WHAT: Press conference to protest new
state law requiring New York City to give charter schools preference for
space and resources, while schools in community school districts need
space and resources to properly serve public school students.
WHO: NYC public school parents, City Council members, elected parent leaders, public education advocates and allies
WHEN: Tuesday, May 6, 9AM
WHERE: Steps of Tweed; 52 Chambers Street in lower Manhattan
City Council hearing on charter schools at City Hall to follow at 10AM.
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NY law creates charter "gold rush" in NYC attracting people in it for the $, warns even charter advocate
New state law changes makes opening charter schools in New York City easier than any other in nation
Recent state law changes are making New York City the friendlist in nation for opening charter schools.
Get ready for a charter school gold rush.
Recently
enacted changes in state law created an environment for opening charter
schools in New York City that’s friendlier than almost any other city
in the nation.
“From
an infrastructure perspective, things have never been better,” said
James Merriman, the influential CEO of the New York City Charter School
Center.
“We have the governor and state Legislature to thank for that.”
Would-be
charter school operators have already contacted the center asking for
information on the benefits of the law spearheaded by Gov. Cuomo. It
requires that the city provide new or expanding charters with space in
traditional public school buildings or rent for privately-owned space.
The law also increases per-pupil funding for charters from $13,527 to an estimated $14,027 by the 2017-2018 school year.
“It
changes the whole game,” said Ric Campbell, 61, co-founder of the South
Bronx Early College Academy. “It’s a huge advantage.”
Campbell’s
middle school received its charter in December and won’t open until
September 2015 with 110 kids and $300,000 dedicated to facility-related
expenses.
If
Campbell qualifies for the new benefits he could spend the money on
hiring four more teachers, laptops for each student, field trips to
college campuses or more arts and music programming, he said.
He’s not the only one excited by the benefits of the new law.
“Everyone
who reaches out to our organization is considering whether they are
eligible,” said Kyle Rosenkrans, vice president of policy and advocacy
at the Northeast Charter Schools Network, which works directly with 183
schools.
Critics have blasted the law.
James
Merriman, the CEO of the New York City Charter School Center, said that
from an infrastructure perspective, things have never been better
“Gov.
Cuomo has given a green light to a separate and unequal school system
that favors privately run charter schools and underfunds traditional
public schools,” said Zakiyah Ansari, advocacy director for the Alliance
for Quality Education.
The
charter movement is counting on the continued support of Cuomo, who is
listed as honorary chairman of a private education conference in Lake
Placid beginning Sunday and attended by charter operators and deep-pocketed hedge fund donors.
“It’s
not just about putting more money in the public school system, it’s
trying something new and that's what charter schools are all about,”
Cuomo has told charter supporters.
That doesn’t sit well with Ansari.
“Political
contributions from super-wealthy ideological promoters of privatization
have too much control over education policy under Cuomo's new law —
instead parents and communities should be in the driver's seat for their
children’s future,” she said.
Rosenkrans
was guardedly optimistic about the law, which he said includes a lot of
vague language that still needs to be hashed out.
Still,
observers expect an avalanche of applicants for the 52 remaining spots
allocated by the state for new charter schools in New York City — and
teachers eager to land jobs.
That’s on top of the 21 approved charter schools set to open in the city this year.
All told, that means 73 new charter schools in the coming years.
Campbell worried the new funding might lure would-be charter operators with the wrong priorities.
“It
will attract more people, but for the wrong reasons,” he said. “Those
of us that believe in the mission will do it anyway. If you get into
this for money, you’re going to be disappointed.”
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