25 Şubat 2013 Pazartesi

UPDATE: President Obama, First Lady Host 2013 Governors' Dinner At The White House

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President pays tribute to state executives at first major formal affair of the second term...
UPDATE 2: President thanks Govs for not trashing WH
UPDATE 1: First Lady on Oscars after dinner...
Amidst candlelight and roses, President Obama and First Lady Michelle Obama on Sunday evening hosted a glamorous party at the White House for America's state executives, welcoming them to the 2013 Governors' Dinner.  A presidential tradition when the National Governors Association (NGA) holds its winter meeting in Washington, the First Couple has hosted the black tie dinner every year since President Obama took office. As they have each year, the First Couple feted their bipartisan guests with a menu of steak and seafood, with vegetables grown in the Kitchen Garden.  Vice President Joe Biden and Dr. Jill Biden attended the first formal affair of the President's second term, as did top Administration officials.   (Above, the President toasting) President thanks Govs for not trashing WH


"Michelle and I are so happy to host you, and we hope that you all get a chance to celebrate a little bit tonight," President Obama told his guests.

The President and Mrs. Obama entered the State Dining Room to applause  at 7:17 PM, with the First Lady in a shimmering floor-length gown with grey and silver bead work, a custom creation by Indian-born American designer Naeem Khan, according to an East Wing spokesman.  Mrs. Obama has worn gowns by the designer before, including to a State Dinner.  Her hair was pulled back in a bun, and she wore large diamond earrings.  (Above, Mrs. Obama and NJ Gov. Chris Christie)

Though the White House on Sunday released a report on the "devastating impact" of the sequester on the state level, the President made no mention of looming economic calamity from the scheduled $85 billion in cuts as he welcomed his guests, who included New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie--seated beside Mrs. Obama--and Arizona Gov. Jan Brewer, who was ready to party, though she declined the President's 2012 dinner invitation as they battled over immigration law.

"Last year, I got to see firsthand some of the great work that our governors are helping to accomplish all across the country, " President Obama said as he stood at the eagle podium beneath the historic portrait of Abraham Lincoln.

"Now, it’s true that I had the chance to see some accomplishments in some states more than others--Ohio--Iowa --Colorado-- Virginia," he said to laughs, as he ticked off the names of the swing states where he battled for reelection.  "But I hope to see more of you this year, the rest of you," he said. 

The President paid tribute to his guests for steering their states through hard times, including "incredible natural disasters," and for making hard choices and wise investments.

"
And that work is paying off," President Obama said.  "Companies are bringing jobs back to our shores, new homes are popping up in our neighborhoods, small businesses are revitalizing our communities." 

As of the November 2012 election, 31 of the Governors are Republican, and 20 are Democratic with two independents. The President said he is looking for "good partners" to rejuvenate America--"we know we’ve got more work to do"--and urged the state leaders to reach across party lines.

"Because while nobody in this room sees eye to eye on everything, we know that when we work together, Democrats and Republicans, north, south, east and west, we can accomplish so much more than we can on our own," President Obama said.

"We're stronger when we work together as a team." 

Before raising a glass of white wine to toast, the President stumbled a bit as he quoted Woodrow Wilson, also a former Governor, he said: "America is nothing if it consists merely of each of us--It’s something only if it consists of all of us."

"And nearly one hundred years later, I expect that those words continue to be true, and they should be guiding all of our efforts," President Obama said.


Six new Governors took office after the 2012 election, and the President hailed them as he closed.   

"To the good that we’ve accomplished together, for the good that’s yet to be done. I look forward to a year of progress working with all of you.  I am grateful for your service.  To those who were recently elected, congratulations.  We look forward to seeing you again over the next several years."

The Governors were accompanied by spouses or significant others.  The White House released no guest list, but pool spotted Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal--who spent part of Sunday tweeting blasts about the President and the sequester.  Senior Advisor Valerie Jarrett, Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano, Communications Director Dan Pfeiffer, and advisor Alan Krueger were also spotted mingling with guests. The Vice President table-hopped before the dinner began. 

Delaware Gov. Jack Markell (D) is the current chair of the NGA, and gave the response toast, thanking President Obama "for your leadership and grit, for your belief in the American dream." 

"On this one night it’s a relief--politics doesn’t drive the conversation," Markell said.  "We don’t speak of partisan issues or presidential aspirations; instead, we gather to reflect on the blessings we’ve received--to serve our states and country the best it’s ever been conceived."

Markell also joked about Mrs. Obama's outing on Friday night with comic Jimmy Fallon, where the duo performed a comedic skit, the 'Evolution of Mom Dancing,' when Mrs. Obama appeared on Fallon's talk show to discuss her Let's Move! campaign.

"You’re probably jealous of the First Lady, she’s Jimmy Fallon’s trainer," Markell told the President, to laughter.  "While you, on the other hand, deal with Leader Reid and Speaker Boehner." 

He closed with: "We may come from the mountain states or from the South or plains or coast, we’re one country and one people, in important ways we are united, and for the chance to offer you our greatest thanks, I really am delighted." 

Tony-award winning actor/singer Audra McDonald performed after the dinner during a reception in the East Room.  


The menu and decor... 
The steak-loving Obamas have served glorious Wagyu or dry-aged rib eye and a seafood accompaniment at each of their Governors' Dinners, and on Sunday they kept the tradition intact.  The dinner opened with seafood cocktail followed by a "Seasonal Kitchen Garden Salad," and the entree was aged beef ribsteak.  Dessert was a chocolate Opera Cake. (Above: The President sat beside Carla Markell, wife of the Delaware Governor)

The White House did not release the names of the wines that were poured with the courses, but it is a tradition to serve American wines.

Guests were seated at round tables for ten, with patterned green tablecloths and large candles in vermeil holders.  Floral centerpieces were made of bright red, yellow, orange and maroon roses, mauve and purple ornamental cabbages, and berries.  The same arrangements were on mantels and window sills. 

 
2013 Governors' Dinner Menu
Seafood Cocktail

Seasonal Kitchen Garden Salad

Aged Beef Ribsteak

Chocolate Opera Cake
  
The President and Vice President met with members of the Democratic Governors Association on Friday morning at the White House.  On Monday, they will meet with members of the NGA at the White House in the State Dining Room, according to Carney, and make remarks.  Mrs. Obama and Dr. Biden will also address the gathering to discuss job opportunities for veterans.

*The full transcript of the President's remarks.

Related: The 2012 Governors' Dinner; The 2011 Governors' Dinner; the 2010 Governors' Dinner; and the 2009 Governors' Dinner.  Earth Wind & Fire (2009), Harry Connick, Jr. (2010), Gladys Knight (2011)  and Dianne Reeves (2012) have each headlined the dinners.

*Updated from Friday, Feb. 22.

*Pool photos

Live At The Academy Awards: Michelle Obama Announces Oscar For 'Argo' As Best Picture

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First Lady tweets congratulations to Oscar-winning film...
Just after hosting the 2013 National Governors' Dinner on Sunday night at the White House, First Lady Michelle Obama filmed a live spot for the 2013 Academy Awards, announcing the Best Picture category from the White House.  Clad in the glittering Naeem Khan gown she wore for the dinner, Mrs. Obama was introduced for her surprise appearance on the global broadcast by the legendary Jack Nicholson, who was onstage in Hollywood.  Mrs. Obama stood in the Diplomatic Reception Room, where she held the envelope with the name of the winning film, Argo, directed by Ben Affleck. Nine films were in the running.  (Above, a White House photo)

"I am so honored to help introduce this year's nominees for best picture and to help celebrate the movies that lift our spirits, broaden our minds and transport us to places we have never imagined,"  Mrs. Obama said onscreen.

"These nine movies took us back in time and all around the world they made us laugh, they made us weep and they made us grip our armrests just a little tighter.  They taught us that love can endure against all odds and transform our lives in the most surprising ways, and they reminded us that we can overcome any obstacle if we dig deep enough and fight hard enough and find the courage to believe in ourselves," Mrs. Obama said.

"These lessons apply to all of us no matter who we are or what we look like or where we come from or who we love, but they are especially important for our young people, every day through engagement in the arts, our children learn to open their imaginations to dream just a little bigger and to strive every day to reach those dreams."


The First Lady's Communications Director, Kristina Schake, said in a statement that the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences invited Mrs. Obama to be a presenter.

"The Academy Awards approached the First Lady about being a part of the ceremony," Schake said. 

"As a movie lover, she was honored to present the award and celebrate the artists who inspire us all--especially our young people--with their passion, skill and imagination," Schake said.




Above, Mrs. Obama as she appeared on the jumbo screen at the Dolby Theater in Hollywood, with Nicholson at bottom leftAfter her star-turn, the First Lady tweeted about how "thrilled" she was to participate in Hollywood's biggest night, and congratulated Argo

"It was a thrill to announce the #Oscars2013 best picture winner from the @WhiteHouse! Congratulations Argo! -mo," Mrs. Obama wrote on her @FLOTUS account. 

UPDATE:  Deadline Hollywood reports on the backstory of how Mrs. Obama made her cameo.  It was the brainchild of Lily Weinstein, daughter of film mogul Harvey Weinstein, who was a top-tier bundler for President Obama's re-election campaign, raising millions for the 2012 race.  Deadline noted:

"The idea of getting the First Lady on the show first came from Lily Weinstein, who mentioned it to her big Obama contributor dad Harvey, who suggested it to the Oscar producers Craig Zadan and Neil Meron and Academy president Hawk Koch. The group flew to DC a week and a half ago to put the logistics together with the White House. The Oscar producers told Deadline’s Pete Hammond earlier this week that they “were being like the CIA” about a couple of surprises on the show, keeping things top secret. In towns like Hollywood and DC where people love to talk, they pulled it off. There was no indication on the show’s rundown and most of the people on the Oscars had no idea who the secret guest would be. “I knew we could do it and we did it,” Koch told Deadline tonight about keeping Obama’s name under wraps.

The First Lady was actually handed the envelope with the winner’s name in it by the head of PricewaterhouseCoopers at the White House." 


__End Update___

On Feb. 13, Mrs. Obama hosted an arts workshop at the White House for 80 middle and high school students that featured a screening of Oscar-nominated Beasts of The Southern Wild, which included the 9-year-old star, nominated actress Quvenzhané Wallis, who did not win this evening.  Mrs. Obama described the film as "beautiful, joyful and devastatingly honest."  Last November, the cast and crew of nominated Lincoln, including star Daniel Day-Lewis (Best Actor winner) and director Steven Spielberg, visited the White House to screen the film for President Obama and Mrs. Obama.



Tuesday: Michelle Obama Announces New Let's Move! Project On 'Good Morning America'

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Chef Marcus Samulesson joins First Lady for a cooking demonstration...
It won't have as many eyeballs as her outing at the Oscars, but First Lady Michelle Obama will appear on ABC's Good Morning America on Tuesday, Feb. 26 as part of the third anniversary of the Let's Move! campaign.  Mrs. Obama and c0-anchor Robin Roberts will discuss healthy cooking for families, and acclaimed New York chef Marcus Samuelsson will join the First Lady for a cooking demonstration, said the network.  (Above, Mrs. Obama and Roberts)

Mrs. Obama will announce a new Let's Move! partnership "that makes finding healthy, reliable recipes easy for busy parents," the White House said 
 
A cookbook author and TV personality, Samuelsson owns Harlem's Red Rooster restaurant, and in 2009 was a guest chef at the White House for President Obama's State Dinner for India.  He also joined Mrs. Obama in the Kids' Kitchen at the 2012 White House Easter Egg Roll, to demonstrate a healthy, kid-friendly recipe. (Above, cooking with Mrs. Obama)
 
On Wednesday, Mrs. Obama begins a three-state tour to celebrate the anniversary.  Her first stop is Clinton, Mississippi, where she will host a culinary competition between school chefs, joined by celebrity chef Rachael Ray.  It will be broadcast on Ray's ABC show on March 11.


The GMA interview is Mrs. Obama's first morning show interview, according to ABC, and was filmed when Mrs. Obama was in New York last Friday, where she appeared on Late Night with Jimmy Fallon and The Dr. Oz Show.  That show will air on Thursday, Feb. 28.

Mrs. Obama's anniversary tour takes her to events in Mississippi, Illinois, and Missouri to spotlight achievements for her childhood obesity initiative. 

CLICK HERE for links to all third anniversary posts.

*ABC photo at top; cooking photo by Eddie Gehman Kohan/Obama Foodorama

First Lady & Fallon's 'Mom Dancing' Video Gets More Than 4.4 Million Views...And Counting

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Mrs. Obama is more popular than Fallon's other video costars, including Justin Bieber and Tom Cruise...
First Lady Michelle Obama is helping Jimmy Fallon make history with their "Evolution of Mom Dancing" video, which debuted Friday night on his talk show to celebrate the third anniversary of the Let's Move! campaign.  As of Monday, the comic dance extravaganza has gotten 4,439,569 views on Fallon's Late Night YouTube channel.  That's millions more views than for other videos Fallon has released co-starring celebrities, including megawatt stars Justin Bieber, Tom Cruise, and Channing Tatum. And those view counts came over the course of weeks and months, not days.

Fallon tweeted his thanks to fans on Sunday when the two-plus-minute video with Mrs. Obama had gotten 2 million views.  That means that overnight to Monday, perhaps thanks in part to Mrs. Obama's surprise appearance at the Oscars on Sunday night, the video has gotten 2 million more views.

"2 million in 2 days!! Wow. Thanks! "Evolution of Mom Dancing" with Michelle Obama (@FLOTUS)," Fallon tweeted with a link to the video.

In contrast, the video clip of Mrs. Obama actually discussing the nuts and bolts of her childhood obesity campaign with Fallon on Friday night has gotten just 61,831 views.  

Fallon's video Jimmy Fallon vs. Justin Bieber, released in June of 2012, has since gotten 2,705,384 views on the Late Night YouTube channel.  Fallon's video Sticky balls With Channing Tatum, released on Jan. 31, has since gotten 122,686 views.  Fallon's video Water War With Tom Cruise, released in December 2012, has since gotten 286,223 views.

The only other Fallon video that's gotten close to the numbers of views for the dance video with Mrs. Obama is Fallon's video for "Slow Jamming the News" with President Obama.  That debuted in April 2012, and has since gotten 6,884,606 views on the Late Night channel.



The video Mrs. Obama and Fallon made for last year's Let's Move! anniversary, filmed at the White House and re-posted by Fallon on his YouTube channel on Feb. 18, has now had 195,966 views.  NBC had disabled the video for a number of months before Fallon reposted it ahead of Mrs. Obama's visit to his New York studio last Friday.

Fallon's "Evolution of Dad Dancing" video--the preamble to his sketch with Mrs. Obama--debuted on Father's Day last year, and has since had 1,050,568 views on his channel.

Mrs. Obama on Wednesday begins a three-state tour for the third anniversary of Let's Move!, with visits to Mississippi, Illinois, and Missouri.

CLICK HERE for all posts about the third anniversary.  CLICK HERE for all posts about the Obamas and Fallon.




*Photo by Lloyd Bishop/NBC; video courtesy of Late Night with Jimmy Fallon

President Obama To Governors: Thanks For Not Wrecking The White House At Dinner

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President is relieved that "no silverware is missing," and he got no calls from irate neighbors...
President Obama has thrown some pretty wild parties at the White House.  Speaking to America's state executives on Monday, he got big laughs from the members of the National Governors Association as he thanked them for not demolishing his historic home during Sunday's black tie dinner in their honor.  (Above, the President at the dinner, beside Carla Markell, wife of  Delaware Gov. Jack Markell)

"I just want to say thanks to you for being on your best behavior last night," President Obama said during remarks in the State Dining Room, where last night he feted the crowd with a steak and seafood menu.

"I’m told nothing was broken.  No silverware is missing," President Obama said.

Presidential guests stealing souvenirs is a centuries-old problem; Mr. Obama last year presented Barbara Walters with a birthday gift of logo'd White House mementos, because she'd admitted she had a longstanding habit of walking off with the real deal.

"I didn’t get any calls from the neighbors about the noise--although I can’t speak for Joe’s after-party at the Observatory," President Obama continued.  "I hear that was wild."
  
First Lady Michelle Obama, who sat beside New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie at the dinner, also addressed the Governors, and mentioned her post-dinner star turn on the Academy Awards broadcast, where she announced Argo as the Best Picture, live from the Diplomatic Reception Room.

"I hope you all got some rest after last night.  We had a good time--little tired," Mrs. Obama said, to laughter. 

"If you noticed, I stayed up a little bit later--a little bit longer than I had anticipated, but it was well worth it."  

Vice President Joe Biden praised Delaware Gov. Jack Markell, chair of the NGA, for his toast at the dinner, which was partially in rhyme, saying it could qualify him to be President.

"I tell you what, I didn't know Jack was as good as he is until I heard that rhyme last night," Biden said.  "Jack, if you had done that, I’d be introducing you here."  

As she greeted the Governors, Dr. Jill Biden gave a shout-out to Tony award-winning singer/actor Audra McDonald for her performance at a reception after the dinner.

"It was great to see you all last night," Dr. Biden said.  "And wasn’t Audra McDonald incredible?

Related: The 2012 Governors' Dinner; The 2011 Governors' Dinner; the 2010 Governors' Dinner; and the 2009 Governors' Dinner.  

*Pool photo.

24 Şubat 2013 Pazar

Cuomo's Evaluation System - Forever Is A Long Time

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So Cuomo said he will put through a budget amendment that gives the NYSED the right to impose a teacher evaluation system on NYC in perpetuity.

That's right - forever.

According to Gotham Schools, the governor said if the mayor and the UFT can come to an agreement before June 1 on an evaluation deal, then the NYSED will not impose a system.

If they cannot, then Commissioner John King will impose a system of his own design before the start of the 2013-14 school year.

And the governor says this right will be given to the NYSED forever.

I repeat - the governor says this right will be given to the NYSED forever.

If NYC is ever without an evaluation system in place, Cuomo says the NYSED will step in and impose one - just for NYC.

Couple of things here:

First, the Race to the Top law does not give the NYSED or the governor the power to impose a system.

I understand that an increase in state aid can be tied to an agreement, but does putting forth a budget amendment to a one year budget give Cuomo the power to take local negotiation between union and district away and give it to the NYSED in perpetuity?

I am not a lawyer and I could be off base here completely, but how does a one year budget amendment give the governor the right to supersede the Race to the Top law?

Second, Mulgrew hailed the news in a statement:

 “We’ve seen the kinds of plans the state has approved. We are comfortable with them because they are about helping teachers help kids, which is something that we don’t often hear from the city,” Mulgrew said. “So while I would prefer to get to a negotiated settlement, with this in place I know a deal will get done.”

So he's happy that King will get to impose whatever system he wants for as long as he wants and the NYSED will now have the power to impose an evaluation system onto NYC teachers forever.

I can't imagine the MORE people will feel that way about this new power being given to the NYSED.

But judging by the Mulgrew statement, I would assume that the UFT will not sue over this budget amendment.

Or even be unhappy about it.

The E4E's and the ed deformers are happy tonight that Cuomo is going to give the NYSED the power to impose a system.

That the UFT President is as happy as they are really tells you how out of touch the UFT leadership is.

Here's The Strategy Going Forward

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In case you haven't seen the news:

The Department of Education has reversed a decision to place a charter school in the same building as Brownsville Academy High School, the transfer school which fought the co-location with a student-led lawsuit.

D.O.E. officials said on Wednesday that they found an alternate site for the Success Academy elementary school. They would not say whether the lawsuit played a role in the change.

“While we believed co-locating the two schools was the best option at the time, another better option became available,” said Devon Puglia, a D.O.E. spokesman. “As a result, we decided to propose a new location.”

The D.O.E. is now proposing to locate the new charter school at P.S. 167 The Parkway in Crown Heights. 

Oh, sure - the lawsuit didn't play a role in the DOE backing down and putting the Success charter somewhere else.

The lawsuit - which was student-led - had everything to do with the DOE backing down and choosing another site.

The last thing Eva wanted to do was embroil the Success Charter brand in a fight against a student-led lawsuit at an A-rated transfer school with a population of special needs students.

I wouldn't be surprised if Eva herself asked for another site to replace this one.

And this shows us what the strategy against the deform movement going forward should be - student- and parent-led lawsuits against co-locations, closures, etc.

The DOE and Eva are happy to fight the UFT on this stuff.

They're not so happy to fight students on it.

Doesn't make for such nice headlines.

There's a lesson here.

Judge: Cuomo Can't Cut $250 Million From NYC Schools

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From NY1:

A state supreme court judge issued a temporary injunction today preventing state officials from cutting $250 million from the city Department Of Education budget for the current school year as punishment for the lack of a teacher evaluation system.

Governor Andrew Cuomo originally said that the city DOE lost the funding for failing to reach an agreement with the United Federation of Teachers on evaluations by January 17.

City officials argued that removing the money would hurt students.

Civil Court Judge Miguel Mendez granted a preliminary injunction, saying the city has shown cause that students and vital programs will be harmed.

There is no word on when a hearing on the matter will take.

It is also not known whether the state will appeal the ruling.

The State Education Department refused to comment on the ruling.

The UFT has not released a statement yet but is reviewing the ruling.

This ruling comes a day after the Cuomo administration announced that the state education commissioner will set a new teacher evaluation system for city public school educators by June 1, if city officials and the teachers union cannot reach an agreement by then.

Cuomo wants to introduce a state budget amendment bill that will give the state education commissioner the perpetual power to step in and impose a teacher evaluation system on the city.
The governor said the school could risk losing another $250 million if the city DOE does not have an evaluation system in place by September.

Cuomo doesn't like to lose to Bloomberg.

Also, this sets a legal precedent that aid increases cannot be tied to something like an evaluation agreement if losing that aid would punish students.

I'm going to wager that the state appeals this ruling.

As I said, Cuomo doesn't like to lose to Bloomberg and in this ruling, he lost to Bloomberg.

I am also going to wager that Cuomo's budget amendment bill that gives the NYSED the power to impose a teacher evaluation system onto NYC ad infinitum can be challenged in court too.

A one year budget amendment that puts in place a rule that allows the NYSED the power to impose an evaluation system onto NYC- and only NYC - should be challenged.

Tax Cap Is Meant To Put Districts Into Crisis

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From a commentary by Fred LeBrun in the Times-Union:

It is irrefutable that the effect of the incomplete tax cap passed in June 2011, while politically popular and a contributor to the governor's high standing, has been disastrous for school districts and local governments. School districts have two sources of revenue: state aid and local taxes. The share of school budgets that is state aid has declined nearly 10 percent over the last decade, and the tax cap makes it far more difficult, especially in poorer districts, for localities to make up the difference from property tax levies. One of the arguments in the lawsuit is that because 60 percent of voters are needed to override the tax cap in a local school budget election, 41 percent of the voters saying no have more power than 59 percent who want to spend more. That totally distorts local control.

Sadly, we are watching a catastrophe unfold that will deeply affect many of our children at their most vulnerable ages, and which will have consequences for the rest of their lives.

The State Education Department has warned that between 100 and 200 school districts will be insolvent within two years.

That's up to a quarter of the state's school districts, with more predicted to follow. That means those schools won't be able to meet their obligations and will very likely be broken as teaching institutions as well. The multi-year highway to insolvency for many of them will be already littered with discarded teachers and administrators, dropped programs and advanced placement courses required for college admission, and cuts, cuts and more cuts impacting the core teaching mission.


I think the tax cap has been devised, in part, not just to keep taxes down, but to bring about the destruction of many schools districts.
Even as Cuomo and the state (and the feds) are ratcheting up the mandates, the state is cutting the aid to districts and keeping localities from increasing funding by raising taxes.
In the end, once they go belly-up financially, some of these districts look ripe for the kinds of takeovers we've seen in Michigan, where entire districts are put into receivership and handed over to some state-appointed administrator who brings in the education management organization to run the thing. Just another example of neo-liberalism at work from our Wall Street-funded governor - and just another example of disaster capitalism at work.
Create the disaster, declare the disaster, sell the pieces off.
The same thing is happening in city after city across this nation - from Detroit to Philadelphia.
And of course Barack Obama's former right hand man, Rahm Emanuel, is trying to pull the same thing off in Chicago.

Vindictive Cuomo Never Going To Be President

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Read the story of how the Cuomo people went "nuclear" on a former state employee by releasing as much damaging information as they could about him for his crime of talking to the press about the state's Sandy response without permission and then ask yourself, how is Andrew Cuomo going to handle a two year presidential campaign without having half a dozen "ferret moments" that expose him as the paranoid, vindictive Nixonian politician he is?

There is no way he or the paranoid, vindictive functionaries around him are going to be able to handle the scrutiny of a presidential campaign without major explosions.

23 Şubat 2013 Cumartesi

Cuomo Sad Over Injunction, Will Appeal Ruling On $250 Million

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From Capital NY:

A judge today has temporarily blocked the state from cutting of more than $200 million in education aid to New York City after the Bloomberg adminsitration and the United Federation of Teachers failed to come to an agreement on the local criteria teacher evaluations.

Updated: Cuomo spokesman Rich Azzopardi said in a statement this evening that, “This is a preliminary injunction and the state intends to appeal.”

The judge, Manuel Mendez, writes in the temporary injunction that the city’s students had no control over the legislative process or the evluation negotiations that produced the current impasse.

The lawsuit filed earlier this month came after the state halted the boost in state aid to the city when the Jan. 17 deadline to resolve the evaluations issue was blown.

The legal challenge was filed by Michael Rebell, the executive director of the Campaign for Education Equity and was one of the co-plaintiffs of the successful Campaign for Fiscal Equity case that claimed the state wasn’t successfully funding public schools.

It seems Andrew Cuomo, the self-appointed lobbyist for students, just cannot allow students to receive the $250 million in increased aid and so he will appeal to try and take that money away from them.

You see, Andy cares about the kids.

Oh, and he hates to lose.

Which is of course mostly what this is all about - the governor's power to exert control over everything and everybody.

He can't allow anybody - even a judge - to tell him he's wrong.

Nice guy this Andy.

Cuomo Imposed System Will Result In Good Teachers Getting Fired

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Bob McManus writes in the Post that the Cuomo imposed evaluation system, if it comes into being, will not result in the firing of many NYC teachers because it will have been developed by John King and Meryl Tisch, two officials who are beholden to Assembly Speaker Sheldon Silver for their jobs:
It certainly takes a massive leap of faith to assume that anything meaningful will emerge from the legislation Cuomo has proposed.

This, again, is because Commissioner King doesn’t work for Cuomo. He works for the state Board of Regents and, specifically, for Regents Chancellor Merryl H. Tisch.

And Tisch owes her position solely to Assembly Speaker Sheldon Silver — plus to the state Constitution, which severely restricts the direct control governors have over education policy.
The Constitution requires that regents, and the chancellor, be elected by the entire Legislature — sitting as a single body. And since Silver’s Democratic conference outnumbers all other lawmakers combined, he has the whip hand.

Which he exercised with his elevation of Tisch to what is nominally one of the most powerful public-education jobs in America. But while puppet may be too strong a word to describe Tisch’s actual role, she’s not remotely likely to buck him on matters of this magnitude.

So what is Silver’s interest?

Well, let’s just say that the influence the public employee unions enjoy over the speaker and his Assembly Democrats is profound. And that none of those unions are more influential than the UFT and its parent organization, New York State United Teachers.

So it’s not hard to see where all this is heading.

Without reference to King’s good faith, Tisch’s independence or Cuomo’s sincerity, it remains that that the state Education Department itself has been in near-total thrall to Silver and the teachers for years — indeed, decades.

Thus it’s simply not reasonable to expect that the three could force the department to exercise real independence on teacher evaluations, even if they wanted to.

Not in the immediate case, and certainly not over time.

So much for Cuomo’s “perpetuity.”

So much, in fact, for the notion that there is anything fundamentally different in this approach than from what has come before.

The UFT has had an effective veto over meaningful evaluations all along. While it may allow Silver to engineer a fig-leaf accommodation this time around — the union, after all, stands to regain effective control of city schools once Bloomberg leaves office — there’s no reason to believe that significant numbers of bad teachers will wind up losing their jobs.

Ever.

 I don't buy this.

Tisch and King have promoted deform policies since they took their positions of power in Albany - from promoting the Endless Testing regime to teacher evaluations tied to test scores.

In addition, the UFT and the NYSUT have promoted ed deform policies as well - from signing off on the original Race to the Top legislation which changed the evaluation systems around the state and tied them to test scores to dropping the lawsuit against the Tisch/King/Cuomo policy change around the 40% test score threshold (a lawsuit which they won, btw.)

The Regents Chancellor, the NYSED Commissioner and the NYSUT and UFT Presidents are all on board to push through the same kind of test score-based education deform policies - and those are the kinds of policies and "reforms" we have been getting out of Albany.

Perhaps these reforms do not go far enough for McManus and the Posties - that's a different issue.

But make no mistake, no one should take any solace that the UFT is allegedly going to have influence over the King/Tisch evaluation system that is imposed on us in June.

The UFT leadership have shown themselves to be in bed with the deform movement and the system we will get will be a deform system that turns schools into test prep factories where kids do nothing all day but practice for the high stakes tests and teachers do nothing all day but teach to the test.

And good teachers will lose their jobs over this - the APPR bell curve that mandates at least 10% of teachers get low ratings every year ensures this.

And the UFT leadership is okay with that.

As one of the Unity functionaries told Accountable Talk, they want more teachers fired because the current system, which leads to only about 1% of teachers being fired every year, isn't terminating enough teachers.

I can't imagine a member of MORE saying that kind of thing, can you?

But until we get a change in leadership at the UFT, you should know that your union is in the business of giving the education deform movement what it wants - and that includes on this evaluation issue.

Neo-Liberals At Daily News Hate Rule Of Law

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The lead editorial from the Daily News argues that school budget issues do not belong in a court room and that judges should have no say in how the state awards school aid:

Rarely does a judge show the lack of perspective and judicial discretion that has just been displayed by the jurist who barred Gov. Cuomo from denying the city $250 million in school funding.

Manhattan Supreme Court Justice Manuel Mendez obviously hasn’t a clue as to state and city budgets, the interplay between Albany and City Hall, or education outlays and policy. As for the law, with those blind spots, it doesn’t matter.

Fairness and the standards of wise leadership say that Cuomo should send the money to the Department of Education. But what a governor ought to do and what a judge can compel a governor to do are vastly different things. Mendez doesn’t know the difference.

Ah yes - the courts have no power to force the governor to comply with state law or previous court decisions, like the 1995 decision that said students have a state constitutional right to a “sound, basic education” and ordered Albany to increase aid to NYC schools.

Since Albany never actually complied in full with the 1995 ruling, as Bruce Baker points out here, students are not getting the "sound, basic education" that law requires.

The Daily News neo-liberals argue that DOE spending is up 34% since 2002, going from $15,811 per pupil to $21,137 per pupil, but they never say how much of that spending actually reaches the classroom. 

Since Michael Bloomberg took over sole control of the NYC school system, he has added layer upon layer of bureaucracy to the system, wasted billions on outside consultants (many of who are robbing the city blind) and increasingly thrown money into technology boondoggles that cost hundreds of millions of dollars and yet never seem to give schools the bandwidth they actually need.

Given the chronic underfunding of the system by the state and the money Bloomberg wastes on bureaucracy, consultants and technology boondoggles, it is fair to say that the $250 million in lost aid does hurt students and the governor should not be able to tie state aid to schools to contractual matters like teacher evaluation systems.

The Daily News, of course, just wants an odious teacher evaluation system imposed, and so they don't particularly care how the governor goes about doing that - even if it means breaking the law and hurting children in the process.

That's what the rule of law is all about for neo-liberals.

They only like it when it can be used to bludgeon the peons.

When it can be used to hold the people in power accountable, then not so much.

Education Week Presents Education Lessons From Donald Rumsfeld

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Seriously - they do.

Here's what Rummy has to offer us:

Shit happens - free markets are untidy and people make mistakes and sometimes that means selling off entire public school systems to private equity predators and letting them suck the money dry, leaving the children in classrooms of sixty kids with no heat, no desks, no books and no teachers because they all got fired.  That's just what needs to happen and there's nothing we can do about it.

Oh, wait - that's what he said about Baghdad after the invasion.



Well, it works for education reform too.

Gee, how exciting that Education Week is publishing all these insights from military leaders on how to reform the education system.

Next week Education Week is going to bring us the wit and wisdom of General William Westmoreland and the charterization of the public school system.

The article is entitled "In Order To Save The Public Education System, We Had To Destroy It."

After that, Kissinger on how to achieve "Education Reform With Honor."

What a great paper of record, this Education Week.

We can learn so much from it.

Like what not to do and who not to listen to.

UPDATE - 1:01 PM: More wisdom on leadership from Donald Rumsfeld:



Yeah, Rumsfeld has so much to teach us about leadership.

How many people died as a result of Donald Rumsfeld's arrogance, hubris, and incompetence?

FreshConnect and Farmers' Market Nutrition Programs Update: Program Season Extended Statewide

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The following alerts come from the NYS Department of Agriculture and Markets program staff.Due to the severe weatherconditions the downstate region experienced as a result of Hurricane Sandy, incollaboration with the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA), the NYFarmers Market Nutrition Program (FMNP) has been granted permission to extend theprogram season statewide as follows:·        Recipients may continue to exchange FMNP checksfor fresh, local produce through Saturday, December 1st  ·        Authorized farmers may continue to deposit FMNPchecks at KeyBank branches through Friday, December 14thFarmers who experience any difficulty transacting their FMNPchecks at non-KeyBank branches should continue to contact our agency forsupport. Given the deadline extension we will not be in a position toreimburse for “late checks” after December 14th, 2012. Also,keep in mind that while farmers may deposit any volume of checks, no more than250 checks per day may be cashed “on-the-spot” at KeyBank branches. Allother program rules and regulations apply.

________________________________________________________Due to the severe weatherconditions the downstate farmers marketing region experienced as a result ofHurricane Sandy, the FreshConnect Program has decided to extend the program season statewide asfollows:·        Fresh Connect Checks may be issued to SNAPrecipients through Saturday, December 1st, 2012·        Fresh Connect Checks may be exchanged for SNAPeligible food items through Saturday, December 1st, 2012·        Fresh Connect Checks may be submitted forreimbursement through Friday, December 14th , 2012
In addition, due to the poweroutages in your farmers market region, and the fact that SNAP EBT wirelessterminals require electricity to operate, special permission to issue FreshConnect Checks is being granted as follows: ·        At farmers markets operating in the affectedregion, Fresh Connect Checks may be issued to SNAP recipients without thepurchase of $5.00 of SNAP benefits. Maximum issuance of checks in thisway should be $10.00, or five (5) Fresh Connect Checks, per SNAPrecipient, per market day.Farmers who experience any difficulty reimbursing theirFresh Connect Checks should continue to contact our agency for support. All other program rules and regulations apply.