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New York City teachers rally against attacks on education
By Steve Light
28 October 2003
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Ten thousand New York City teachers rallied outside City Hall
October 21 to protest attacks on the public schools. The podium
chiefly consisted of city elected officials and union leaders
leading ambiguous chants of Let teachers teach and
They just dont get it. UFT President Randi Weingarten
thought it was something to boast about that of the 864 paraprofessionals
laid off with no real action by the union at the end of the school
year, 710 have received their jobs back.
No mention was made of the lack of a contract since June 1.
In negotiations, Weingarten has offered to concede work rules,
as an experiment in 50 or more schools, which limit
class size, assignments outside the classroom and class scheduling.
UFT action against overcrowding has been limited to proffering
a resolution for the ballot in November that would merely set
up a commission to study class-size limits for some future time.
New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg has been successful so far in
using the courts to prohibit this question from the ballot.
The UFT is also calling for a no vote on the Republican
mayors resolution to end elections using political party
labels. Weingarten is head of the Municipal Labor Council, of
which none of the unions have contracts now except transit. Having
no alternative in the face of government claims of cuts needed
to meet city debt, Weingartens central strategy is to save
labors alliance with the Democrats. City Council Speaker
Gifford Miller, a Democrat, is proposing $12.9 billion over five
years for school construction and renovation, less than the minimal
$28.4 billion proposed back in 1998 before cuts.
Teachers at the rally enthusiastically denounced the micro-managing
of classroom practices by Chancellor Joel Klein. New teachers
expressed with dismay to the World Socialist Web Site that
they did not find teaching to be the profession they thought it
was because of the conditions and bureaucracy.
A second-year teacher at elementary school P.S. 126 held a
sign stating he was among the 3,900 teachers who will not begin
being paid until November, which will also result in a bigger
tax bite on the larger lump-sum payment then. Those not paid for
the last nine weeks include mostly new teachers and some who were
excessed and then re-hired. Klein thought it
was smart to cut people from the payroll. Way to go, he
said.
A teacher with a group from P.S. 151 and 145 described classes
that are too big. One of the schools had 820 students after 250
more were added than last year when P.S. 2 was closed and its
students merged. I am acting only as a safety guard. Classes
went from 20 students to 30 or 32. There is the reason why teachers
classes in New York City will score lower. Teachers should be
respected as much as firefighters. People arent getting
paid because of the cuts. There are so many kids and too little
resources. The principal can only buy so many cartons of paper.
The chancellor prescribes programs which we cannot implement in
the classrooms. They dont have any real working knowledge
of education.
A spontaneous chant from the crowd broke out of Recall
Bloomberg, referring to the mayor. One high school teacher
stated: I am here to show unity with teachers. They dropped
programs like physics, French, and Italian that we used to have.
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