Ramapo, NY – Monitor In School District Riven By Religious Favoritism To Hit Barber Shops, Talking To People

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    FILE - In this March 19, 2013 file photo, members of the East Ramapo School Board  are seated at a table together during a school board meeting in in Spring Valley, N.Y.  APRamapo, NY – When his fifth-grade son struggled with a question on primary colors posed by the TV show “Are You Smarter Than a 5th Grader,” David Curry saw just how bad things have gotten in the troubled East Ramapo school district.

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    Divided for a decade between the ultra-Orthodox Jews who control the school board — but don’t send their children to public schools — and parents who say their children are the victims of unfair budget cuts, East Ramapo has seen meetings degenerate into shouting matches and a federal lawsuit brought against the district.

    Now a former New York City public schools chancellor has been appointed by the state to examine claims of parents like Curry, who have demanded state intervention in a district they say is failing to serve their children.

    “Not only did he not know the answer, he didn’t know what a primary color was,” Curry said. “But then he hasn’t had any art classes in third or fourth grade.”

    Curry said his daughter, a high school student, has suffered from cuts to extracurricular programs.

    “She would have been on the track team, junior varsity, but we don’t have junior varsity anymore,” he said.

    Parents blame the board for deep cuts in teachers and programs for the mostly black and Hispanic children who attend the public schools, saying the board favors the private yeshivas the bulk of the district’s children attend. The board blames state funding — in particular a funding formula they say isn’t favorable to the district — for the problems.

    On Thursday, the state appointed former city schools chancellor Dennis Walcott to study the district’s finances, watch to see if the board is breaking state law and make recommendations to Education Commissioner MaryEllen Elia.

    Curry said the appointment has a chance to be a step forward, but there was plenty of frustration and skepticism among the hundreds of others who attended the announcement. The meeting was occasionally disrupted with boos and shouts calling for federal intervention.

    Besides arts teachers and half the sports program, the board has chopped many guidance counselors, social workers and advanced placement courses and slashed kindergarten to half a day, parents complain.
    FILE - In this Aug. 13, 2015 file photo, former New York City Schools Chancellor Dennis Walcott addresses a community meeting in Suffern, N.Y., after being appointed monitor in the East Ramapo school district. Walcott plans to go to "barber shops, beauty parlors, hanging out on corners" to find out more about the decade-long control of the East Ramapo public schools by ultra-Orthodox Jews, who do not use the public schools but have nevertheless made deep cuts in teachers and programs. Behind Walcott, are, left to right, state Regent Josephine Finn, school board President Yehuda Weissmandl and Monica George-Fields, who will assist Walcott. (AP Photo/Jim Fitzgerald, File)
    Many parents noted that the state had failed to take action after a report ordered up last year concluded board members’ concern for Jewish children “blinded them to the needs of the entire community,” and called for a monitor who could veto board actions. But the state Legislature failed to pass a bill that would have done so.

    Steve White, who went through the East Ramapo schools himself and sent two children through, said, “We need action. We’ve had monitors and reports before and it hasn’t resulted in any real change for the children.”

    Walcott said that in addition to board meetings and PTA meetings, he’ll be going to “barber shops, beauty parlors, hanging out on corners, talking to people” to find out more about the schools’ problems and the community’s deep divisions.

    But Walcott won’t be able to countermand board actions, unseat a board member or even attend the board’s executive sessions unless he’s invited.

    Board President Yehuda Weissmandl said he would help Walcott any way he can, but said he didn’t know if that would include inviting him to executive sessions.

    The board has maintained that a state aid formula hurts East Ramapo because of the district’s high proportion of private school students: about 24,000 in private school and about 9,000 in public school. The formula considers only public school enrollment when it divides the value of taxable property by the number of students.

    Walcott suggested he and his experts will find ways to sniff out the workings of the district 25 miles north of New York City.

    “We know when something’s not right,” he said. “We know when something stinks.”

    Walcott said they would make unannounced visits to classrooms and school board meetings. And he said he would talk to schoolchildren, too.

    “Students give the honest answer about what’s going on,” he said.
    FILE- In this March 19, 2013 file photo, supporters of public schools turn their backs on the East Ramapo school board during a meeting in Spring Valley, N.Y. State monitor Dennis Walcott, a former New York City schools chancellor, says he plans to go to "barber shops, beauty parlors, hanging out on corners" to find out more about the decade-long control of the public schools by ultra-Orthodox Jews, who do not use the public schools but have nevertheless made deep cuts in teachers and programs. Parents allege school board members are shortchanging them in favor of private yeshivas. The board blames a lack of state aid.  (AP Photo/Jim Fitzgerald, File)
    Elia said she expects a report from Walcott in December.

    Veterans of the district war expressed hope and some reservations.

    Oscar Cohen, education chairman of the Spring Valley chapter of the NAACP, wondered how Walcott’s street-corner approach would work with the notoriously insular ultra-Orthodox Jews in the district. Walcott said he’s “a big believer in respect” and would not be ignoring Jewish concerns.

    Laura Barbieri, who represents parents and children in a federal lawsuit against the district, commended the choice of Wolcott, who has also led the Urban League and been a New York City deputy mayor.

    “We need to shine a light on the activities of the board that are problematic,” she said. “These children are being denied a basic education.”‎


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    8 years ago

    Parents have also been in touch with the IRS, FBI, and other federal agencies. The agencies are listening!

    8 years ago

    I am waiting for the usual suspects to start posting their indignation, Oh what a chilul hashem
    when their only knowledge of this situation is what the biased media spoon feeds them.

    awacs
    awacs
    8 years ago

    IOW, they’ll talk to non-jews; frum yidden don’t hang out in “barber shops, beauty salons and corners.”

    What a maroon.

    Abba_S
    Abba_S
    8 years ago

    Walcott has his work cut out for him. If he is going to solve the district’s problem he has to win both the board’s and the public school supporters support. Right now he is trying to get the public school supporters support.. If he doesn’t get the boards support he wouldn’t be invited to meeting and will make an incomplete report.

    Last year they had a prosecutor come down and make a report. Since no criminal charges have been brought I assume he couldn’t find any. No criminal charges = no state takeover. The state tried to change the law so that they could take over the board but it didn’t pass.

    Now they are trying to use school administrators to see what can be done. The Frum community uses only two services busing & special ed. both of which are mandatory and hard to cut.

    Walcott recommendation are due in December, the state will then vote again for a state takeover of the district.shortly there after. Once the law is passed a homeowner in the district must file a lawsuit in Federal Court claim the law is in violation of NO TAXATION WITHOUT REPRESENTATION a founding principle of our nation. It is not hard and cost less than $100.00.

    wsbrgh
    wsbrgh
    8 years ago

    Bs’d. Perhaps a rules change of “1 extra vote for each child currently enrolled in Ramapo district” would do the trick.

    8 years ago

    Would someone please explain something to me. If the overwhelming majority of religious Yidden don’t send their children to public schools, then why should they control the school board. Just because they can? Let those who send their children to public schools have a say in the education of their children good or bad. Would you allow Goyim who do not send their children to Yeshivas to have a say in the administration of these schools? The answer is a resounding NO! So why do you feel it is incumbent to force yourself on those who utilize the public schools.

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    8 years ago

    #7 , no doubt you attended your public school debating team. We would like nothing more than to have no say in the running of the public schools. Stop taking our money and we will not be on the board.
    Deal?