Principal will still hand out diplomas days after fraud arrest --- While her students will be wearing caps and gowns Monday, Port 
Richmond High School interim principal Oneatha Swinton might want to 
consider donning an orange jumpsuit..... NY Post, Sue Edelman
Yesterday I posted this item: 
Below is a video I made with some background info. Before we knew about the arrest - the day before - we went to the UFT DA and the PEP - which we found had been moved from Brooklyn to Manhattan -- we found out when the translators who were also confused rushed out of the building to head to Manhattan. Annette Renaud actually asked them to give us a ride. There's no stopping her, which Oneatha Swinton, who was the principal when Annette was PTA president at the School of Journalism on John Jay Campus and once attacked Annette, is finding out.
https://vimeo.com/276717595 
Here is the link to the Daily News article:
http://www.nydailynews.com/new-york/ny-metro-staten-island-principal-busted-insurance-fraud-20180622-story.html
NY1:
 http://www.ny1.com/nyc/all-boroughs/news/2018/06/23/interim-acting-principal-of-staten-island-school-arrested 
And the NY Post:
https://nypost.com/2018/06/23/principal-will-still-hand-out-diplomas-days-after-fraud-arrest/
While her students will be wearing caps and gowns Monday, Port 
Richmond High School interim principal Oneatha Swinton might want to 
consider donning an orange jumpsuit.
The embattled educator is scheduled to hand out diplomas at the 
Staten Island school’s commencement ceremony — even though she was 
arrested last week on felony insurance-fraud charges.
School leaders dashed off a letter Friday to Chancellor Richard 
Carranza demanding Swinton’s “immediate removal,” citing the criminal 
case and complaints that she has mismanaged the budget.
But a city Department of Education spokesman on Saturday said Swinton
 will remain in the post “while we review the charges.” The DOE would 
not say if Swinton will show up for graduation.
Swinton, 39, is accused of registering two Lexuses at the 
Pennsylvania home of a city vendor she had hired, a scheme The Post 
exposed last November.
Pennsylvania Attorney General Josh Shapiro hit Swinton with four 
counts of insurance fraud, plus theft by deception and criminal 
conspiracy.
The vendor, Tanya John, a former city principal, is charged with 
insurance fraud and conspiracy for allegedly letting Swinton use her 
East Stroudsburg, Pa, address to get low-cost car insurance.
A defiant Swinton, who is seeking to be named permanent principal, 
refused to comment when confronted by a Post reporter at the school 
Friday.
But Swinton recently contended her critics are unfair.
“I know that people have done things to disrupt me or make me leave,”
 Swinton told a School Leadership Team meeting this month. “There are 
people looking to get me on an investigation.”
City Councilwoman Debi Rose, who has staunchly defended Swinton, is 
set to speak at Monday’s graduation ceremony. “I understand that these 
allegations are serious, but individuals are innocent until proven 
guilty, so therefore we await the outcome the court proceedings,” Rose 
said in a statement to the Post.
In a criminal complaint, the Pennsylvania AG said John put her energy
 bill in Swinton’s name for three months in 2014 so that Swinton could 
show it as proof of residency to obtain a driver’s license. She also 
used the fake address to register two luxury cars, replacing one Lexus 
with another.
Swinton then bought car insurance using her fraudulent Pennsylvania 
license and registration — saving about $3,000 because rates are cheaper
 in rural East Stroudsburg than in NYC, the AG said.
She later filed two claims, both in September 2016, reporting damage 
to her car in Staten Island and Brooklyn fender-benders, costing the 
insurer $2,247 to repair.
After getting wind of the AG investigation in December 2017, 
officials said, she tried to cover her tracks by getting a New York 
driver’s license with her own Staten Island address, and changed the 
registration of her Lexus to New York State.
Swinton and John, who have not yet entered pleas, turned themselves 
in Thursday, and both were released on $5,000 bail. A preliminary 
hearing is scheduled for Aug. 15. Swinton called in “sick” that day, 
staffers said.
John, 44, is the CEO of Feetz LLC, which has collected at least $1.3 
million in payments from DOE schools since 2012 to tutor students, run 
“character development programs,” and take kids on college tours.
Swinton hired Feetz at the Secondary School for Law in Brooklyn, 
where she was formerly principal. Soon after joining Port Richmond last 
year, Swinton planned to hire Feetz again, staffers said.
Swinton has endorsed Feetz on its website with a blurb saying “Teamwork really does make the Dreamwork!”
John, married to a DOE teacher, refused to comment.
 
1: "No loss of raises." Obviously, the benefit to the City of extending the contract is to delay raises, effectively reducing our pay during the next fiscal year.
Turns out that 73 is exactly .2% of 365.
Let's assume an average DOE salary of 80,000. (Is there a more accurate figure? I can't find average DOE salary online.)
For a 1% raise, that's a .2% reduction. On average, that's $160 per member.
For a 2% raise, that's a .4% reduction. On average, that's $320 per member.
And a 3% raise, that's a .6% reduction. On average, that's $480 per member.
2: The more confusing part, he says, "We're not getting fleeced, we are paying exactly what the benefit costs." Without contract negotiations still ongoing, we can't possibly know what kind of raises we are delaying, and so we can't know the cost of this agreement. As you can see above, the difference between a 1% and a 3% raise is triple! The only thing that makes sense to me is that the DOE and the UFT secretly agreed that no matter what raises are negotiated over the course of the contract, the very first raise in the contract will be an agreed upon amount.