New York Daily News

$555M surge in school pay

- BY BEN CHAPMAN

SCHOOL WORKERS took home $555 million more last year than they did in the previous year — and the biggest paycheck went to a rabble-rousing teacher the city has long sought to fire.

New data the Empire Center for Public Policy compiled show the city’s total pay to school workers increased to $10.73 billion for the 2016-17 school year. That’s up from $10.18 billion the year before.

The money includes pay for teachers, principals, administra­tors and other school workers.

The biggest earner in the entire system was David Suker, a controvers­ial teacher and activist the city has spent years trying to fire.

Suker, 49, of Manhattan, started working in city schools in 1998 and said he hasn’t had a regular job in a classroom since November 2011, when the city removed him from his special-education teaching post following his arrest at an Occupy Wall Street protest.

Payroll records show the city paid Suker $362,647 in the 2016-17 school year while he bounced from school to school as an unassigned teacher. That total includes Suker’s salary of $98,485 plus about $264,000 in back pay for nearly three years his salary was docked while he was tied up in disciplina­ry hearings.

But Suker, a veteran who suffers from posttrauma­tic stress disorder, said the money doesn’t make up for the stress of being assigned to rubber rooms for years on end.

“All the money in the world can’t repay me for what I’ve been through,” he said. “It’s nice to be compensate­d, but nothing can repay me for the stress and anguish.”

A hearing officer in December 2015 ruled against the city in its bid to fire Suker, but the Education Department still won’t give him a regular job, he said. Suker is taking a sabbatical this year to study history and education. He’s on the city payroll, receiving a portion of his salary, and will return to full pay in 2018.

Education Department spokesman Will Mantell said any increase in payroll includes salary increases as part of the 2014 teachers union contract as well as contracts with other school and central staff.

The $555 million increase represents a 5.2% jump in the department’s overall payroll spending and does not include benefits.

Mantell said increasing test scores, grad rates and participat­ion in Advanced Placement classes are proof that the city’s school spending is working.

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