than many surrounding districts, just about as many work hours but with fewer days off. The time schedule should have been altered by collective bargaining and then cleared with the State Education Department before any new contract was signed.

The UFT has a liaison with the State Education Department and plenty of people in NYSUT who can advise us. In the final analysis, school on December 23 when it falls on a Monday would not have happened without UFT ineptitude.


The worst part about this is that the 990 hour problem will recur again next year and the year after as commenters pointed out. It will be worse when all of the holidays fall on weekdays so we will have to deal annually with which days off we want to give back. This is truly sad and totally preventable if someone at the UFT was awake and bothered to read and then act on what NYSUT put out in September.

I am almost positive nobody will be held accountable for this error at the UFT but what to do now?

Mulgrew's answer is to beg the Regents to reconsider the regulations. Maybe that will work. A better answer might be publicity and militancy but don't expect the UFT to lead any of that. Teachers, parents, principals, other administrators, students and others don't want Monday, December 23 to be a school day. We'll have to fight this one without the UFT it seems.

37 comments:

Anonymous said...

corporate companies in the private sector give employees roughly 7 days per year and they all work 12 months a year so why is this a story....

James Eterno said...

Compare us to teachers please.That is our comparison group

Anonymous said...

This is a done deal. Mulgrew already washed his hands at this. And why should he ever care to begin with? He is not busting his ass trying to teach out of control middle school kids in East New York or Harlem. The only people that could possibly make a change are rich, Park Slope Tiger Moms who are not going to be happy to see that they can't spend a decent vacation with their kids. Any other petition, picket drive, etc. by teachers will accomplish exactly squat. SQUAT!

Anonymous said...

Let the kids come in on September 4th, not 5th. Done, end of story. Adjust as needed on a yearly basis.

So I guess in 2020 when New Year's Day falls on Thursday, we are working Friday the 2nd. Good luck to them.

Anonymous said...

Sick Out 2019!!! Spread the word, 30 out of 60 at my school are in so far what about yours? 12/23/19 Doctor appts are going fast get yours today!!!

Anonymous said...

YES! Sickout indeed! No worries if you can't get a doctor's appointment just use a place that does not require an appointment.

NOT BEING RESPECTED OR TREATED AS AN EQUAL TO TEACHERS IN OTHERS DISTRICTS IS NOT RIGHT. MAKES ME SICK. 12/23/19 NO WORK FOR ME

Anonymous said...

As a veteran teacher, I am saddened by all of you wussies. We were hired to teach the students of NYC and we are expected to show up unless we are ACTUALLY sick. All of this, "get a doctors note so we can take Monday Dec 23rd off" is pretty sad if you ask me. I hate the DOE and the UFT just as much as the next teacher but I am a professional and will show up as expected. I'm not telling anyone what to do, just stating my opinion.

Anonymous said...

5:06,

Being that you are a veteran teacher, which in NYC that could mean 2 years in, you must be familiar with the cooking of the frog allegory.

It is easy to manipulate people who overlook the small issues. These people will be shocked, surprised, incredulous when the more substantial issues are automatically instituted. This has been demonstrated throughout history.

The SED, the NYC DOE, and the UFT are so corrupt and immoral one has to believe that there is some dubious intent behind having schools open on Monday, December 23rd.

Anonymous said...

Yes we are hired to teach and as you are fully aware no teaching will take place that day. Yes, I am a teacher, not a baby sitter. Maybe you are the "wussy" for not standing up for yourself. I personally would strike if needed and wildcat at that. Thats how strongly I feel about our current working conditions. I guess you just want to bend over and take it.

Anonymous said...

Hey Anno 5:59 and Anno 6:19. I am a veteran NYC teacher with 20 years on the job. If you think I am a wuss for not standing up for myself that is your opinion just like I think you are a wuss for not coming in to do your job. I know it is going to be babysitting but that is how many parents treat the NYC school system. If that is the case, it is still my job and responsibility to show up. I don't mind being paid $100,000 for babysitting on certain days. I would gladly go on an organized strike for reasons that I believe are worth going on a strike for but having to work on December 23rd is not worthy of that to me. I would gladly strike if the state tried to gut tenure or threatened mass teacher firings due to budget cuts. So yes, I am going to "take it" and show up for work on December 23rd. I respect your choice to take the day off but you should respect the fact that I and the majority of teachers in NYC will show up that day and we are probably going to have to cover classes for all those teachers like you who took the day off while you are sitting on the beach with a margarita in hand. And I am not guilting you but yes, it is a fact that teachers who come in that day will be doing extra coverages due to thousands of teachers who are gonna take that day off. I'm not a scab for showing up as this "sick out" is not even organized or sanctioned by the rank and file but is rather just a few heads on these boards making statements.

Anonymous said...

You all are foolish. An “sickout” could be construed as an illegal job action. All of these comments on this board could be used to characterize it as such (NY1 showed this morning that they will quote directly from these online forums). You all should be a lot more responsible with what you say online. Kudos to James for being aggressive, but, prudent in his description of this controversy. The rest of you folks need to think about your words more carefully.

Anonymous said...

Lkie every oter day, another reason to drop out.

Anonymous said...

Yes indeed, sick outs and strikes are indeed illegal in NYC/NYS. I'm not risking a letter to file or worse to make some political point that will fall on deaf ears. I'll be in on December 23rd as I am saving up more days than the 140 that I already have in my CAR. I'll be able to take half a year of terminal leave in my last year of teaching at the rate that I am saving up days.

John G said...

Look, I get it. I understand. The lunch to minute thing seems fascinating to some people but the bottom line isnt there. This is avoidable if they just
*Hold classes on a chancellor day
*trim a single day PD in summer
*trim a vacation day somewhere else or
*extend the year by a day
* have the DOE in the city recount the days ...we always come in at 182 or 183, as opposed to the suburbs who usually come on at 180.

So, no. This instructional minutes thing is nonsense. Painfilly obvious. Also, I think folks at 52 know this.

This smells more like something os being given, or goven back, somewhere.

Surprised you're not asking different questions.

James Eterno said...

We are in at 186 working days for next school year. A few minutes extra instructional time per day and we are within new state mandate for hours. Do the math yourself.

Read Arthur's report or our commentary. Passing time no longer counts as instructional time. Mulgrew admitted that is the problem but he knew about this in September and dropped the ball in contract negotiations. NYSUT Fact Sheet documents it.

Anonymous said...

“The common house fly has bigger balls than the average NYC teacher.” - the UFT

Anonymous said...

Anonymous 5:06- you're either not whom you claim to be, or one of your principal's sycophants.

20+ years in as well, and since 2005, I've watched our rights being eroded away exponentially. The career I signed up for doesn't even slightly resemble what it has become. So yes- December 23rd is a big deal to me, and it should be to you, too. Every single time the DOE takes something away from us - and as James has said repeatedly, working a single day before winter recess is unprecedented going back to as far as 1986- we set ourselves up for more of the same. We all know damn well that February break is on life support, and most likely, will be next thing to go.

There is nothing wrong with us banding together and stop being so damn passive every time the DOE shits on us. Perhaps the DOE WILL agree to change the kids’ start date to September 4th, rather than the 5th. It's an option that works for everybody. But we'll never know until we kick up a fuss. People complain about the UFT, but a significant part of the problem is weak teachers who sit back and take it. Being high minded never got us anywhere.

James Eterno said...

7:51, You make many valid points. Problem with September 4 is it is one of the four allowable conference days that are counted in the 180. I am not sure about the clerical days (January for high schools, June for elementary). I do know this December 23 problem could easily be fixed but it will only be done if all of us keep huge pressure on UFT and DOE.

Anonymous said...

Yeah, Mulgrew made a point at the last DA to mention that we will have two pre-instructional days next year instead of the one that we had this year (as if that was a good thing). So, why not have students return on Wednesday, Sept. 4th next year instead of Thursday, Sep. 5th? I got by just fine with one pre-instructional day this year. And, don’t tell me new teachers need more time to get set up; the dingbats set up our contract so that new teachers have to come in five days earlier no matter what.

Seriously. Trade-off Thursday Sep. 5th for Dec. the 23rd. What could be more simple. For crying out loud, who is running this ship? Only deBlasio could mess this up so badly. And he wants to be President? GtFOH, man. He’s about as disorganized as the current moron on the White House.

Anonymous said...

James- I understand that the 4th is counted as a conference day- but there have been several instances over the past few years (including this school year) when the kids' started on Wednesday. That's the part that I don't understand, along with the four built in snow days. I'll settle for three, and gamble on the fourth.

James Eterno said...

September 3, Sept 4, Election Day and Brooklyn Queens Day are our 4 conference days built in as part of the 180. I don't understand where 4 snow days come from if we are short hours but whatevet.

If SED no longer allows passing time to count as instructional, it seems to me that taking a few of the minutes from extended time each week and turning them into instructional time is the easiest way to resolve this. Trading a few minutes of instruction each day to make a useless December 23 a day off would seem to be a way to make everyone happy rather easily. It would work for future years too and save February midwinter recess which I agree is in jeopardy.

I am not talking aboutthat small group instruction from the 2005 contract. It is five minutes extra with your class or classes (divide by 8 periods and it is less than a minute per class) each day and then Monday and Tuesday extended time become proprtionally shorter. Nobody is working an extra second.

Multi session schools do a larger version of this already. It is legal under new regs and very doable.

James Eterno said...

What I am saying about Sep 4 is it is already being counted as instructional. Take it away and it means nothing.

Anonymous said...

Co located schools will have a big problem if they are on different schedules. My building has an elementary, middle, and high school in it. If the high school and middle school change their per schedules gym, lunch, etc, will all be messed up due to the fact that these places are shared with the elementary school.

James Eterno said...

Changing the day by adding a few minutes of instructional time and taking some from extended time is not rocket science.

Anonymous said...

I find it absolutely hilarious that there are 700 angry teachers complaining on the UFT Facebook page about having to work on December 23rd. Where the hell were all of these teachers when Mulgrew sold us out on our shitty evaluation deal 6 years ago? You know that evaluation deal that Mulgrew said should be "the model for the whole state"? Oh wait, he waffled and got us two observations now. It only took him 6 years to fix it. Guess we will have to wait 6 years for him to make a move against the DOE to get us a decent calendar.

Bronx ATR said...

Interesting posts. Teachers have done nothing wrong and are now put into the position of ethically having to do something legally wrong because of the UFT’s complacency and complicity.

Anonymous said...

Or is all of this a distraction from the real shit changes that are coming? Will my next emergency room visit have an $8000 co pay?
Will there be additional mind numbing PD forced upon us? Will I start having to go to my students home and do their laundry? Whats next? Seems like every little thing like this is followed with something my worse. What will it be this time?

Anonymous said...

Rumor has it that the school custodians are not contracted to work on the 23rd (or any week that is only one day long). Is it indeed illegal to have us in the building with no custodians present?

James Eterno said...

Obviously it would be a problem without custodians but there have been one day work weeks in the past. Will investigate. Keep up the pressure folks.

John G said...

SED angle is a good story. No doubt.
It also doesn't matter when there were many other options for a solution to a stupid move on both parties' part.

I agree on giveback for something. The idea, though, that this is somehow a contract giveback .. you should write that up as its own piece.

James Eterno said...

Teachers are going to be working more days for the same amount of money. How is that not a giveback? This will happen again when Eid and the Lunar New Year fall on weekdays during the school year and/or when Labor Day comes later like September 7.

Anonymous said...

why not take an hour away from the back to school PTC in both May and June. Years ago we never had these meetings. put these 2 hours into instruction time.

James Eterno said...

Easy ways for us to add up to a day or two that nobody would notice.

Anonymous said...

While I'm in full support of this petition and think the UFT and DOE need to be called out and have sold out rank and file teachers, I wish there was this much noise about the loss of instructional time due to state tests. It's great to see teachers begin to stand up for your rights. Wondering how to keep this growing into more activism and organizing around the huge issues our schools are facing daily: class size, high stakes testing, charter schools, racist policies, etc. Can NYC teachers continue to find their voice en masse?

Anonymous said...

You can't get a letter in your file for calling out on December 23rd. We get self treated days and there is nothing in the contract saying we can't call out on December 23rd. Show me where that is written. Just call it a mental health day.

James Eterno said...

Teachers have received file letters for repeatedly calling in sick before holidays. Here. If someone shows Facebook pictures from California, they can be charged with theft of services. That said, you are right we are entitled to up to ten self treated days per school year.

Anonymous said...

Lets not forget Michael Mulgrew, Unity, Bill DeBlasio AND Andrew Cuomo for this holiday gift.
How is it that every other school district in New York State managed to close on December 23rd?