Monday, August 5, 2013

Bill de Blasio Makes His Move - Will UFT Members Move With Him?

Mr. de Blasio argues that Ms. Quinn and Mr. Thompson have been either unwilling or unable to sufficiently challenge the legacy of the mayor and the city’s corporations over the past decade. .....Mr. de Blasio’s message, despite the excitement it has drawn from liberal luminaries like Alec Baldwin and Howard Dean, has alarmed many business leaders and Bloomberg aides.
Describing what he calls a “tale of two cities,” rife with inequalities in housing, early childhood education and police tactics, he promised those gathered at the Brooklyn bar that this year’s mayoral race was “going to be a reset moment. A major reset.”
Mr. de Blasio can barely contain his fury over what he sees as the central contradiction of the Bloomberg years: a mayor who routinely unleashed the power of government to change New Yorkers’ personal behavior repeatedly balked at harnessing it to change their economic circumstances. “You can see it; there is a bright line,” Mr. de Blasio said. “On health and the environment, he is Franklin Roosevelt. On economic justice, he’s Adam Smith. He turns into a free marketeer.”
.... NY Times
Today's NY Times had an intriguing pro de Blasio article with a nice photo of him, his wife and State Senator from Harlem/Upper West Side, Bill Perkins (our hero years ago for challenging the charter school lobby with a full day of hearings).
Now that Anthony D. Weiner’s campaign has imploded, Bill de Blasio, the public advocate, is drawing new energy and voter interest to a candidacy that presents the most sweeping rejection of what New York City has become in the past 12 years — a city, he says, that is defined by its yawning inequities. “We are not, by our nature, an elitist city.... “We are not a city for the chosen few.”  It is the campaign season’s riskiest calculation: that New Yorkers, who have become comfortably accustomed to the smooth-running, highly efficient apparatus of government under Michael R. Bloomberg, are prepared to embrace a much different agenda for City Hall — taxing the rich, elevating the poor and rethinking a Manhattan-centric approach to city services.  
And there has been favorable coverage of de Blasio's wife, Chirlane McCray. Interesting development, especially for educators with the UFT making a desperate push for Bill Thompson, an historically flawed candidate being run by people like Merryl Tisch and Al D'Amato.

Add the recent Wayne Barrett revealed stuff about Thompson connections to the guy who destroyed Bed-Stuy Interfaith Hospital. Plus Thompson's jumping on the "stop and frisk" bandwagon when he saw that Weiner was way more popular amongst black votes than he was. [I don't have time to find all these links on ed notes but the always reliable RBE at Perdido Street School has most of them:
Plus some of his great commentary on the race in general.
Mulgrew Stumping With Thompson, Attacks Weiner/Spitzer

RBE at one point said that Thompson was as bad as Quinn.

I imagine the business community, Bloomberg hacks and much of the press will engage in an all out assault to make sure Thompson and not de Blasio gets into the runoff with Quinn. But they can't be seen openly to be on the same side of the UFT - which readers of Ed Notes full well know has been my claim all along - so they will obfuscate and attack Thompson in mild ways.

I know there are aspects of de Blasio's history as president of the District 15 School board pre-mayoral control that may come up.  His  interesting marriage where his wife is black and a former lesbian seems to be playing well at this point --- will she get the black and gay vote for Bill?

de Blasio talks about the free-market concept pushed by Bloomberg and just about all the candidates that if an institution can't stand on its own feet it should close. He seems to be for doing what it takes to keep health care institutions open.
In a mayor’s race crammed with celebrity razzle-dazzle, historic candidacies and tabloid turns, a gangly liberal from Brooklyn is quietly surging into the top tier of the field by talking about decidedly unglamorous topics: neglected hospitals, a swelling poverty rate and a broken prekindergarten system.
One very interesting point is that the page one article continues on a page with this article about a Bronx park and compares it to the funds going to the HiLine (For Decades, Fighting to Rescue a Bronx Park From Disrepair). 
“This is a disgrace,” Mr. Diaz said. “We still haven’t seen what we were promised. The time has come and gone. And that’s only talking about capital improvements. When you look at park rangers, comfort stations and other amenities, we seem to be shortchanged.”
The city’s Department of Parks and Recreation portrays Playground 52 as an example of good policy and volunteerism. When asked about the poor conditions, Zachary Feder, a department spokesman, said designers were working on plans to build a skate park and renovate a basketball court. The scope of further renovations would be determined after a public hearing. Mr. Feder said the playground was cleaned daily by department crews, who also swept water off the courts. But numerous visits over the last several months showed the opposite.
“If this was downtown, this would be fixed A.S.A.P.,” said Dayshawn Holmes, 14. “That’s where the money is in New York. They don’t care about us playing basketball here. Downtown, they’d have glass backboards.”
 You mean a city official lied to the reporter about cleaning the park? Shocking.

The de Blasio article makes much the same point:
Zoning changes have encouraged sky-piercing condominiums with multimillion-dollar price tags, but Mr. Bloomberg vetoed a bill requiring paid sick leave for working-class New Yorkers. By the city’s own measure, 46 percent of residents are poor or near poor, but the mayor scoffed at plans to compel companies that receive city subsidies to pay higher wages.

While a social justice oriented group like MORE at this point is not focused on the mayoral election (given its tiny size and outreach MORE's opinion or actions are irrelevant) my sense has been both inside MORE and amongst outraged teachers generally, was that John Liu followed by de Blasio were the best choices for UFT members. With Liu gaining no traction, many pro-Liu educators are moving to de Blasio.

Now I know that even internal critics say that the UFT is also social justice. But its choice of Thompson given de Blasio's social justice oriented positions shows which side the union leadership is on. Our point has been that only of the union strongly allies itself with community forces does it have a chance to resist the ed deform attacks. The Chicago TU is under assault, as it has been for 15 years, but they only have a chance to survive through their organizing efforts both internally and externally. Right now even with lots of flaws, de Blasio might be the candidate to bridge those gaps though I don't trust him either in the long run if he gets into office.
In a city that is endlessly congratulating itself for its modern renaissance — record-low crime, unmatched crowds of tourists, streets refashioned in European style — a day on the campaign trail with Mr. de Blasio is a reminder of unaddressed grievances and glaring disparities.
And this is not just about the poor, but the working middle class.
A young husband and wife, both employees of the city, told of their shock at being unable to afford a home in the Crown Heights section of Brooklyn, an evaporating refuge for middle-income buyers. “Now even the gentrifiers are getting priced out by gentrifiers,"....
Do inequalities that affect most of the kids teachers have to deal with interest teachers in terms of getting into a battle to improve the lives of our kids? Their living conditions affect our teaching conditions is clear to everyone. But what can we do about it?  We know that E4E and TFA say we can overcome poverty with good teaching and ignore outside factors. Where MORE differs is that we say YES to good teaching -- not by the way the test-driven teaching E4E and TFA support, but engage in both a fight to give us the rights as teachers to make judgements and teach the whole child, while also engaging in the broader struggles.

An open attack on the Bloomberg negatives will gain and lost people. A perusal of the NY Times metro article today has some interesting stuff about the state of Bloomberg's city in the outer boroughs where de Blasio is aiming his arrows.
At the heart of Mr. de Blasio’s appeal, according to interviews with his supporters and political team, is a willingness to deliver an unvarnished and unstinting critique of the Bloomberg era in spite of polls that show a majority of New Yorkers believe the city is heading in the right direction under the mayor’s leadership.
It is a strategy, he said, that hinges on a pervasive sense that, for all of New York City’s bike-path charms and pedestrian plaza allures, its denizens are deeply uneasy about inequalities that remain unchecked by City Hall. 

.... wherever Mr. de Blasio travels these days, resentments toward Mr. Bloomberg’s New York tend to tumble out of voters’ mouths. A woman stopped to rail against wealthy foreigners who are buying luxury apartments, but rarely inhabiting them. “We don’t want to be like those European cities where rich people fly in once a year and nobody really lives there,” she told him. 

A man who is H.I.V. positive complained to Mr. de Blasio about the absence of a rent cap on housing for AIDS patients, which he said left him homeless. 

A student lamented the city’s class stratification, saying that the city “needs a mayor for the 99 percent, not the 1 percent.” 

Inside Mr. de Blasio’s campaign, aides talk about the need to simultaneously recognize Mr. Bloomberg’s triumphs, on issues like the smoking ban, and tap into a widespread desire for a change. “The remedy verses replica theory,” as one adviser put it, speaking on the condition of anonymity because the adviser was not authorized to disclose strategy. 

Mr. de Blasio’s campaign platform is unabashedly interventionist and progressive. His most eye-catching plan would raise the income tax rate to 4.3 percent from 3.87 percent on earnings of over $500,000, to pay for universal access to prekindergarten.
Now, an overcrowded system leaves tens of thousands of lower-income residents without access to full-day programs, setting back the early education of a generation, Mr. de Blasio argues. The campaign says the 11 percent increase in the marginal tax rate would amount to about $2,120 for a family earning $1 million.
In conversations with voters, Mr. de Blasio argues that Ms. Quinn and Mr. Thompson have been either unwilling or unable to sufficiently challenge the legacy of the mayor and the city’s corporations over the past decade. 

But his determination to emerge as the unrivaled liberal in the race has entailed a moral showmanship that may repel as many voters as it endears. He was arrested a few weeks ago during a sit-in to protest the latest closing of a city hospital.
“That,” Mr. de Blasio said of his arrest, “is certainly not in the Michael Bloomberg playbook.”

MORE Update 63: How Do We Fight For a New Contract? Summer Series Thursday 4PM



Movement of Rank & File Educators

Weekly Update #63 - August 4, 2013

COMMITTEES:

Media Committee
media@morecaucusnyc.org
Monday, Aug. 5, 9:30 AM
Starbucks
370 7th Ave @ 31st

High Stake Testing Committee
testing@morecaucusnyc.org

Steering Committee
steering@morecaucusnyc.org
Meeting minutes here

Contract Committee
contract@morecaucusnyc.org

Newsletter Committee
news@morecaucusnyc.org

Chapter Organizing Committee
chapters@morecaucusnyc.org
Mon, Aug. 12, 10:30AM
Cafe Mercato, 648 Broadway
Meeting minutes here

STAYING IN TOUCH: 
Comments? Suggestions?
Email update@morecacusnyc.org with items for future updates

Want more info?
Click below to join our listservs:
News (announcements/articles)
Discussion (debate/back-and-forth)
Chapter Leader (discussion for chapter activists)



Thursday, August 8:

How Do We Fight for a New Contract?


RSVP and share on our Facebook event

4-7 PM
Local 138 
138 Ludlow St
(betw. Rivington & Stanton) 

The UFT leadership’s only fair contract strategy is to influence the Democratic mayoral primary in hopes that the new mayor will feel obliged to the UFT.  However, after the election, the UFT will have no leverage over the Mayor, leaving teachers in a weak position to negotiate.  The lack of real UFT mobilization has given the DOE the green light to violate our contract, increase the number of observations, and use partial observations against teachers.

JOIN THE CONVERSATION!
  • Why union contracts are good for educators and the public
  • Strategies for winning a contract that can protect us from the worst aspects of the new evaluation system
  • How do we protect educators' and students' rights?
  • Supporting teacher professionalism and checking administrative power
BONUS: Watch Chicago teachers sing "(When There's a Contract, Then) Call Us Maybe" during their 2012 contract fight.

DON'T MISS OUR FINAL SUMMER SERIES SESSION:

August 22: The First Days of School: How to Build an Active Chapter
 

2013 MORE Summer Series:
 Discuss, Debate, Educate!

Fast Food Worker Strikes Gain Traction
"An injury to one is an injury to all."  Help support striking fast food workers as they fight for $15/hr and the right to unionize.
  • Sign Fast Food Forward's "Can't Survive on $7.25" petition here
  • Watch John Oliver of "The Daily Show" tear into critics
  • Front-page coverage in The New York Times
 

How Are We Doing?

The MORE media team has been working hard to revamp the website.  Your feedback is welcome!

Email more@morecaucusnyc.org with comments and/or suggestions.

Join UFT at March on Washington

The Movement of Rank and File Educators encourages all UFT members, education activists, and all those who are concerned about the future of democracy and justice in this country, to attend the March on Washington, DC on August 24th, 2013. UFT members and their guests can travel for free on UFT-sponsored buses.

UFT members and their guests can register for free rides on UFT-sponsored buses here.
 

Volunteers needed!

MORE is looking for members to help with website design, proofreading, treasury, fundraising, and planning social events. Please reply if you can help out.

Also, consider attending the meeting of the media committee:
Monday, Aug. 5, 9:30 AM
Starbucks
370 7th Ave @ 31st
Moving?

Moving?

If you are changing schools, phone numbers, or addresses, make sure we can stay in touch by updating your information with MORE.

National Student Power Convergence: Madison, WI

This weekend (August 1st-5th), hundreds of student leaders and activists converged in Madison, WI, to discuss strategies for bringing economic and social justice to their respective campuses and communities.  Shout-out to these young labor and social justice activists for fostering solidarity among national/international students and activists.

View the program, and watch footage from last year's conference at The Ohio State University.

99 Pickets Solidarity Meeting: Thursday, August 8

Join 99 Pickets, New York's worker solidarity group, for their new monthly meetings. On the second Thursday of every month, workers and organizers from campaigns around the city will join with activists to learn what's happening and plan actions to support worker struggles.

Thursday, August 8, 6-8pm
310 W. 43 St. (at 8th Ave.) in the basement
RSVP on Facebook

Potluck dinner--if you're so moved, bring a dish, snacks, or dessert!

Childcare available--please RSVP to 99pickets@gmail.com if you're bringing your children, and indicate their age(s).

Wheelchair accessible. Spanish interpretation available.

Sunday, August 4, 2013

NY1 Coverage - Today: Last Chance to See Amazing Rockaway Cafe at Fort Tilden - 3PM

Finally some press outside The Wave. NY1 was out to cover last night and here is a link to the NY1 report at one of the wonderful performers, Jacquie Caruana's facebook page.
https://www.facebook.com/jacquiedollycaruana?fref=ts

The clips I put up the other day (The Little Theater That Could: Rockaway Cafe: The Comeback) also features Jacquie singing the custom lyrics to I Will Survive.






My former colleague Mary Hoffman trekked out Friday and loved it and just got a call from an old pal who saw the NY1 reports and is heading out this afternoon. I think I am being lured into going a 4th time.
 
Here's the piece I wrote this past week for The Wave.

Rockaway Theatre Company Update
By Norm Scott

The little theater company that could came roaring back to life over the past two weeks, bringing a good chunk of Rockaway comeback spirit with it with its opening production “Rockaway Café – The Comeback” at its refurbished theater which sustained serious Sandy damage. Susan Hartenstein in last week’s Wave (Hallelujah Rockaway Theatre Company! http://www.rockawave.com/news/2013-07-26/Columnists/From_The_Artists_Studio.html ) captured the spirit of the RTC and its unique Fort Tilden WWII vintage theater. “Rockaway Café is our story,” Hartenstein wrote. “A story told with great humor and poignancy. Cleverly weaving contemporary rock and pop songs and standards with original choreography, and based on an original concept by Susan Jasper and John Gilleece, we are taken from disaster to aftermath to daunting struggles to hard-fought triumphs and exuberant hope for the future. Opening night the waves of emotion and pleasure flowing back and forth between the talented cast and the highly receptive audience and the bonds within those groups were palpable.”

For an all-volunteer operation - from carpentry, set design, costumes, music, acting, dancing, singing, management, creativity – just think of an applicable word and apply to RTC – to not only come back so soon, but to do it with such verve and vigor while also rebuilding the theater is beyond remarkable. And the great band lead by Jeff Arsberger does not get mentioned often enough. They can play at my Bar Mitzvah in my next life anytime. Never forget the amazing local talent we have here in Rockaway and our extension in South Brooklyn where between the areas most performers seem to come from.

Nancy Re Cregan in a letter last week said, “The show features great "storm" songs like "Umbrella," "Bad Moon Rising," and "Let the River Run" just to name a few. There is also an original version of "I Will Survive" that recaps the strong character of Rockaway, Breezy, and Broad Channel.” The words were written by RTC stalwart Susan Jasper.

Here are links to some video I shot at the Friday and Saturday performances last weekend featuring some of the dynamic talent (young, teen, young adult, adult, and my generation – old.)
https://vimeo.com/71167899, https://vimeo.com/71311581.

I dare you to watch them and not come to one of the 3 performances left this weekend: Fri., Sat at 8PM, Sunday at 3PM.

Reserve tickets at: www.rockawaytheatrecompany.org.

Soon after Sunday’s performance, new sets will be built and rehearsals will begin for the next show, Boeing, Boeing, opening September 20.

Friday, August 2, 2013

Video: State Senator Tony Avella Calls for Removal of Jennifer Jones Rogers as PS 29Q Principal


Despite the oncoming rain, a spirited crowd of parents, teachers and supporters turned out to join Tony Avella in calling for the removal of PS 29Q Principal Jennifer Jones Rogers, a Leadership Academy principal who fits the mold of feral grads from that institution.

Here is the video of the press conference. I have some interviews on tape that are not included.




https://vimeo.com/71555440

Daily News
Angry teachers and parents are demanding the city fire a College Point principal they claim harasses and humiliates staffers. About two dozen people — including teachers and state Sen. Tony Avella (D-Bayside) — rallied outside Public School 29 Thursday to complain that Principal Jennifer Jones-Rogers is so abusive that 25 of 45 teachers have left or been forced out since she took the helm in 2010.

http://www.nydailynews.com/new-york/queens/parents-principal-fired-queens-article-1.1414885
Several parents and teachers in College Point want the city to end what they claim is an elementary school principal’s terror-driven reign. They said Jennifer Jones-Rogers of P.S. 29 has wrongfully placed a handful of students in special education classes without notifying parents. Critics also say the administrator’s “hostile environment” has driven away droves of teachers and has caused parents to pull their kids from the school. “It is a shame that one person can do so much harm,” said parent Linda Briones, who has since transferred her child out of the school....Educators say she has not provided a copy of the school’s budget to the United Federation of Teachers chapter president for the past two years as required.
Queens Courier -- MORE
South Bx School posted. Check out those comments.

Rally and Presser On August 1 For Removal of Jennifer Rogers, Principal at PS 29 in Queens

Jennifer Rogers, probably one of the least qualified people ever to hold the job of principal, is totally

in over her head and unqualified. Her job, which in all probability got do to her connections of her mother, Carolyn Jones (and the Leadership Academy) former principal at PS 23 in District 10 in the Bronx.

But as with being a principal in NYC, one can do anything short of murder and still retain their position. Or just read the comments here.

The students are afraid of her, the parents are afraid of her, the community is afraid of her, and so are the teachers (except the sycophants).
More








Thursday, August 1, 2013

Network for Public Education Update: Tony Bennett Left His Heart in Tallahassee

Lots of good stuff in this update on Tony Bennett, the Chicago Teachers Union protest against ALEC on Aug. 8 (darn, we're not getting into town until the 9th), and Diane Ravitch's new book.




Volume 1, Issue: #17

August 1, 2013
Inside NPE News
Bennett Announces Resignation in Florida
ALEC Wants to Privatize Our Schools
InBloom Threatens Students' Privacy Rights
Welcome to Our New Board Members!
News About Diane's Upcoming Book Tour
Tell NPE Your Story

It's summer, the perfect time to reflect on your school year experiences. Send your story to us at networkforpubliceducation
@gmail.com and you could appear in our next newsletter!



Like us on Facebook

Follow us on Twitter

Greetings!
Welcome to August, and welcome to the seventeenth edition of our newsletter. This week we offer you multiple opportunities to fight for our schools in your own hometown. You can protest privatization of Chicago schools on August 8th and fight for students' right to privacy around the country. Additionally, we are excited to announce some of the upcoming dates and locations of Diane's book tour! Read it all here! And like us on Facebook, follow us on Twitter, and JOIN US at our website.

Bennett Announces Resignation in Florida

Tony Bennett to Resign Amid Accusations of Grade-Changing
Tony Bennett, head of Florida's schools, joins a long line of "corporate reformers" facing allegations of unethical and politically-motivated conduct
regarding school leadership.
This morning, Florida Education Commissioner Tony Bennett announced his resignation. The announcement comes just four days after the Associated Press published e-mails found from Bennett's time as Indiana School Superintendent which revealed that Bennett had secretly altered the way in which schools were graded in order to reward his political supporters. Bennett's changes specifically affected the ratings of charter schools such as Christel House, which Bennett claimed was being unfairly rated under the previous grading system. Despite Bennett's denials of allegations against him, many of his own staff contradicted his denials.

Bennett's resignation comes at a time when many supporters of data-driven corporate reform are finding themselves involved in similar scandals. A piece written this week by Bruce Baker of School Finance 101 claims that rather than referring to corporate reform, we should look at corporate reform for what it truly is: "FAILED corporate management strategy - often hastily adopted in a moment of leadership desperation - and rarely if ever achieving the desire turn around." 

On the flip side, this week we have also seen the punishments facing those in the education community who refuse to perpetuate this "corporate management strategy." In the case of John Barge, Georgia's Education Commissioner, the U.S. Department of Education is withholding funds from the state because Barge will not impose the sort of scandalous strategies that many others are instituting. According to Leonie Haimson of Class Size Matters, the DOE is harming Georgia's schools because Barge refuses to create "a statistically invalid and wasteful teacher evaluation system."

To read more about these and other stories, we invite you to visit some of this week's News Briefs on our website. 

ALEC Wants to Privatize Our Schools  

Join the Chicago Teachers' Union in protesting ALEC August 8th
Help expose ALEC through protest on August 8th.
On August 8th, the Chicago Teachers Union will be leading a protest against the American Legislative Exchange Council. The CTU estimates that ALEC has helped create hundreds of policies that aim to protect corporations and ultimately harm middle class families. In 2013 alone, ALEC supported 139 bills for privatizing public education and 104 bills that diminish public sector unions and collective bargaining.

Hundreds of ALEC's proposed bills have been turned into legislation through the wealth and influence of Charles and David Koch. Through ALEC, the Kochs have been able to turn their free-market fundamentalism into legislation in every state in the country. 

The American Legislative Exchange Council (ALEC) 40th Anniversary Conference will be taking place in Chicago August 7-9. The conference is being held at the Palmer House Hilton Hotel, 17 East Monroe, Chicago, IL 60603. The CTU will protest outside the conference on August 8th at noon, and invites all friends of public education to join them. To sign up for the protest, please click here.

For more information on the corporations and legislation supported by ALEC, please visit ALECexposed.org. We also invite you to read Diane's blog posts about ALEC.

InBloom Threatens Students' Privacy Rights  

Are corporately-backed organizations stealing kids' privacy?
For more information concerning how your student's privacy might be in danger, please visit classsizematters.org.
Over the past few months, tensions have been building concerning InBloom, an organization that collects information about students around the country in order to create methods of personalized education. InBloom claims on its website that       
"[s]tudent data privacy is a top priority" of theirs. However, parents strongly disagree. After protests led by parents across the nation, four of the nine original states sharing information with inBloom are no longer doing so, while another two are reconsidering the choice. 

One state, New York, has played a large role in the fight over students' privacy rights. New York is currently the only state that allows inBloom complete access to student data in all public and charter school systems statewide. Enraged New York parents have been protesting this practice for months, particularly the fact that the schools do not require any parental consent in order for student data to be offered to invasive corporations such as inBloom. 

For more on this issue, we encourage you to read:

Join Us in Welcoming New Board Members 
The Network for Public Education receives four new board members
New Board members (from upper-left, clockwise): Colleen Doherty Wood, Bertis Downs, Sonya Douglass Horsford, and Mark B. Miller.
We are pleased to welcome four new members to the NPE Board of Directors! These new members have dedicated their lives to public education. They share the values and vision of NPE, and will bring great experience to our ever-growing Network. 
  
Diane announced the additions to the Board earlier this week, saying that the new members "will be a great resource for the important work of the Network for Public Education. Each of them has unique talents. We go forward with them on our team, determined to strengthen public education."

The four new members are: Colleen Doherty Wood; Sonya Douglass Horsford; Bertis Downs; and Mark B. Miller. We invite you to learn more about our new members in this week's press release

News About Diane's Upcoming Book Tour
You can now look on our website to see if Diane will be visiting your town
Today is officially August, which means that Diane will be on her book tour next month! She will be traveling around the country speaking about public education in relation to her new book, Reign of Error: The Hoax of the Privatization Movement and the Danger to America's Public Schools. The book examines the actions taken by the Bush and Obama administrations to privatize public education and discusses how these policies can be altered to promote public schools. 
Now, you can visit our website to keep track of the cities that Diane will visit along the way! Diane's first visit will be in Illinois on September 10th, followed by stops in Colorado, Washington, and closing September with visits to various parts of California. We invite you to take a look at our website, where we will be posting new locations and information about the book tour as they develop. 
Watch for Diane's new book, coming out this autumn!

Tell NPE 

Your Story

NPE wants to hear from you! We would like to publish real stories about the effects of misguided school reforms on our Friends & Allies. Please share this and send responses to networkforpubliceducation@gmail.com.
Please forward this newsletter far and wide! 
In solidarity,
NPE sq
The Network For Public Education


NYC Supervisor: Barbara Morgan is getting what she deserves

I said "Ms. Morgan you work for the DOE what the hell are you doing here defending [Moskwitz]?! She steals money from our public schools by opening non-unionized charter schools which profit off our kids." ... NYC Principal
Oops! Did it again. Don't open your twitter.

This just in from a school principal in response to our Weiner press chief Barbara Morgan post (Unflappable Weiner Press Spokesperson Barbara Morgan Flaps)

 I was happy to see her get her comeuppance. She is an arrogant, mouthpiece for the neo-liberal deformers (and perverts) she represents.
She got upset that they say she had a thin resume? She never did anything of substance but talk the party line whatever the marching orders – Klein, Cerf, Weiner...

I met her at a rally against Moskowitz. 

I asked Moskowitz:

"How do you justify paying yourself half a million dollars a year to run 3 schools when I am a principal and don't make that and when my sup't has dozens of schools and only makes 170,000?" 

Eva just made a bored annoyed face and then Barbara Morgan who was observing everything runs over, jumps in and says "I will answer that!! She does not take a pension like you and the sup't so it is just another way of looking at compensation." 

I asked her "Why are you answering for her? Who are you?"

She says "I am Barbara Morgan. I work for the DOE Press Office." 

That really pissed me off as I was there as part of a Community Rally AGAINST the unwanted $ucce$$ Charter vultures.

I said "Ms. Morgan you work for the DOE what the hell are you doing here defending her?! She steals money from our public schools by opening non unionized charter schools which profit off our kids."

Look at this crowd-

FROM THIS COMMUNITY, not the twenty folks bussed in from harlem by Eva Moskowitz - 

THEY DONT WANT THE SCHOOL.HERE IN THIS DISTRICT. 

The parents are against it, the unions are against it and most importantly the CEC is against it. 

I asked Ms Moskowitz a question and you jump to her defense. 

Why would you do that as a n employee of the DOE? Are you here as an apologist for $UCCE$$ ? If so it shows a serious bias in favor of Charter schools over Public Schools which we have been alleging all along. You should be speaking up for me as a NYC PUBLIC SCHOOL principal not this corporate raider/privateer.

Ms Moskowitz walked off during this exchange as she knew full well the City was merely holding the Mandated Community hearing and that the City's decision was predetermined... 

When she was gone Ms Morgan changed faces and says "well I understand that you are a union Rep and I respect that. I am from New Jersey and have a brother who is in a union"...

Two-faced foul-mouthed hypocrite. I don't wish ill on people. Life is too short. But when her brother can't get work or medical benefits he can thank soul-less empty-vessel spokespeople like his sister.