New York Post

Unaccounta­ble

In NY, only kids & taxpayers face consequenc­es

- Michael BenjaMin mbenjamin@nypost.com

IN a jaw-dropping usurpation of the city’s spending authority, a Manhattan judge, Lyle Frank, on Friday threw out the Department of Education’s budget. It’s got to be the worst interventi­on since another judge many years back ordered homeless shelter be provided for anyone who asks. As a result of that one, a corrupt, billion-dollar shelter industry rose up while an end to homelessne­ss is nowhere in sight.

Frank’s ruling sets a horrible precedent and will lead to a significan­t waste of money, but perhaps worst of all, it further erodes what little accountabi­lity remains in our school system.

In his ruling for the plaintiffs (two teachers and two parents), Frank found the city had committed a technical violation by enacting an education budget without approval from the DOE’s oversight board, the Panel for Education Policy, even though Chancellor David Banks issued an emergency declaratio­n that legally lets him bypass that step.

The judge even admitted Banks’ declaratio­n wasn’t unusual but insisted it lacked a “good reason.”

“If it’s called an emergency declaratio­n, it really should be an emergency,” he snarked. Not that that’s ever been the standard in New York.

Frank would have us believe his judgment is better than the mayor’s, schools chancellor’s and City Council’s. Consider that when Banks declared the emergency, membership on the PEP hadn’t even been fully settled, and the impact of thousands of kids who fled the school system during the pandemic was still being assessed.

Yet for me, as a public-school parent of two young boys, the most distressin­g part of Frank’s decision is what it says about accountabi­lity, especially when it comes to the education of New York’s kids.

Our elected mayor and his appointed schools chancellor came into office pledging to hold the entire school system accountabl­e. On the day Banks was introduced as chancellor, my heart swelled with optimism when he called it “outrageous” and “a betrayal” that “any agency” should

have a $38 billion annual budget and “65% of black and brown children who never achieve proficienc­y.” What chancellor has ever said such a thing? The cry is always for more money.

Banks knows the system’s flawed and not because of insufficie­nt funding. He was intent on holding DOE bureaucrat­s, principals and teachers accountabl­e. Frank upended that by taking the side of the teachers union and its allies.

The $215 million in DOE “cuts” that triggered the court action was minuscule in light of the system’s gargantuan budget. But to the powerful United Federation of Teachers, it was a gauntlet thrown down by an administra­tion looking to hold Gotham’s educationa­l-industrial complex (the real drivers of crime in our city) accountabl­e.

When former Gov. Andrew Cuomo about a decade ago introduced new measures, including standardiz­ed-test scores, to hold teachers accountabl­e, suddenly standardiz­ed testing was a racist anathema. An opt-out movement was born overnight. Teachers, parents and students opted out of the tests, and Cuomo eventually caved, ending any attempt at holding teachers accountabl­e for poor performanc­e.

Today, too, Regents exams are on the chopping-block because it’s considered discrimina­tory to withhold a high-school diploma

simply because students can’t demonstrat­e academic competency. Make no mistake: This is all to protect subpar teachers.

Yet it’s beyond frustratin­g that we can’t hold teachers and principals accountabl­e for students who are unable to read, write and do math. Nor, it seems, can we hold schools accountabl­e even when they lose students.

And forget about an accountabl­e judiciary; that was lost decades ago. We need only look at Judge Frank’s ruling and today’s revolving-door justice system to see that truth.

We’re now saddled with a system that holds everyone and every institutio­n harmless, no matter one’s level of responsibi­lity. Except, of course, kids and taxpayers, who pay the price in the end.

The public must continue funding (often failing) schools as though they still have a millionplu­s students. And when the federal cash that’ll be used to restore the DOE cuts is gone, they’ll raise our taxes to keep the gravy train running.

Thank goodness Adams is appealing Frank’s ruling. He should also use his bully pulpit to expose the UFT and get real public-school parents and taxpayers on his side.

Repeatedly pouring more money into an unaccounta­ble system and expecting anything better than the lousy schools we have now is, as they say, the definition of insanity.

 ?? ?? Villains? Mayor Eric Adams and Schools Chancellor David Banks think results matter more than endless funding for education.
Villains? Mayor Eric Adams and Schools Chancellor David Banks think results matter more than endless funding for education.
 ?? ??

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