senator adriano espaillat vs robert jackson kids pac questionnaire responses

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  • Senator Adriano Espaillat KidsPAC Questionnaire Response 2014

    1) What is your position of the city being obligated to pay rent for charter, or give them

    public school space for free?

    After provisions impacting charter funding were inserted into the 2014 Education, Labor, and

    Family Assistance (ELFA) budget by the Senate Republicans, I joined majority of Democratic

    Conference in attempting a hostile amendment to remove the charter language from the bill.

    Doing so would have prevented a simultaneous vote on charter and universal pre-kindergarten

    funding; allow an unobstructed vote on securing New York Citys historic $300 million UPK expansion.

    Despite the clear relevance of this amendment to budget bill S.6356-D, this hostile amendment

    was deemed not germane, and a vote to overrule this decision was unsuccessful.

    2) What is your position on the common core standards?

    Common Cores implementation has been disastrous on many fronts: from poor-quality Spanish language materials, to inadequate community outreach and explanation, to the insufficient

    training that was provided to teachers and educators.

    I have supported a moratorium on the use of Common Core assessments until our community is

    satisfied it has been given proper resources for this transition. I have also specifically raised the

    quality of non-English language materials issue with SED.

    3) What do you think about the current testing regime?

    This year, I staunchly supported of the successful push to reign in the rising and excessive

    amount of standardized testing that New York kids are subjected to, which interrupts classroom

    learning, by banning testing in grades kindergarten through second grade.

    Excessive testing has created needless, counterproductive stress for students, parents and

    educators. It has increased teacher turnover and burnout rates, as passionate educators grapple

    with a shortsighted focus on testing cuts into the learning experience. Many tests impacting

    students future have also heightened the achievement gap and education inequality for low-income students from communities of color whose families cannot afford private tutoring and

    other supplemental resources.

    4) What is your position about the teacher evaluation system?

    I have strong reservations over the use of test scores for assessment purposes that do not take

    into account student composition, including English Language Learners, and student requiring

    Individual Learning Plans. Doing so encourages schools to game the system, and focus on

    securing preferred students instead of ensuring all students needs are addressed.

  • In particular, I have continually cited the disproportionally small enrollment ELLs in New York

    City charter schools as a problem that must be addressed; have stated that until this enrollment

    gap is closed, their effectiveness cannot be fairly measured.

    I support a variety of assessment methods but I strongly value peer assessment, and the evaluations performed by professional educators. I am proud to have the support of the United

    Federation of Teachers in this campaign, and I will continue to work with them to fight for

    appropriate assessment standards that do not penalize teachers for taking on the challenge of

    providing an urban education in difficult circumstances.

    5) What are your views on campaign funding?

    I have been an outspoken advocate for campaign finance reform that includes a matching funds

    system and eliminates the multiple LLC loophole that has empowered special interests; particularly the real estate industry at tenants and the general publics expense. I support a broad range of reforms, including maximum contribution limits, and eliminating the current unlimited

    6) What is your position on CFE and equitable funding?

    I am proud to have served as a plaintiff in the CFE lawsuit, after filing an amicus brief in support

    of correcting the longstanding funding imbalance faced by New York City schools.

    While we have prevailed in court, multiple consecutives gubernatorial administrations have not

    fulfilled the courts wishes; initial down payments made toward the CFEs resolution have been undone by recession-driven cuts.

    Securing the funding our children are owed has been a continuing passion that I have fought for

    each year. As former Chair of the legislatures Black and Latino Caucus, I held an often-fractious coalition together to delay budget agreements until additional education funding

    concessions are made. In the Senate, I have repeatedly voted against education budgets that made

    no effort to fulfill the covenant with our citys children.

    As the states economy continues to recover, I am committed to ensuring education funding remains at the top of the agenda. I will also be fighting hard for the $80 million in after-school

    funding sought by Mayor de Blasio this year that was not allocated.

    7) What is your position on raising the cap on charter schools?

    Given that the number of authorized charter licenses within New York City currently exceeds the

    number of actual charter schools, there is no demonstrated need for raising the charter school

    cap.

  • Robert Jackson KidsPAC Questionnaire Response 2014

    1) What is your position of the city being obligated to pay rent for charter, or give them

    public school space for free?

    When I walked 150 miles to Albany to build support for my Campaign for Fiscal Equity (CFE)

    lawsuit to fix a broken New York State school funding formula that cheated our children, I did it

    on behalf of all our students, so that our public resources are used to provide all students access

    to high quality programs and prepare every child to earn their own way in life. With this policy,

    Albany is once again inflicting an inequitable and unjust policy on our school children with its

    budget mandates that support charter school growth at the expense of public schools. This

    regulation has led to the decision to locate a Success Academy charter school at the former

    Mother Cabrini High School. This action was taken with no public discussion and over the

    pressing needs and long-standing overcrowding of Washington Heights, Inwood and Hamilton

    Heights (District 6) students. It is not fair or just to have a tale of two publicly funded school

    systems, where neighborhood parents and students needs are ignored for years and who live with

    overcrowded and underfunded schools, while charter schools are guaranteed new space and are

    fully supported in expanding at great expense to the taxpayer.

    For years, families in this community, District 6 CEC members, and education advocates have

    worked tirelessly and unsuccessfully to relieve overcrowding and poor classroom conditions and

    to create much needed public school space in the district. Space is and has been urgently needed to serve the community.

    2) What is your position on the common core standards?

    While I'm generally in support of common core standards, New York's implementation has been

    terrible. Before the test go into effect, we must first get teachers the curriculum and materials

    they need to help their students succeed.

    3) What do you think about the current testing regime?

    We must move away from the current emphasis high stakes testing and replace it with more

    individualized assessment from a variety of sources. These tests raise anxiety among students

    and force teachers to narrow their curricula and teach to the test. Too much time is allocated for

    test prep which cuts back on time for in-depth projects and creative thinking. Rather than use

    these flawed tests for teacher evaluations and school progress reports, tests should be used as a

    learning tool for teachers to help them better understand their students.

    4) What is your position about the teacher evaluation system?

    I support the recent legislative agreement saying teachers rated ineffective based on state

    Common Core tests this year or next will not face negative consequences. Teacher evaluation

    should be geared to improving teaching and student outcomes, not based on student test scores

  • alone. We must move away from all these high stakes testing. The best evaluators are fellow

    teachers who participate in a collaborative process of reviewing student work, improving lessons

    and fine-tuning instruction. The measures of teacher success are well-educated students. We

    must have a more broad-based measure of teacher effectiveness.

    5) What are your views on campaign funding?

    Big money has corrupted our government and we must fundamentally change the way we run

    campaigns. Only by taking the money out can we start to win back the confidence and

    involvement of the people. My five point plan includes: Establishing a public financing program

    modeled on the successful New York City program; Setting sensible limits on contributions and

    closing corporate subsidiary and LLC loopholes; Restricting fundraising during the legislative

    session and instituting fixed limits on those doing business with the government; Increasing

    reporting, transparency and enforcement; and Prohibiting the use of campaign funds for personal

    or legal expenses.

    6) What is your position on CFE and equitable funding?

    As an original plaintiff in CFE lawsuit, I am absolutely in favor of this. Improving education

    isnt only about money, but money is an important factor. It takes money to reduce class size, hire more teachers and make sure that our children have the supplies and resources they need.

    Its our obligation to provide every student the opportunity to a sound, basic education. For that reason, I initiated the CFE suit and sued the state once again last year to prevent it from

    withholding $250 million in the school evaluation conflict so our school children dont continue to suffer because adults cant agree. And we are back in court on September 10th fighting for equitable funding. I will go to Albany to make sure NYC gets the rest of the promised CFE

    money.

    7) What is your position on raising the cap on charter schools?

    While I believe every parent should choose what is best for their child and am happy for any

    child that gets a good education, we need to provide the opportunity for a quality education for

    all 1.1 million children in the NYC public school system, not just the thousands who may attend

    a charter school now or in the future. That means not favoring charter schools over traditional

    public schools and preventing charters from having a negative impact on other schools. Contrary

    to what proponents argue, theres little evidence that competition from charters has led to improved performance in surrounding public schools and co-locations often are problematic and

    create a profound imbalance for students under the same roof. When I walked 150 miles to

    Albany, I did it on behalf of all our students, so that our public resources are used to provide the

    best education for all. Charter schools alone do not address that need.