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Court panel calls for billions in new spending for New York
City schools
By Peter Daniels
14 December 2004
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A court-appointed panel has determined that the New York City
public schools have been denying millions of students a minimally
adequate education, and that infusions of billions of dollars
in new spending are needed to remedy the situation.
State Supreme Court Justice Leland DeGrasse appointed the referees
this past summer, in the latest development in a lawsuit first
filed 11 years ago by the Campaign for Fiscal Equity. The organization,
a coalition of local school boards, parent organizations and advocacy
groups that is also backed by powerful sections of business, charged
the state with failing to provide a sound basic education for
students in New York City. The Campaign reported several years
ago that annual education spending in the city was $10,469 per
pupil, compared to $13,760 in nearby suburbs.
The lawsuit has slowly made its way through state courts. In
June 2002, the Appellate Division of the State Supreme Court overturned
an earlier court order from Judge DeGrasse. According to the Appellate
Division majority, the state was obliged only to provide skills
at an 8th- or 9th-grade level. This decision was in turn overruled
by the Court of Appeals, the states highest court, in June
2003. The Court of Appeals pointed out that anything less than
a high school education would leave young people at a severe disadvantage
in modern society. The court gave the state government until July
30, 2004, to formulate a plan for upgrading the citys schools.
When this deadline was not met by the Democrats and Republicans
in the state capital of Albany, the panel of three special referees
was appointed.
The panels report, which is expected to be incorporated
into a new order to be issued by Judge DeGrasse, calls on the
state to come up with a plan within the next 90 days to increase
annual spending on school operations in New York City by $5.6
billion, on top of the current schools budget of $12.9 billion.
The state will have four years to reach the $5.6 billion figure,
a 43 percent increase, in annual installments of $1.4 billion
in added spending.
At the same time, an additional $9.2 billion in capital spending
on the citys schools is called for, on top of the annual
increases of $5.6 billion in operating expenses. The state will
also be given 90 days to formulate a plan for this capital spending,
including construction and the repair of existing facilities,
to be implemented over a five-year period.
The appalling conditions in city schools are longstanding and
well known. The system, with a total of 1.1 million students,
reports officially that it is 66,000 classroom seats short of
its needs. Many students attend classes in split shifts, which
forces them to wake at dawn. Classes are sometimes held in hallways
or in bathrooms. Arts and music instruction have been eliminated
in most schools, library facilities are hopelessly inadequate,
and parents are sometimes forced to raise funds to purchase even
basic supplies.
Education, like many other social and public services, is regulated
by the states under the US federal system. There have been numerous
legal struggles over unequal state spending for urban, suburban
and rural districts, but the New York case is the most significant,
not only because of its size and scope, but also because of its
social content. In the wealthiest city in the world, the authorities
have been found guilty of denying children the basic education
that is guaranteed them by law. Michael Bloomberg, New Yorks
billionaire mayor, who succeeded in eliminating the Board of Education
and establishing mayoral control of the citys schools several
years ago, presides over this scandal.
What comes next in the continuing legal case and political
maneuvers is a period of stepped-up negotiations between the plaintiffs
in the case, led by the Campaign for Fiscal Equity, and city and
state officials. The state, already facing a massive budget deficit
of at least $6 billion for the next fiscal year, will have the
primary responsibility for coming up with the $5.6 billion in
additional spending on the citys schools, and this does
not even count additional demands from other struggling school
districts throughout the state.
New Yorks Republican Governor George Pataki has so far
said nothing directly on the panels report. The state budget
has been balanced in recent years through a series of one-time
gimmicks and windfalls such as the $1.2 billion in state revenue
produced by the conversion of the Empire Blue Cross and Blue Shield
health insurer into a for-profit company. One of the few concrete
proposals that has been floated is a plan for up to $2 billion
in revenues from video slot machines, a regressive gambling tax
that will force the poorer sections of the population to shoulder
more of the burden. Even this amount, moreover, will raise only
a fraction of what has been called for.
In previous negotiations, the state has said that the city
should come up with 40 percent of the additional costs. Mayor
Bloomberg responded this week: For the city to fund even
a portion of this $5.63 billion would require us to cut after-school
programs, close libraries and make severe cuts to essential city
services, even in the area of public safety. Such actions would
harm the very children this lawsuit is designed to help.
Bloomberg feels no need to explain how the wealthiest city in
the world is unable to find the resources to provide a minimally
adequate education for working class youth.
The crisis of the public schools is inseparably bound up with
the social polarization for which New York City has become notorious
in recent decades. The city has never been divided as sharply
on class lines. The poverty rate remains near 30 percent; 2 million
immigrants, mostly poor, have flocked to the city over the past
20 years; and meanwhile, the ruling elite and the upper middle
class have never enjoyed greater wealth.
The immigration influx is a significant factor in the current
situation. Hundreds of thousands of students, for most of whom
English is a second language, have entered a system that was already
aging and inadequate.
If one compares the current wave with the previous high-water
mark of immigration exactly 100 years ago, certain things stand
out. New Yorks public schools, and those of other major
cities, used to enroll almost the entire population. The earlier
wave of immigration took place at a time when American capitalism
was still able to enact limited reforms, and a growing labor movement
exerted pressure for improvements in public education.
Today, however, there is no constituency within the political
establishment for social reform. Private and religious school
enrollment has grown, and a large upper middle class, including
the vast majority of elected officials, has little connection
to the public schools.
Meanwhile the working class majority lacks even the limited
means of applying pressure that it utilized in earlier periods.
The United Federation of Teachers, representing New Yorks
teachers, is correctly perceived by workers as part of the political
establishment. The two-party political system, both Democrats
and Republicans, is utterly indifferent to the day-to-day crisis
facing working class families.
The deterioration of the public schools has created problems
for major employers looking for adequately prepared employees,
but the political system run by big business is incapable of resolving
the underlying crisis. These are the circumstances under which
the courts have intervened, prodded by a lawsuit supported by,
among others, the Ford, Rockefeller, and Bill & Melinda Gates
Foundations.
Additional appeals could mean further delays, although it is
likely that some resolution of the 11-year-old case will have
to be reached in the next year. Whatever deal is finally struck,
there is no reason to believe that the state will finally provide
the resources needed to provide a decent education for New York
Citys public school students.
See Also:
New York City teachers
rally against attacks on education
[28 October 2003]
New York City schools
to ax 3,200 jobs
[12 April 2003]
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