New York Daily News

Educrats in the dark on $347M

- BY ELLEN MOYNIHAN and REUVEN BLAU

THE CITY Education Department has no record of how it spent $347 million earmarked to upgrade internet service at middle schools, an audit showed Sunday.

In 2007, the department began to update its broadband technology with the goal of installing fiberoptic cables and other components in all of its 503 middle schools.

The project was completed last year, but there are no documents showing how much it actually cost, project plans or progress reports, according to city Controller Scott Stringer.

In addition, many educators are frustrated by the service, according to a user-satisfacti­on survey Stringer’s office conducted.

All told, 33% of the 440 middle school principals and staff who responded said they were not satisfied with the internet service, 45% said the speed did not meet their instructio­nal needs, and 25% said the service was inadequate.

“If we’re going to be the greatest city in the world in this century and the next, we have to prepare our kids for the future,” Stringer said.

“It’s pretty hard to engage a child when the video takes five minutes to load,” he added. “It’s not easy to spread joy and promote the love of learning if a child is at a laptop watching the spinning wheel of death for an extended period.”

In response to the survey, department officials argued there is no need to improve the internet service.

They said “school-based respondent­s were confused by the phrasing of the auditors’ User Satisfacti­on Survey question about bandwidth upgrades.”

The controller’s office insisted the survey questions were clear and reviewed by the Education Department’s auditor general.

As for cost records, education officials said “there was no overarchin­g ‘initiative for middle schools.’ ”

Instead, they said, the funding was covered by different sources.

Stringer called that a poor explanatio­n.

“Accountabi­lity of our tax dollars means that we want to see this money in our schools,” he said. “The (Education Department) is one of the least transparen­t agencies in the government. They’d rather hide everything than open up their books.”

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Rapper Drake (center) laps up attention (and more) as he accepts Billboard award for top artist, flanked by (from left) Nicki Minaj, Lil Wayne and Drake’s dad, Dennis Graham. Below, Celine Dion was on, and bottom, Cher, boldly took much off.
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