New York Daily News

UFT skips meeting with Eric & bigs over mayoral control of city schools

- BY MICHAEL GARTLAND AND MICHAEL ELSEN-ROONEY

Mayor Adams rallied with union leaders Monday morning to highlight his push to renew mayoral control of the city’s schools — but with one glaring absence.

The United Federation of Teachers, which represents the city’s public school teachers, did not attend the mayor’s outdoor confab on the steps of City Hall, and when asked about their absence, Adams punted as to why.

Adams said he dined with UFT President Michael Mulgrew over the weekend, but did not reveal what they discussed.

“You have to ask them about mayoral control specifical­ly,” the mayor told reporters. “One thing’s for sure, everyone agrees — the more clarity that we have, the better we’re going to be able to resolve the problems in our school system.”

Since taking office, Adams has been pushing for Albany lawmakers to give him an extension of mayoral control of city schools, a power which was granted to mayors Michael Bloomberg and Bill de Blasio before him. On Monday, Adams reupped his push, arguing that, unlike his predecesso­rs, he and his Schools Chancellor David Banks (photo) are products of the city’s public school system.

“We shouldn’t even have to be here today to have this conversati­on,” Banks said. “The reality is that the mayor and I are both products of this system, and we’ve dedicated our lives and our careers to the fabric of New York City.”

Beside them on Monday were leaders and members of SEIU 32 BJ, which represents building and custodial workers, Local 372, which represents nearly 25,000 nonteachin­g school workers, and the Hotel Trades Council.

Along with the notable absence of the UFT, the Council of School Supervisor­s & Administra­tors, which represents school principals and other supervisor­s, did not attend Hizzoner’s rally, which was initially scheduled for last Thursday but postponed after Adams’ return flight from Los Angeles was delayed.

Both the UFT and CSA have voiced support for the continuanc­e of mayoral control of schools, but the unions also want to see more in the way of guardrails.

A UFT spokeswoma­n said Monday that “while we support mayoral control, we have also repeatedly called for more checks and balances and greater parental voice.”

During a January hearing on mayoral control in Albany, Mulgrew called on the state Legislatur­e to change the structure of the oversight panel that approves city Education Department contracts by adding two parent-elected members and guaranteei­ng that members can’t be yanked from their positions for voting against the wishes of the official who appointed them.

Mark Cannizzaro, the head of the city principals’ union, agreed that the education oversight panel should be restructur­ed to give it more power to push back on the Department of Education and the mayor. He has suggested taking away two mayoral appointees to remove the mayor’s majority and launching an independen­t review of two decades of mayoral control.

The role of the normally obscure panel has grabbed the spotlight in recent weeks as Adams has struggled to appoint and maintain members, and the panel has bucked the DOE on several important budget proposals.

The UFT is by far the Education Department’s largest union, representi­ng roughly 120,000 of the its 150,000 employees. CSA represents roughly 6,000 principals, assistant principals and administra­tors.

Adams said on Monday that he would travel to Albany to resume his push for mayoral control in the coming weeks. When asked if he had an alternativ­e plan in the event that he fails to secure mayoral control, Adams essentiall­y said no.

“Sometimes when you create a Plan B, C, D and E, you are setting yourself up for failure. And we’re not. We have one plan, Plan A. Plan A is mayoral accountabi­lity,” he said.

“We believe the people understand how important it is, and that is our focus.”

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