Saturday, January 7, 2012

Hopefully, Albany is waking up at last.

  What seems to be an eternity, Albany just maybe stirring.  In his “State of the State Address this past week, Governor Andrew Cuomo, “will accuse New York’s schools of being unaccountable and announce a commission to come up with reforms, the Daily News has learned.
As a NYC educator that has felt and experienced this “mayor’s”(sic) “education reforms” in the worst way, I am looking forward to the day that his corruption is finally brought into the light.  We as education partners with the parents of our children have been abused and tormented by “his” actions for way to long.  Together with the “co-operation” of the once powerful U.F.T., results have flat lined, students are being deigned experienced teachers, and these same teachers are being terrified into resigning or retiring early.  All the while “he” sits there on his self made thrown and touts how great he is doing.  
As people who have hold the future of our great city(and country) in our hands please call, write, and or e-mail your State Assemblyman/woman and your State Senator to demand a state investigation of the unaccountability of the D.O.E. with the goal of a takeover by the state till all of “his” abuses are righted and eliminated.  

Gov. Cuomo to announce state education commission to reform schools: sources

EXCLUSIVE: His call will come just days after he was critical of the city and other districts that failed to reach agreement with their unions on a new teacher evaluation system by an end-of-year deadline

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Published: Monday, January 2 2012, 2:00 AM
Updated: Monday, January 2 2012, 6:00 AM
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 New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo listens to a question during a news conference at the Capitol in Albany, N.Y., Thursday, March 17, 2011. (AP Photo)

MIKE GROLL/AP

Gov. Cuomo will annouce a state education commission to come up with reforms, sources said.

ALBANY — Gov. Cuomo, in his second state-of-state address Wednesday, will accuse New York’s schools of being unaccountable and announce a commission to come up with reforms, the Daily News has learned.
Cuomo’s announcement will come just days after he was critical of the city and other districts that failed to reach agreement with their unions on a new teacher evaluation system by an end-of-year deadline.
“The failure to pass the teacher evaluation system is an example that not only is the system broken, but the ability to monitor the system and come up with a method to ensure kids are educated properly is broken,” said a source close to Cuomo.
The education commission he will announce will be designed to look at education from a “student perspective,” the source said.
“What are the performance indicators? How do you judge performance in the education system? How are the services being provided?” the source said. “No one has really looked at it without a particular perspective on what’s going on in education.”
The makeup of the commission, which as of Sunday was still undetermined, will likely include outside experts.
Cuomo spokesman Josh Vlasto wouldn’t confirm or deny specifics of the speech.
Meanwhile, Cuomo will also announce a foreclosure relief unit that will serve as an advocate to struggling homeowners, another source said.
The newly created Department of Financial Services will oversee the unit, which will provide counseling and mediation services designed to help resolve mortgage issues and keep people in their homes, the second source said.
The Democratic governor, who recently told The News he was open to the idea of a full-scale casino in New York City at a place like Aqueduct Racetrack, will press lawmakers to begin the process for a constitutional amendment to legalize gaming.
He will tout “destination gambling” as a job creator, sources said.
And after what has been widely viewed as a successful freshman year, Cuomo will urge the Legislature to build on the bipartisan success.
He will focus heavily on the need for job creation while stressing the importance of rebuilding the state’s roads and bridges, reorganizing state agencies and public authorities and enacting pension reform, the sources said.
The governor is also expected to formally announce the creation of a new commission to review the state’s tax code, just weeks after the state agreed to increase the tax rate on millionaires and lower it for the middle class.


Read more: http://www.nydailynews.com/news/convention-center-coming-aqueduct-article-1.999550#ixzz1iniUqoOt