The mayor is running out of friends. Photo: John Lamparski/Getty Images Several months before the start of the school year, Mayor Bill de Blasio came up with a plan to get schools open again — or, more specifically, an alternative to a plan. At a May meeting, he “pitched an idea of a contest for coming up with the best reopening plan,” The Wall Street Journal reported on Sunday. But schools needed a plan by early June, sources told the Journal, and the mayor was already behind schedule.
A vote of no confidence is not the same thing as a strike authorization vote. The president of the Council of School Supervisors and Administrators, Mark Cannizzaro, told the New York Times that a strike wasn’t even on the table. They’re asking instead for a state takeover of the city’s public schools, which would wrest control of the system from the mayor’s office.
The UFT defended its deal with the city in a statement to the Times, though some factions of its rank-and-file members are dissatisfied with the union’s approach. A Twitter account for the union’s MORE caucus, a social-justice-focused group that is highly critical of UFT president Michael Mulgrew’s Unity caucus, expressed guarded support for the principals’ no-confidence vote.
onesarahjones cuz he’s a queef
onesarahjones
onesarahjones he's not learning from anything. SO ineffective.
onesarahjones Cuomo, DeBlasio & NY are ultimately responsible for the spread of the virus throughout the United States.
DickYoungsGhost onesarahjones
DickYoungsGhost onesarahjones