Urgent! Please call your Council member to end school overcrowding today!
June 11, 2015
Dear Friends,
Our letter urging the Mayor and the Chancellor to expand the capital plan and appoint a Commission to improve the efficiency of school planning and siting has 16 Council members signed on, in addition to the Public Advocate, the UFT President and many parent leaders.
Please check the letter below and call your Councilmembers if they have NOT signed on, and ask if they will do so. And then please let me know what they say. The negotiations on the budget are happening now so this is an urgent matter. The deadline is this Friday 6/12 at 5 PM. You can locate their phone numbers by entering your address at this link: http://council.nyc.gov/html/
Please do it for your kids and all the city’s public school students who have suffered from overcrowding for far too long. A fact sheet on this issue is posted here: http://wp.me/p1uzCk-1lF
Thanks,
Cc: Mayor de Blasio
Dear Chancellor Fariña:
As you may know, nearly half a million students already attend schools that are severely overcrowded and the situation is worsening. We are writing with great concern regarding the recent release of the city’s capital plan. Specifically, we are interested in learning more about the rationale for the number of new schools being built. Given the Department of Education’s (DOE) own data on current overcrowding and enrollment projections, the capital plan as currently designed will meet less than one half of the need.
According to an audit from the NYC Comptroller, at least one third of public schools are overcrowded, according to the DOE’s own data, without the city having a clear plan to deal with the problem. A third of the city’s elementary schools are at least 138% of capacity. [1] At the same time, enrollment is increasing and just-released Census data show that New York City is the fastest growing large city in the country.
Moreover, there is a widespread consensus that the DOE’s formula for estimating school utilization levels in the Blue Book underestimates the actual level of overcrowding and the space needed to provide a sound basic and legal education. Though a working group appointed by the Chancellor made proposals to improve the accuracy of this formula in December, their recommendations still have not been released. Therefore, the City continues to make crucial decisions on co-locations, and now the capital plan based on inaccurate data.
The well-documented result is that hundreds of schools have lost their cluster rooms; thousands of students are assigned to lunch as early as 10 a.m., and/or have no access to the gym. Many special needs students are forced to receive their services in hallways and/or closets rather than in dedicated spaces, and class sizes in the early grades have reached a 15-year high.
The Mayor’s ambitious plan to build an additional 160,000 market-rate housing units, on top of 200,000 affordable units over the next ten years will create the need for even more school seats. [2]The city ended up cancelling the contract after it was pointed out that the company was implicated in a kickback scheme that had robbed DOE of millions of dollars.[3]
For approximately the same amount that the DOE was prepared to pay for this contract, the number of seats in the capital plan could be doubled and we could begin to meet the real needs of NYC public school students.
As the Public Advocate has advocated previously, we also urge your office to form an independent commission to improve the planning process and efficiency in siting new schools, which now lags far behind private and public development efforts. The OneNYC plan released by the Mayor’s office projected the need for infrastructure improvements to meet the requirements of a growing population in housing, transportation, health care and many other areas, but gave little or no attention to the worsening crisis of school overcrowding and the need for new schools to accommodate this growth.
We look forward to your response.
Sincerely,
Letitia James, NYC Public Advocate
Daniel Dromm, Chair, New York City Council Committee on Education
Michael Mulgrew, President, United Federation of Teachers
Council Member Inez Barron
Council Member Robert Cornegy
Council Member Laurie Cumbo
Council Member Daniel Garodnick
Council Member Vincent Gentile
Council Member Corey Johnson
Council Member Ben Kallos
Council Member Karen Koslowitz
Council Member Andy King
Council Member Brad Lander
Council Member Stephen Levin
Council Member Mark Levine
Council Member Helen Rosenthal
Council Member Mark Treygar
Council Member Paul Vallone
Leonie Haimson, Class Size Matters
Lisa Donlan, President, Community Education Council 1
Shino Tanikawa, President, Community Education Council 2*
Joe Fiordaliso, President, Community Education Council 3
Miriam Aristy-Ferer, President, Community Education Council 6
Bryan D’Ottavi, President Community Education Council, District 8
Marvin Shelton, President, Community Education District Council 10
Ilka Rios, President, Community Education Council 12
David Goldsmith, President, Community Education Council 13
Naila Rosario, President, Community Education Council 15
Laurie Windsor, President, Community Education Council 20
Melanie Mendoca, President, Community Education Council 23
Nick Comaianni, President, Community Education Council 24
Dr. Vera Daniels, President, Community Education Council 28
Jeffrey Guyton, President, Community Education Council 30
Mike Reilly, President, Community Education Council 31
Teresa Arboleda, President, Citywide Council on English Language Learners
John Englert, Co-President, Citywide Council on Special Education
Alleyne Hughley, President, Citywide Council on High Schools
Michelle Kupper, Vice President, Community Education Council 15
Deborah Alexander, Treasurer, Community Education Council 30
Karen Sprowal, NYC Kids PAC
Andy Lachman, Parent Leaders of Upper East Side Schools
Eduardo Hernandez Ph.D, member, Community Education Council 8
Michelle Noris, PE, member Citywide Council on Special Education
Rubnelia Agostini, member, Community Education District Council 10
Ellen McHugh, member, Citywide Council on Special Education
Banghee Chi, member, Community Education Council 2
Claude Arpels, member, Community Education Council 2
Jacqueline Colson, Member, Community Education Council 25
*organizational affiliation for identification purposes only
_____
Leonie Haimson
Executive Director
Class Size Matters
124 Waverly Pl.
New York, NY 10011
212-529-3539
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follow on Twitter| friend on Facebook
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Make a tax-deductible contribution to Class Size Matters now!
Subscribe to NYC education list by emailing nyceducationnews-subscribe@