Wednesday, May 08, 2019

WHO IS THE MOST CULPABLE FOR SCHOOL BEING OPEN MONDAY, ON DECEMBER 23?

We here at the ICEUFT blog sometimes can't believe how uncaring some of the actions of the State Education Department, the New York City Department of Education, the United Federation of Teachers fronted by Michael Mulgrew and an opposition caucus called the Movement of Rank and File Educators can be.

If we had an ICEUFTblog "Blame-Meter", all four entities would  receive some kind of point for the school calendar in NYC that keeps schools on Monday, December 23, 2019 and/or not solving the problem.

We have documented over and over and over how having school on Monday, December 23, 2019 is a horrible precedent for teachers, administrators, parents, students and anyone else connected to the New York City school system. There is so much culpability to go around for this absurdity. It is hard to know where to begin our analysis.

The State Education Department 
SED forever allowed "passing time" between classes in secondary schools to be counted as instructional time. This is why NYC was able to have a 6 hour-20 minute instructional day for decades. I personally made it through high school in NYC under the 6 hour and 20 minute day. I went on to obtain a BA, MS + 30 additional credits after having most of my K-12 education with these "short days". Even when NYC extended time for teachers starting in 2002, most schools did not use the extended time for full class instruction. New State regulations that were approved by the Regents in September changed all of this so now days and hours are counted for adding up minimum state instructional time for students. Therefore, many NYC secondary schools will not meet the new minimum 990 instructional hour classroom requirement for the 2019-2020 school year. The SED created this problem. They couldn't just follow a simple rule: "If it ain't broke, don't fix it." There was no plausible reason for the State Ed Department to rock the boat on the hours of instruction issue. Give SED a big thumbs down.

The New York City Department of Education
The NYC DOE knew full well these new State Education Department rules were going into effect. Those of us who were expecting them to be humane and follow past practice by not opening on December 23 when it falls on a Monday, as all of the other school districts in NYS where people could find calendars are doing, were expecting too much from the DOE. I am giving the City DOE the least amount of blame here, however,  as they are often a disgusting employer. An uncaring employer would try to weasel another day out of its workers and cut into their Christmas vacation. The DOE is playing the role of Ebenezer Scrooge which is not surprising. They get a smaller thumbs down as far as I can tell.

The UFT Led by Michael Mulgrew-Unity Caucus
 It is tough to decide whether the UFT or SED is more at fault here. The SED is to blame for changing the regulations after decades where they worked just fine. However, there is no doubt that the UFT is at fault here in a big way as they were notified in advance of the change and the UFT was told to account for the new regulations in their new collective bargaining agreement but instead the Union did nothing.

The UFT knew in September 2018 that the State Education Department had issued new regulations on counting days and instructional hours, not just days, when figuring out the minimum amount of time needed in school calendars. The Union knew as of September that SED would find our traditional calendar to be short on teaching time. SED, through our state union New York State United Teachers, informed the UFT and all locals in a Fact Sheet that " that 'passing time' between periods does not count as instructional time." In addition, the SED told all union locals through NYSUT:  "Future collective bargaining agreements will need to comply with these regulations."

Guess who just happened to be negotiating a new collective bargaining agreement when this Fact Sheet came out? The UFT and NYC DOE. They didn't bother with the new state regulations and reached a new contract agreement in October keeping the old instructional time schedule.

Someone at the UFT should be held accountable for neglecting to cover this issue in contract talks. Since the SED said that we had to deal with it in a new contract, our contract should have been reviewed with Albany on the work day and work year before anything was agreed to. What was the rush? The 2014 contract did not expire until the middle of February of this year. The UFT gets a huge "asleep at the switch" thumbs down on this topic. Can we put a letter in their file?

The UFT has proposed only one solution now which is to beg the SED to reconsider on passing time not counting as instructional time and then to convince the DOE to change the calendar. I hope that works. I really do want them to succeed.

However, if the UFT is not successful, then having school on Monday, December 23 amounts to yet another UFT giveback. Giveback is the generic term for adding a day to the work year at no extra pay. This will happen again and again when all of the holidays fall in the middle of the week in future years.

This blog led the fight against the 2018 contract and we didn't even know about the calendar problem. (You are welcome to blame us for not seeing the NYSUT Fact Sheet in September but we were not sent the Fact Sheet as we weren't negotiating the contract. That's the UFT's job, not a dissident blog.)

MORE'S PETITION FOR A GIVEBACK
Wait, we are not done giving out blame. One of the opposition caucuses MORE apparently read our blog posts as they knew the years when school was closed on Monday, December 23 in the past. (Maybe one of their people did the research on past years but I doubt it.) However, MORE's proposed solution to the problem makes less than no sense. MORE wants the Chancellor to reconsider giving us the day while MORE does not even address the new State Regulations. After petitioning NYC Chancellor Richard Carranza to change his mind, MORE asks, "If this is not possible, could we extend the school year until June 29 or switch this day with another holiday?"  Is MORE serious? This is what the contract says about the school year in Article 6E:

 Work Year 
1. All teachers shall report to their schools to begin work on the Tuesday following Labor Day, and will have a professional day on Brooklyn-Queens Day. The Tuesday following Labor Day may be an instructional day. Teachers shall be in attendance on duty thereafter on all days of the school year except for the last two weekdays of the month of June. 

MORE suggesting we make one of the last two weekdays in June a workday is a pure and simple giveback. 

We now have a bipartisan consensus in the UFT among two of the political caucuses that we should have a new giveback. MORE would make it June 29 while Mulgrew-Unity wants it to be December 23.

ICEUFT blog stands against either giveback. We've given back enough already! (see 2002, 2005, 2014 and 2018 Contracts, 2013, 2015 evaluation systems, Tier VI, four years probation and more for ample details)

When judging this debacle, the DOE and the SED are our employer and the state oversight agency respectively. Our employer and the SED are not known for being that intelligent or sympathetic to teachers, students and families. We should put maximum pressure on them to reverse course on the December 23 issue by telling our union representatives (UFT, CSA, DC 37) that school being open for a one day week on Monday, December 23 is completely unacceptable to us. 

I also support any action by the UFT/NYSUT to tell State Education Commissioner Mary Ellen Elia that passing time should count as instructional time as it always had in the past. If the UFT wants to join other NYSUT locals in a no confidence resolution on Elia, I would endorse that as well for many reasons.

If that doesn't succeed, I would support a move to have the UFT Contract reopened on Article 6 (work day and work year) only to reapportion time so that we add a few minutes to instruction so that our traditional calendar will be approved by SED. See our prior post for a detailed explanation.

The real fault and the grand prize on the "Blame-Meter" goes to the UFT whose job as a labor union is supposed to be to protect our interests but instead they agreed to yet another giveback. It's time for us to make them do their job.  MORE gets a consolation prize for proposing a June 29 giveback of their own and SED gets one for starting this mess. NYC DOE gets a dishonorable mention for just being their disgusting selves.

If all else fails and schools in NYC end up being open on Monday, December 23 (a likely outcome), I really want to know what teachers, other staff members and administrators are willing to do. If people are all going to call out sick en masse, are they going to go to thousands of doctor's offices to get medical notes? Are some unthinking teachers going to post pictures from Aruba or some other vacation spot? I know what theft of services is.  

By all means, let's have the discussion! 

One rule besides the usual ones. No comparing us to corporate America. Our comparison group is other school districts in NYS that as far as we can find are all off on Monday, December 23, 2019,

24 comments:

Anonymous said...

Then don;'t forget that a whole lot of them come in on August 29 and 20.

Anonymous said...

Our elementary principal stated in our weekly staff memo this week that, "The 2019-20120 DOE year calendar includes Monday, December 23rd as a working day. Please be advised that teachers are not allowed to tack on additional days to the Holiday vacation". I am guessing the DOE is not going to be mellow on teachers who take that Monday off without documentation. They will be going after teachers who are out on that day. I'm not trying to scare anyone, just stating what I think.

Anonymous said...

Come after me I don't care, I will not be in school that day. And if they want to get me for not actually being sick I will educate them on mental well being as a part of a healthy body. I am sure by then ( hell by October) I will be in need of a mental health day.

SICK OUT 2019!!!

Anonymous said...

"If you give an inch, they take a mile." There is a reason this idiom exists.

Anonymous said...

Tell the UFT to start doing its job or withhold your dues - it’s the only thing the UFT cares about.

Anonymous said...

Teacher appreciation week...............................

Anonymous said...

Blame is 50% DOE and 50% UFT. DOE wanted December 23rd to be a working day in the calendar and the UFT agreed. End of story. Show up or don't and let the friggin' cards fall where they may.

Anonymous said...

Anonymous 5:14- at least my principal said he'd be the first one calling in sick on 12/23. To say that staff "isn't allowed to tack on days to the holiday" is absurd.

What bothers me the most is the sneaky way they held back the calendar until after the UFT election.

New question: what if attendance is so low citywide that the day ends up not counting? Is that a possibility?

Anonymous said...

Here’s an interesting interview with Commissioner of Education MaryEllen Elia:


www.pbs.org/video/suncoast-business-forum-june-2015-maryellen-elia


Here’s some further information about Commissioner Elia:


www.nysed.gov/commissioner-elia-bio

www.tampabay.com/news/education/k12/the-hillsborough-county-school-board-could-act-today-on-elia/2214290

www.chalkbeat.org/posts/ny/2015/05/26/former-florida-superintendent-nominated-to-lead-new-york-ed-department

www.washingtonpost.com/news/answer-sheet/wp/2015/05/26/new-york-taps-new-education-commissioner-a-superintendent-fired-in-florida

www.lohud.com/story/news/education/2015/05/26/education-commissioner-new-york/27964329

http://blogs.edweek.org/edweek/state_edwatch/2015/05/former_tampa_schools_boss_elia_set_to_be_named_ny_k-12_chief.html

www.aft.org/press-release/aft-leaders-maryellen-elia-next-new-york-education-commissioner

www.nysut.org/news/2019/march/fact-checking-the-commissioner


NYSED-related and DOE-related complaints can always be directed to Commissioner Elia:

Commissioner@mail.nysed.gov

Anonymous said...

If school is open it counts. We had many days where it snowed under Bloomturd with extreme low attendance but the days still counted. It is not "absurd" that a school principal said that tacking on additional days to the calendar is not allowed. DOE policy has always stated that it is not allowed. Check the UFT Q and A page in regard to absences. It states that you can get dinged for taking days off attached to vacations without authorization. However, I think a ton of folks are going to take Dec 23rd off. It is going to be an interesting day indeed!

Anonymous said...

Here’s the bottom line. One can not control if they are sick December 23rd.

Nothing is stated in the contract about not using certain days if you are sick.

But, don’t put up a picture on Facebook with your toes in the sand in Fort Lauderdale December 23rd for colleagues to see and snitch you out about.

Anonymous said...

I find it funny that the rank and file have their balls in a tizzy over having to work on December 23rd but did not seem to give two shits when the UFT sold us out by getting us 4 observations 8 years ago. (Thank god we are going to be back to 2 observations next year for most tenured teachers)

Anonymous said...

We have finally had enough of getting shitted on by everyone.

Anonymous said...

5:27 ...YUP!!....They were probably in the same place as when we lost tens of thousands of dollars in TDA interest for the two days before labor day we used to come in.

Anonymous said...

Stop paying dues or stop complaining. That is the only thing the UFT/NYSUT Ponzi scheme will understand

James Eterno said...

Can you provide me with an example where a large group of working people dumped their union and their salary and working conditions improved? Please tell me.

Bronx ATR said...

The UFT isn’t a real union. Retirees vote, veteran teachers are targeted and turned into subs, great teachers are discontinued arbitrarily, entire staffs are traumatized, there’s no challenging corrupt administration ( there appears to be an agreement not to), discontinued and untenured teachers are treated like mucus filled cleanex - Unity only cares about dues. There is no other way to get the UFT to do its job. It’s the only card left to play. The rank-and-file do not have to stop paying their dues forever , but could suspend paying them until their needs are addressed. James, if you know of another way to get this done let me know. The whole thing is rigged against those that stand up. I’m retired now, but I put up with over a decade of non-representation, abuse and the being refused help when I asked for it. I’m just one individual - multiply that by thousands of those who have had similar or worse experiences. I tried running for office, supporting dissenters, starting a chapter, speaking out in schools and nothing worked. Things are now worse in many ways. Something has to be done and this is the only thing that’s available. ATR’s, the untenured, and those that have asked for help and been refused should suspend paying dues as soon as possible, which is next month. If those marginalized groups alone do this, the UFT will act. Do not be afraid of them, you pay their salary.

Anonymous said...

Years ago, when I was a sub, there was a Monday right before Holiday vacation work day. That and other extreme snow days were guaranteed work days for day to day subs like me.

James Eterno said...

Many valid points Bronx ATR. However, if people aren't organized in leaving, it is just more divide and conquer that will leave us in worse shape.

ed notes online said...

So Bronx ATR - you are retired - go out an organize people to withhold dues and pay to an escrow fund of sorts and build up capital to get legal rep or form an alt union. Very hard work but doing it might bear fruit.

Bronx ATR said...

Hi Norm,
I thought about exactly that and asked a few ATR friends for input. The guys I know are very close to retiring and don’t want to trip at the finish line. They will not opt out. The younger guys told me they don’t want an escrow account, as they are just going to stop paying dues in June. They don’t know how different things could be and just want to save some money. There may be be a sharp uptick in folks opting out in June. Then again, I may have misread almost every teacher Ive met - perhaps they like being abused and paying dues for non- representation. The anger isn’t there like it was a few years ago. Apathy has become ingrained. Herding cats is not something I want to do - well maybe if they actually were cats.

James Eterno said...

No organizing=no gains and big losses eventually. If people just leave the UFT and other unions in droves individually to save some money, how on earth will working conditions improve? There is no precedent for weaker unions leading to better wages, benefits and workplace empowerment for working people.

Anonymous said...

Why not have the students start one day earlier (9/4 as opposed to 9/5)? We have done this numerous times when the holidays were close to the start of school (in 2018, for example).

James Eterno said...

September 4 is already an allowable conference day as far as I know. It already counts as instructional. Adding it won't solve the problem.