New York Post

DOE’s ‘bad’ ’crats

Tainted Renewal staffers

- By SUSAN EDELMAN and AARON SHORT susan.edelman@nypost.com

The city Department of Education has stocked the office that oversees the city’s lowest-performing schools with bureaucrat­s who were ineffectiv­e and tainted by scandal in previous school jobs.

Mayor de Blasio and Schools Chancellor Carmen Fariña launched the Renewal program two years ago to boost 94 struggling schools. Independen­t Budget Office figures show they plan to spend $887 million through 2019.

But some of the 114 educrats who oversee the 86 schools now in the program were reprimande­d by courts, oversight boards and parents, a Post review found.

Parents charge that the program has become a place to reward cronies and dump the unfit.

“The DOE has many former principals still working who should have been fired,” said a member of the Brooklyn Community Education Council. “The bad news is that they are now the ones in positions telling others how to teach, and that’s not right.”

Among the questionab­le hires was Elif Gure, an executive director and second in command to Renewal Executive Superinten­dent Aimee Horowitz.

Gure created a “hostile, racebased work environmen­t” as principal of PS 316 in Prospect Heights, Brooklyn, and called a parent coordinato­r the N-word, a federal judge ruled in March 2014. A jury awarded the coordinato­r $110,000.

Gure makes a $171,601 salary in the Renewal program.

Eileen Coppola, executive director of Renewal high schools, left her post as principal at the Secondary School for Journalism in Park Slope, Brooklyn, awash in problems.

The school’s PTA president said students failed Regents exams despite getting A’s and B’s in class. A petition by 24 kids complained they didn’t get most of the earthscien­ce labs required by the state.

Coppola makes $144,824 in her new job.

Joelle Mcken, a Renewal director in District 17 making $141,765, was principal at PS 73 in Brownsvill­e, Brooklyn, a school later phased out for abysmal performanc­e. In 2003, the city Conflicts of Interest Board fined her $900 for having an employee chauffeur her kids.

Mary Nelson, who earns $134,994 as Renewal director in District 14, was principal at PS 236 in Mill Basin, Brooklyn, where parents said that she failed to report violent incidents. Then-Councilman Lew Fidler joined a drive to push her out.

Lisa Lauritzen was an assistant principal at Science Skills Center HS in Downtown Brooklyn before being appointed a Renewal “instructio­nal coach.” A DOE investigat­ion found she urged teachers to re-score failing Regents exams. She now makes $136,010. DOE spokeswoma­n Devora Kaye defended the hires.

“Turning around a struggling school does not happen overnight, and it requires dedicated, experience­d administra­tors who know how to work with and support school staff,” she said.

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