New York Daily News

KO sex harass, educators told

- BY BEN CHAPMAN AND JILLIAN JORGENSEN

Class is in session for city educators, with new lessons on how to prevent sexual harassment.

City Schools Chancellor Richard Carranza — whose own actions were at the center of a $75,000 sex discrimina­tion settlement in his former district of San Francisco – sent an email to public school staffers last Tuesday informing them of mandatory antisex harassment training.

The lessons are to be carried out as part of the Stop Sexual Harassment in NYC Act, which Mayor de Blasio signed in May amid an explosive scandal over the city's handling of the issue.

“Each of us plays an essential role in maintainin­g a respectful work environmen­t that is free of sexual harassment for all employees,” according to Carranza's letter to city educators informing them of the training.

“The sexual harassment prevention training was designed to help identify and define sexual harassment and understand how best to prevent it,” the letter continues.

As part of the City Council's package of bills aimed at addressing and preventing sexual harassment in the workplace, all city employees must take sexual harassment prevention training on an annual basis. For city school workers, this entails a 45-minute online training session that must be completed by Oct. 23, plus school-based, inperson workshops. Staffers in other agencies will take the same lesson. The city schools' handling of sex harassment issues heated up in recent months, with conflictin­g statistics and official secrecy drawing extra criticism. Figures published by the de Blasio administra­tion in April identified 471 cases of sex harassment complaints in city schools from 2013 to 2017. But internal records kept by Education Department officials showed 590 complaints during the same period — a figure about 25% higher.

Just a handful of those cases were substantia­ted, prompting de Blasio to say “a hypercompl­aint dynamic” drove a high number of reports of such incidents – a statement he quickly walked back.

The situation prompted the city to put up an additional $5 million to hire extra investigat­ors to probe such reports — but not all the investigat­ors have yet been hired.

A City Hall spokeswoma­n said the training had been rolled out to all employees citywide and that the entire workforce is set to be trained by the end of the calendar year.

The city will spend about $500,000 over fiscal years 2018 and 2019 on the training across all agencies.

 ?? BARRY WILLIAMS ?? City Schools Chancellor Richard Carranza, who had his own problems on his last job, sent an email to public school staffers telling them of mandatory anti-sex harassment training.
BARRY WILLIAMS City Schools Chancellor Richard Carranza, who had his own problems on his last job, sent an email to public school staffers telling them of mandatory anti-sex harassment training.
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