Thursday, October 9, 2008

Mayoral School Control is Flawed by Yaldaz Sadakova - The Queens Courier

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Town Hall Panel (l-r) Assemblywoman Audrey Pheffer, State Senator Shirley Huntley, District 27 CEC President Andrew Baumann, Councilman Joe Addabbo and Assemblywoman Cathy Nolan - Chair, Assembly Education Committee

Click on photos for hi-res image - Photos by Me


The mayor’s control over the city’s public schools has a number of flaws, most notably too much power centered at the top, which has discouraged parental input. This is the main thing that educators and community members from Howard Beach and the vicinity expressed during a forum on mayoral school control held on Monday, October 6.

Town Hall Participants

The forum comes at a time when the New York State Senate and Assembly are gathering testimonials from citizens and holding public hearings in all boroughs to solicit opinions about the efficiency of Mayor Michael Bloomberg’s school management. The legislature is gathering these opinions because in June 2009 it will review the mayor’s performance and vote on whether to continue or revise the current school structure.

City Councilman Joe Addabbo

Held at St. Barnabas Church, at 159-19 98th Street, in
Howard Beach, the school control discussion was hosted by Councilmember Joseph Addabbo, a democrat who represents parts of South Queens and is running for Senate.

Pamela Baumann - Parent and former President of District 27 Presidents Council

“The almost seven-year experimentation with mayoral control is a failure,” said David Quintana, a member of the city group Class Size Matters and of Community Board 10’s education committee.

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Donna Gilmartin - Community Board 10 member

“Many speak about tweaking the system, but I think it is in need of a massive overhaul to make it more responsive to the needs of its primary stakeholders,” Quintana said.

Andrew Baumann and Joe Addabbo

Most of the other debaters, about 30, essentially agreed. “To me, it’s almost like a dictatorship. The windows to the Department of Education are black; you can’t see through them,” said Andrew Baumann, president of Community Education Council District 27.

Assemblywoman Audrey Pheffer

“There’s no communication. There’s no ‘Put your hand in mine and we’ll do it together,’” Baumann added, recommending more checks and balances. “If mayoral control is to continue, it has to be revamped where the mayor is more of a monitor, because, let’s face it, the mayor is not an educator.”

Betty Braton - Community Board 10 Chairperson

Betty Braton, a teacher for many years and a chairperson of Community Board 10, expressed a similar view, saying that the current system has been designed to fit Bloomberg, but it may not fit a different mayor. She added: “It doesn’t function to allow all the different stakeholders to have a say.”

Frank Guluscio - Democratic District Leader (23rd AD Part A)

One group of stakeholders that debaters agreed is underrepresented are parents. “[They] don’t want to be involved because they feel they don’t have a voice,” said Baumann.

Andrea Mercatante, President - PTA MS 207

Andrea Mercatante, president of the Parent Teachers Association (PTA) at P.S. 207 in Howard Beach, complained that the main role of her school’s association has been limited to fund-raising. “We are looked at as a cash cow. That’s all we are good for,” Mercatante said. “In five years, I don’t see the PA [Parents Association] involved in the school at all. Parents go above the PA to have their needs met.”

Tracy Schnepf - PS 47 PA - 2nd Vice President

Tracy Schnepf, second vice presiden
t of the PA at P.S. 47 in Broad Channel, echoed the sentiment. “I have nine parents that come to our PA meetings,” she lamented.

Martin Auerbach, Ed O'Hare, Frank Gulluscio and Albert Baldeo

Representatives from the Department of Education were not present to respond to the debaters’ concerns.


They were invited, but “they were told not to be
here today,” which is disappointing, said Addabbo. “They felt it was political - I’m a councilman; I’m a candidate for state senate,” Addabbo explained, claiming that this was not political.

Assenblywoman Cathy Nolan and Joe Addabbo

But some of the debaters, such as Assemblymember Catherine Nolan, who chairs the Assembly’s education committee, expressed hope that next year Addabbo would be in the Senate and vote on whether to continue or change the current structure of school governance.

State Senator Shirley Huntley

Meanwhile, Senator Shirley Huntley, co-chair of the Senate’s committee on the governance of New York City schools, urged the public to submit testimonials to her about the effectiveness of mayoral school control.

Nolan’s Albany office is also accepting testimonials.


In 2002, Bloomberg inherited control over the city’s school system, the biggest one in the country, which prior to that was widely believed to lack transparency and the ability to produce skilled students. Bloomberg created a centralized system headed by Schools Chancellor Joel Klein. The Chancellor’s numerous reforms have proved controversial though.