From Chalkbeat:
New York lawmakers reached a budget deal Sunday that boosts education funding for school districts across the state by a billion dollars and extends mayoral control of city schools for three years — the longest extension since Mayor Bill de Blasio took office.
The $1
billion increase brings state spending on school aid to $27.9 billion, almost
identical to last
year’s increase. But, as in previous years, it was still substantially less
than what lawmakers and the state’s Board of Regents requested.
The budget
deal — often referred to as the “big ugly” — also included a slew of other
policies that affect city schools, including mayoral control, tweaks to the
city board that votes on school closures and contracts, and changes to local
parent councils. Lawmakers were expected to vote on the
deal Sunday.
On the tweaks to Mayoral control:
After campaigning
aggressively to retain his control of the city’s schools, de Blasio
won a three-year extension of mayoral control. It’s the longest renewal since
he took office and will extend beyond the end of his final term.
In the past,
Senate Republicans were only willing to negotiate one- or two-year extensions
in exchange for concessions, such as on charter schools. But with Democrats in
charge of the state Senate, attention focused away from charters and moved
toward elevating parental input in city schools since some of the state’s newly
elected Democrats criticized mayoral control as being too top-down.
In one
example, the city’s Panel for Educational Policy, which has the power to
approve contracts and sign off on school closures but is generally considered a
rubber stamp for the mayor’s preferred policies, will add two members. The
panel is being increased in size from 13 to 15, and one member would be elected
by the presidents of local parent councils across the city.
The mayor
will now appoint nine members instead of eight, so his power over the panel, which
rarely breaks with his proposals, will not substantially change. (The deal
would also require a new 10-day notice and written explanation for removing
any panel members.)
At least the charter cap wasn't lifted but charter schools still received the same funding increase as public schools. It looks like the 2% tax cap limit for municipalities and school districts is in there too so don't expect salaries for teachers in the suburbs to start heading up again anytime soon.
If this is the best public schools can do with significant Democratic majorities in both the Assembly and Senate and a Democratic governor (albeit Democrat in name only I concede), the political process without any leverage from threats of statewide teacher action may not take us very far up in Albany.
You can read more about the overall state budget deal here. They don't call Albany budget bills "The Big Ugly" for nothing.
8 comments:
A dark day for sure.. The main problem with our beloved DOE is it's centralized nature.
28 Billion for absolutely nothing. "Students" cant read or write, walk in late, leave early, play on their phones, disrespect staff, have no ability to do anything but keep minimum wage jobs, have no idea how basic math works...
They announced the atr buyout. So i was force placed in 2017 and made a regular member of staff because of the good rating, without agreeing, so now i cant take the buyout. Sounds fair.
11:51, not sure how many years you have, but suck down the salary for a little longer, get the retro, max the retirement accounts, much better in the long run.
Yes, it is unfair. They should at least backdate somewhat. If you resign, you forfeit retro and must immediately pay your own medical.
What is the offer for ATRs?
What is the buyout offer?
50k to leave at end of school year
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