I know full well that Chancellor Richard Carranza was protecting his people when he made this statement to the City Council on Tuesday as reported by Sue Edelman in the NY Post:
“There is no fat to cut, there is no meat to cut — we are at the bone,” Carranza testified Tuesday at a City Council budget hearing.
Okay, everyone have a good laugh. When you have finished guffawing, let's get back to Sue.
“It’s just inconceivable there’s not waste in that budget,” said Leonie Haimson, executive director of Class Size Matters. “Clearly there are more savings that can be made by cutting unnecessary contracts, consultants, and the mid-level bureaucracy, which has more than doubled in spending since de Blasio took office in 2014.”
Examples:
Instead of slashing programs that impact students, critics say, the DOE should chop away at the vast array of high-salaried supervisors, consultants and contractors who do not work in schools or directly serve kids.
The DOE employs 1,189 educrats making $125,000 to $262,000 a year. All have desk jobs at Tweed Courthouse or in borough offices, records obtained by The Post show. Of those, 50 execs take home $200,000-plus — more than double the 21 at that salary level in fiscal year 2018.
That does not count Carranza, who collects $363,000.
Despite the army of six-figure supervisors, the DOE still pays high-priced consultants.
The DOE just inked a two-month, $1.2 million contract with Accenture LLP to advise the chancellor on school-reopening options, including a mix of classroom and remote learning.
Accenture staffers bill up to $425 an hour. That’s on top of another three-year Accenture contract costing the DOE $1.7 million a year for management advice.
The Office of School Wellness, under executive director Lindsey Harr, promoted 19 employees to supervisory posts over the past year — with pay hikes up to 45 percent.
Harr’s own salary ballooned $41,416, or 28 percent, to $189,041. She paid a consultant $19,000 to advise her on the reorganization.
In what a fed-up staffer called “favoritism,” Harr let two employees who were working part-time bump up to full-time. Their boosted salaries of $103,211 and $112,791 kicked in in March, just as schools closed and they could work from home.
“The timing shows that they are taking advantage of the system,” the staffer said. “They get a financial benefit during a global pandemic, while first-responders have to find help or send their kids to city-run child-care centers.”
Harr promoted another employee to “senior director of implementation,” making $185,944 a year. The DOE said she supervises a team of 45 who help schools meet PE and health-ed requirements.
The senior director of implementation, in turn, appointed four “directors of implementation” to supervise the 45 staffers — about 10 each. Three of the directors received 40-percent pay hikes to $110,419; the fourth makes $118,418.
Harr reports to LaShawn Robinson, deputy chancellor for School Climate & Wellness, who makes $229,787 a year.
There's so much more in the piece but I don't want to just repeat it. I think we should add to it.
Can any of you find some fat in the DOE budget?
There is the obvious bloat of a school with around 500 kids having two assistant principals or the coaches who do pretty much what the assistant principal does. Then, there are the Quality Review people who waste school time reviewing schools where the superintendent already reviews the school to rate the principal. Even more obvious are the 300 lawyers who just go after educator jobs. When it was the Board of Education, they had far fewer attorneys and they still managed to run a grievance process against us.
Your suggestions to help Carranza out please ladies and gentlemen.
Brooklyn institute for liberal arts has 400 something students, 3 APs and a principal.
ReplyDeleteI am sure your school isn't the only top heavy school out there.
ReplyDeleteMy suggestion is that he read a good essay on how deficit obsession, and I'm not talking about embracing modern monetary theory (not a fan) and the economics of austerity are two sides of the same intellectually bankrupt coin. Why are people talking about austerity, cuts and slashes when our economies are in a depression? Why cut his job? Why cut hers? Trim the fat? This phrase reads like "surgical strike" or like "smart bomb" when what you are doing is bombing the hell out of other people. Nothing surgical, nothing clean, nothing smart about trimming the fat in a depression.
ReplyDeleteI know, live and let die but the invisible hand still has a hand on the levers of all economies, including ours in NY State and in NYC. The Visible Hand of government needs to put down the slashing knives and take up a calculator. Remember when interest rates could not go to zero? But they did, and they kept going. Negative interest rates. No economic text book ever mentioned negative interest rates (nominal or real) before the Great Contraction or Great Financial Crisis (not called a depression because headline unemployment only hit 10% ) and before markets forced the hands of central banks around the world to set rates below zero.
For those of you who are confused by this, don't fret, it's all strange and new to everyone and doesn't seem to make sense. You don't need to be an economist to know that when I lend you money you pay me interest and not the other way around. Right? Wrong. Not in our world. Negative rates are weird. They seem to defy all the laws of the general theory of wages and production. Capitalist everywhere are scratching their heads. Even Marx, who contrary to his reputation, praised the extreme in capitalism to the heavens, never dreamed of them. Keynes, brilliant as he was, would be confounded by them. The foolish gold bugs are giddy. And have been for over a decade as inflation rots in its grave.
Why rates are negative is not understood. It's a chapter in the bigger mystery: who or what killed inflation? Economists think the gang that killed inflation is the same gang that killed labor.
Let me repeat that: Economists think the gang that killed inflation is the same gang that killed labor.
Now, I'm not talking about a bunch of Left-wing economists who manipulate statistics to promote a progressive tax system. The notion that inflation is dead is widely accepted in economics. And, forget the notion, the facts support the death of inflation. Your 1.3% raise is proof enough of the death of inflation and wages.
But Cuomo and de Blasio ignore the facts and are still playing the political game with a book of 1970s economics. Why? Cut. Slash. Layoff.
Why is Cuomo so proud of his austerity? Why does he keep bragging about his budget record? How he kept taxes low? He sounds like Paul Ryan, whose austerity for the workers and tax cuts for the rich, and deficit reduction plan, once the foundation of the Republican Party was exposed by Trump as Voodoo Economics and not the political mantra the party needed anymore now that Trump and Steve Bannon figured out how to get working class people to vote for Trump. Cuomo argues with Mitch McConnell about the new bill he wants passed by putting up figures that prove he has been the frugal one, the leader who keeps taxes low and trims the fat, the meat, the budget to the bone. And he accomplished this during the greatest economic contraction in recent history until this one hit us. Is that something to be proud of? To be bragging about? I guess if you're playing horseshoes with Paul Ryan and Herbert Hoover's ghost it is.
We need to change the conversation. Stop calling for slashes and cuts. Put the knives away.
The money is available. Money has never been cheaper. We can borrow the money. Keep everyone working who is working now and recover from the depression quicker or we can use the old book and make the Greater Depression Greater.
Suspend all Quality reviews for K-12 and ECERS-R and CLASS reviews of Pre-K and 3K. This should be a no brainer as we don't need anyone extra coming into school buildings and classrooms who travel all over the state spreading germs. Drop one AP as ratings should go to S/U with anyone who comes to work and survives this disease getting a S for the 2020-2021 school year.
ReplyDeletePrincipals, AP's should not be coming into classrooms spreading germs and they can't go closer than 6 feet to see student's work anyway.
Get rid of the Executive Superintendent's-another waste of money.
No need for high priced consultants and "directors. Why not consult the people who actually do the job?
Suspend all state testing for the 2020-2021 school year.
All I see is Carranza and crew hiring director of this and consultant of that getting paid a lot of $$$$. I have not heard of any additional cleaners or custodians, you know the people who are actually vital to attempting to try and keep us and students safer?
Instead of all this money being spend on high salary people to sit at home or in their offices sitting safely 6 feet apart interacting with adults only who understand boundaries. Why is there not a focus on cutting these unnecessary jobs and a sole focus on hiring the 1,000's of cleaners or custodian supervisors to try to ensure our health?
Is Carranza planning to have these people humble themselves and step foot into schools and pitch in and CLEAN THE BUILDINGS SEVERAL TIMES DAILY since it's ok for us to work in these buildings with poor air quality? Rather than tell us how children are supposed to not touch a door knob,wall,chair, hand rail etc. they can follow our student's around and clean up after them.
How much more proof do New Yorkers need to show that Carranza is not mentally or morally well? During this time with tens of thousands, if not more, New Yorkers joining the ranks of the unemployed, Carranza does not feel even a little shame or guilt? His sense of reality is clearly askew. I am sure there is a label in the world of psychology for people who do not feel guilt, shame, embarrassment, and have their own sense of reality.
ReplyDeleteThis should be the last straw for Carranza. New Yorkers are paying him over a million dollars in salary for his years as Chancellor and has done nothing to improve the school system and everything to contribute to its ruin. He is simpleminded, immoral, corrupt, polarizing, insulting, narcissistic, lacks leadership and he is immensely embarrassing.
This story should be plastered all over the place right next to the pictures of hundreds of people on line for food at NYC pantries and churches.
Put the campus schools back together into one school - 1 principal, 1 ap for each subject, no consultants, no three tiered educrats at Tweed, the list goes on and on. DeBlasio will eventually be arrested. Thrive NY, his real estate bribe deals and virus murders by incompetence need to be investigated.
ReplyDelete10:07, I will volunteer to put Jamaica HS back together.
ReplyDeleteHow about placing all the ATRs. I've been sitting doing nothing for 2 months because I had no classes when my school closed on March 14th. If the principals complain, they need to just suck it up and shut up. It's a financial crisis. Also, suspend sending faculty members to overnight or week long pds like in Nashville and suspend all field trips for students unless they are actual competitions. Also, don't pay for useless curriculum planning over the summer. Also, why do we need a deputy chancellor and deputy superintendants?
ReplyDeleteCut everyone working at central, everyone working at Tweed, DOE legal and give kids
ReplyDeletea realistic chance to learn safely.
The DOE would save 2 Billion dollars and the schools would then run efficiently and much more successfully in all ways.
It is a sad reality, but a true one nonetheless.
Recall De Blasio, fire Carranza and straighten out NY City finanaces NOW!
ReplyDeleteCut the BullShit!
Those that have been slaughtered like Sheep want to grow teeth and bite the Dogs. But it is the Wolf and the Fox we need to protect ourselves against. Every Dog will have its day, and we can't take that away. Let Tweed and the Admins alone. At least a Dog can bark. Vent. Vent. Vent. But don't bleat. Flock together and welcome the Dogs to protect the fold. The Wolf in Albany is sharpening his sheers and his butcher blades. The Fox in the Manor is not as stupid as you imagine; he is clever. You underestimate him and the fold will flock in fear and bow down to the Pigs again. Solidarity & the Street. Not cuts. No slashes. Not now. Not in a Depression. We need to keep the fat, the lean and the bone. We've got to fight for education funding. Issue the debt. The Wolf has the authority to do it now.
ReplyDeleteWhy are you concerned about deficits and balanced budgets? The fight is about funding not cutting. To fund all we need do is deficit-spend and the Governor has emergency spending power to do it now. Emergency funding, by law is specifically exempted from all debt limitations. And Cuomo can extend the short term funding to long term bonds like these bonds issued on 5/13:
$386 MM Dormitory Authority of the State of NY School Districts Revenue Bond Financing Aa3 /AA- due 10/1/21-50
The tax payer pays 2% interest and we all get out of a Depression sooner than later.
Politics. Playing politics in a Depression. Meanwhile the Pigs are issuing debt at extraordinary cheap rates and taking over public education.
But the public, the average tax payer, teacher, nurse, carpenter, sandhog, electrician believes in balanced budgets and austerity and low taxes. And would rather fight his co-worker supervisor and talk the same old talk about cuts and slashes and who should bend over first.
I think they should keep any lawyers who provide instruction to children.
ReplyDeleteI am not overly concerned about deficits and balanced budgets. You spend your way out of this. I get it. Nevertheless in the real world we live in, state and local budgets are going to be looked at for cuts with tax revenue way down now. Read the piece we linked to on school budgets. This is as good a time as any to point out central DOE bloat.
ReplyDeleteWe don't want any lawyer who is a teacher cut. We are talking about the gotcha lawyers at central.
ReplyDeleteSo , how many teachers died of Covid 19 because the schools were not closed on March 7th?
ReplyDeleteWe don't know. As Mulgrew said, logic would dictate that some got it at school.
ReplyDelete.
ReplyDelete@NYCschools
stopped paying for unused buses at the end of March, which will save $600M. This shd be used to restore cuts to schools w/$350 million left over to hire more teachers and counselors next fall.
" I am determined to examine what we knew, when we knew it, and what we did about it" NYC comptroller Scott Stringer launches probe into de Blasio’s coronavirus response
ReplyDeleteGonna be safe to get to work in September???
ReplyDeleteThis is what Mayor Bill de Blasio’s “historic” success in clearing out the homeless from the subways looks like.
A photo was taken at the Bellevue Men’s Shelter on Tuesday night, hours after the mayor touted his office’s ability to get the homeless off the streets and into shelters, where they’re “accepting help.”
It turns out that “help” includes maskless men curling up in close proximity on a staircase or on the floor, mere inches from others amid a global pandemic, on makeshift cardboard “beds.”
“They’re forcing these guys off the train to go here and staff at the single men’s intake is overrun and these guys won’t get a bed in a lot of cases so they’re forced to sleep on the stairs and such, which causes tension and unrest from being so close,” fumed a Department of Homeless Services police officer.
“As you can see, this is not social distancing.”
I work in manhattan. How am I getting to work?
ReplyDeleteToday's announcement by @NYSE that it will BAN users of public transit when the trading floor opens is yet another preview of the coming carpocalypse and the need for leadership now — which @Julcuba and @DaveCoIon show is lacking. https://buff.ly/2WAxM3A
Eight Executive Superintendents w/ staffs never existed before Carranza .... does anyone assess the impact of staff NOT in schools? Do they provide a "value-added" to student outcomes? The current leadership created a school system adrift ...
ReplyDeleteLogic would dictate that since there were cluster outbreaks at these schools and UFT employees who were part of those cluster outbreaks passed away at that time, therefore they got it at school. So, yes they were human sacrifices. n other words tribute as in the Hunger Games meaning of the word tribute, namely, sacrificial deaths.
ReplyDeleteWell it is time for a Texas size barbecue. Time to send Carranza and his ilk back home to their Texarkana homesteads. Bring out the 10 gallon bottles of barbecue sauce and get ready
ReplyDeletefor a New York sendoff!
As of May 15, there were nearly 350,000 COVID-19 cases in New York and more than 27,500 deaths, nearly a third of the nation’s total. The corresponding numbers in California: just under 75,000 cases and slightly more than 3,000 deaths. In New York City, the country’s most populous and densest, there had been just under 20,000 deaths; in San Francisco, the country’s second densest and 13th most populous, there had been 35.
ReplyDeleteso, now that's it been proved without a shadow of a doubt to even the staunchest supporters of the current regime that the DOE has incredible, useless bloat, what is going to be done about it? My bet is nothing. The Wellness portion of the article really got to me. Most of those people are failed teachers who are of no help anyway, it's like the phys ed method of a useless teacher going the admin route.
ReplyDeleteThey will get rid of teachers choice, maybe permanently.
ReplyDeleteIn other words, New York had the worst outbreak in the country due to keeping subways open and seeding nursing homes with COVID patients they weren't prepared to treat, then New York residents fed the remainder of the country when they fled their politicians policies.
ReplyDeleteThey say those who can't teach. I say those who can't teach, become administrators.
ReplyDeleteA real union would have been gathering signatures to impeach deBlasio for delaying closing schools and opening them for teachers for a three day training. The aura of corruption in the deBlasio administration hasn’t been seen since Boss Tweed was in charge. A billion to Mrs D for ? Is he looking to close Rikers for real estate development? He’s done enormous harm by rezoning for real estate friends - going against the wishes and needs of whole neighborhoods and boroughs. Stringer needs to do something if he wants to be mayor, or be seen as complicit. The city council is even turning against him.
ReplyDeleteSo, June 1st opt out is just two weeks away from tomorrow!
ReplyDeleteThank you SCOTUS!
Selfish idiot.
ReplyDelete7:28 pm
ReplyDeleteYou are insane!
Keep paying for the same bad results and expect it to be different this time!
You are a self centered asshole trying to justify anti unionism as something noble. It isn't no matter how much Mulgrew sucks.
ReplyDeleteWhat a dope
ReplyDeleteI am not 845 pm but what are you dues payers doing to make it better or cause a change?
ReplyDeleteON a side not just want to tell James, we may not agree politically, but thanks for doing what you do. Especially now with the tragic passing of Chaz, we need you more now than ever. I find myself going to Chaz page once a week, been following over 10 years everyday, such a tough loss that will continued to be felt.
ReplyDeleteShould chapter leaders around the city be doing borough or whole city zoom meetings to start planning what demands we have?
@Anon2323... i agree. I have visited Chaz' page once or twice myself. He's on God's team now and that's where I hope to be at the end of my journey. So yes,thanks James. Stay safe folks. Stay safe.
DeleteDemands? Lol. We will have no say.
ReplyDeleteyeah without Chaz, even fewer bloggers will consistently blog about the academic fraud in our schools now and abuse of teachers by teachers. Chaz had a way of pointing out how the academic stats from the DOE didn't make sense and how NYC HS grads were woefully underprepared for college.
ReplyDeleteAgree Chaz is missed. We were friends and colleagues at Jamaica and as bloggers.
ReplyDeleteNothing to cut? Just not his racist stuff...Chancellor Richard A. Carranza Retweeted
ReplyDeletePaul Forbes
@PaulForbesNYC
Today the
@OEAnyc
IB/CRE Team launches the online Implicit Bias platform for
@NYCSchools
staff. We miss the in-person IB Awareness Workshop but grateful to our leader,
@DOEChancellor
for his vision, leadership & support.
The doe wants to cut spending? For starters, do all PDs on PD days via remote technology. This would save on bagels and coffee and hiring guest speakers who cost a ton of money.
ReplyDeleteHave carranza take a pay cut. He makes 365 k. He’s worth a fraction of that.
Get rid of f status and out of classroom coaches.
Get rid of the 750 assistant superintendents of bs who push paper even though it’s 2020 and files should be online.
In a place like south shore or Canarsie that have 4 schools, get rid of 3 of the principals.
Carranza is a moron. There is a ton of fat that can be cut.
@ Anonymous 5:40 pm
ReplyDeleteExactly!
Since this whole situation first started we were flat out lied to regarding safety (stupid video disseminated saying "masks don't help"). Then we were given 48 hours to institute full scale online learning without any guidance or training. All of these over-paid and under-qualified paper pushers have not done a single thing to help teachers and para-professionals with online learning. These assistant superintendents have to justify their unjustifiable existence so they come up with new catch-phrases and try to micro-manage schools and teachers by talking about observations and accountability within the second week of online learning. Really? Who is holding them accountable? I will consider any they say once each and every one posts a video of a live teaching session that they completed as a model for all of us out there. Until then, they can all take a "deep dive" into the shallow end of a pool.
P.S. I must say that I am very fortunate that my principal and administration have been extremely flexible and accommodating during this mess and have been working well with our UFT representative and has not been treating people like some of the horror stories I have read.
947,
ReplyDeleteI have been lucky as well.
My friend who is in a Brooklyn Jhs has told me that between the hours of 10 pm and midnight, he will see a ton of emails being sent from APs and principals and other teachers regarding issues. That is just ridiculous. He said he will spend about an hour each morning checking them.
If remote learning continues in September, mulgrew needs a MOA to occur. First, what are the general expectations. This has never been given to us. Other large cities(LA and Chicago) have a MOA.
Second, the live teaching issue. Most people are being pressured by principals to do this from what I am hearing.
There are so many other issues.
Also, so much end of the year business must happen.
On mulgrew’s last town hall, he stated a calendar would be completed soon after that call. That call was a month ago.
Why can the doe drag their feet? Not ok.