Resistance to Eva grows and even if battles are lost, the ability of Success to wage long term war will be affected. Resos like this, while not binding (unless mayoral control is tweaked enough), they count as public anti-Eva comments and eventually wend their way into public consciousness while they also force the Eva publicity machine to put out fires in many locations.
But we are aware of DOE and external forces coming attempts to control the powerless CECs (except for their ability to gain some press) and in fact to start placing charter school adherents onto these boards - as has happened with the ed deform slug Brian Davis in Dist. 6.
RESOLUTION #96
CALLING ON THE SUNY CHARTER SCHOOLS INSTITUTE TO REJECT SUCCESS ACADEMY’S PRELIMINARY PROPOSAL TO OPEN SCHOOLS IN DISTRICT 30
AND CALLING UPON NEW YORK CITY TO REJECT ANY REQUEST BY
SUCCESS ACADEMY FOR PUBLIC SCHOOL SPACE IN DISTRICT 30
WHEREAS,
District 30 is proud to be host to many excellent and successful public
schools, including several well-considered charter schools; and
WHEREAS,
on March 21, 2013, Community District Education Council 30 passed a
resolution calling for a moratorium on all school closures, phase outs,
and charter school co-locations; and
WHEREAS
Community District Education Council 30 continues to be opposed to
co-locations of charter schools in district schools without the approval
of the district; and
WHEREAS,
along with adjoining District 24, District 30 is one of the most
overcrowded districts in New York City, such that at the request of City
Council member Julissa Ferreras the DOE convened a task force to
collaborate with the community to establish long-term solutions to
address overcrowding, which task force held its first meeting on April
25; and
WHEREAS, District 30 is currently operating with an average building utilization rate of 104 percent; and
WHEREAS, New York City Schools Chancellor Dennis Walcott has conceded that “Overcrowding is an issue we take seriously,” and
WHEREAS,
the overwhelming majority of charter school seats in District 30 are in
private buildings which serve to provide additional seats for students
in this overcrowded district; and
WHEREAS,
Success Academy has stated in its application to the SUNY Charter
Institute that it only intends to open a school in District 30 if it can
co-locate in a district school, with no acknowledgement that District
30 is already overcrowded and lacking in space for the schools already
in the District; and
WHEREAS,
serious concerns have been raised concerning student and teacher safety
at schools co-located with Success Academy schools as a result of
Success Academy’s performance of construction work without DOE approval;
and
WHEREAS,
District 30 has 13 elementary schools rated an “A” in their most recent
New York City Department of Education Progress Report, which is over
half of the elementary schools in District 30, and eight schools for
which Progress Reports have shown improvement over the past two years;
and
WHEREAS,
District 30 offers numerous options for parental choice including, but
not limited to, no less than five dual language programs, with a sixth
opening next year, three district-wide gifted and talented programs, a
citywide gifted and talented program, a sought-after NEST program,
several magnet schools, and five other charters schools each with its
own theme; and
WHEREAS,
District 30, along with District 24, has one of the fastest growing
populations of immigrant students in the city, with dozens of languages
being the native tongues of students and their parents including but not
limited to Bengali, Arabic, Chinese, Urdu, Punjabi, Greek, Tivetan,
Nepali, Albanian, Philipino/Tagalog, Portuguese, Hindi, Polish, Korean,
Serbo-Croatian, Russian, Turkish, Japanese, French, Romanian, Haitian
Creole, Thai, Ukrainian, Vietnamese, Gujarati, Indonesian/Bahasa,
Pashto, Italian, Burmese, Farsi, German, Bosnian, Tamil, Armenian,
Slovak, Bulgarian, Hungarian, Czech, Yonba, Belorussian, Telugu,
Macedonian, Hebrew, Swedish, Tigre, Dutch, Georgian, Malayalam,
Dzonghka, Bihari, Malay, Slovenian, Guarani, Hausa, Lithuanian, Marathi,
Uzbek, Visayak, Bambara, Cham, Fulani, Ibo, Malagasy, Mongolian,
Niger-Congo, Sindhi, Turkman, Twi, Afrikaans, Azerbaijani, Baluchi,
Estonian, Khoisan, Loma, Maltese, Mandinka, Nahuatl, Native American
Languages, Norweigan, Romansch, Shluh, Sundanese, Swahili, Tamazight,
and Yoruba; and
WHEREAS,
Success Academy has not made its petitions, enrollment materials,
parent contracts, or other documents available in any languages other
than English and Spanish; and
WHEREAS,
Success Academy’s average rate of annual student suspensions for the
schools for which data is publicly available is well over three times
higher than the rate of annual student suspensions in all of District
30, despite the fact that such figures reflect only suspensions of
students in grades K-6, whereas District 30’s suspension rate includes
students in grades K-12; and
WHEREAS,
Success Academy’s average rate of teacher turnover for the schools for
which such data is publicly available is well over twice the rate of
teacher turnover in District 30, and such teacher turnover robs students
of a stable instruction population and systematically prevents the
creation of a stable school community; and
WHEREAS,
Success Academy has not shown that there has been any significant
number of applicants from District 30 to any of its schools.
THEREFORE,
BE IT RESOLVED that Community District Education Council 30 hereby
calls upon the SUNY Charter Institute and the New York State Board of
Regents to REJECT Success Academy’s preliminary proposal, and any
subsequent proposal made by Success Academy to open a school in District
30; and
BE
IT FURTHER RESOLVED that Community District Education Council 30 hereby
calls upon the New York City Department of Education, the Panel on
Education Policy, and the Chancellor of the New York City Schools to
REJECT any request by Success Academy to be co-located in any public
school building in District 30.
VOTED AND UNANIMOUSLY APPROVED: May 16, 2013
Regards,
Gail Cohen
Administrative Assistant
Community District Education Council 30
28-11 Queens Plaza North, Room 520
Long Island City, NY 11101
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