New York Post

Probes fueled GOP’s DeB school snub

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The “multiple investigat­ions” of Mayor de Blasio are one reason state Senate Majority Leader John Flanagan won’t agree to extend mayoral control of the city’s public schools for more than a year.

“In light of the questions that remain over how Mayor de Bla- sio intends to lift up failing schools . . . not to mention the multiple investigat­ions into the mayor and his administra­tion — I have deep reservatio­ns over signing off on a longer extension,” Flanagan said in a statement Monday.

Because of Republican resis- tance, the Legislatur­e and Gov. Cuomo last year agreed to a oneyear extension. It expires June 30.

By comparison, former Mayor Mike Bloomberg had six years.

A one-year deal would force the mayor to return to Albany next spring — right in the middle of his re-election campaign.

City Hall spokesman Austin Finan said the state Senate was playing politics.

“It serves no one to hold our children’s educationa­l progress hostage. Once again, we urge the Senate to put students before politics,” he said.

We appreciate that state Senate Majority Leader John Flanagan wants to rein in Mayor de Blasio’s misrule of the city’s schools, but his proposed “education inspector” won’t do much about the problem.

Flanagan has offered a bill to extend mayoral control by a year, with a few new strings: 1) a new ban on lobbyists serving on the Panel for Education Policy, which in theory oversees Schools Chancellor Carmen Fariña the way a corporate board does a CEO and 2) letting Gov. Cuomo appoint an inspector.

But the inspector’s main powers are to 1) block new contracts that seem sleazy, pending the city’s appeal to the State Education Department and 2) himself appeal to SED if he thinks Fariña and PEP have decided against the best interests of children — such as refusing to give space to charter schools that have requested it.

The problem is SED is controlled by de Blasio’s teacher-union pals, thanks to appointmen­ts by Assembly Speaker Carl Heastie. That makes the inspector a toothless tiger.

A year ago, Flanagan gave de Blasio just a one-year extension of control as a warning — yet the mayor has continued both his harassment of charters and his hapless policies on “failure factory” schools, which he insists on keeping open under his hapless “Renewal” program.

The sorry state of the city’s worst regular public schools is driving demand for charters. For the coming fall, over 68,000 students applied for the 23,600 available seats.

Yet de Blasio keeps trying to prevent charters from growing to meet this demand, routinely rejecting their requests to use publicscho­ol space that’s sitting empty.

Flanagan’s inspector can’t stop these core de Blasio abuses of mayoral control — only shine a light on them, and perhaps throw some sand in the gears.

If Flanagan fears to simply let mayoral control die, he needs to offer more. His inspector needs the power to force de Blasio to shut down terrible schools — and to stop standing in the way of good schools that want to open.

That may mean open political war with the mayor and the teachers unions — but it’s the only thing that might help the kids.

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