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NY lawmakers may weaken, stall tougher educational requirements for yeshivas
NY lawmakers may weaken, stall tougher educational requirements for yeshivas

Yahoo

time02-05-2025

  • Politics
  • Yahoo

NY lawmakers may weaken, stall tougher educational requirements for yeshivas

NEW YORK — New York lawmakers are brokering a deal that would delay and weaken educational requirements for religious schools — a major setback for yeshiva reform advocates who believe all students should receive some secular instruction, The New York Daily News has learned. The plan is to include the changes in the next state budget, which is in its final stages of completion and more than a month late, according to sources familiar with the negotiations. On Thursday, the state education commissioner, Betty Rosa, called the last-minute effort a 'travesty' for students during an interview with The New York Times. 'It's gutting this whole mechanism that exists for compliance and caring if kids are able to get a basic education,' said Adina Mermelstein Konikoff, executive director of the group Young Advocates for Fair Education. The New York State Education Department passed regulations in 2022 related to government oversight of private schools. The schools were given multiple ways to show how they were complying with a century-old state law, which requires private schools provide secular instruction at least 'substantially equivalent' to that offered at a public school. The vast majority of private schools, including most yeshivas, are following the law. But the years-long fight came to a head this year when the agency moved to revoke funding from six ultra-Orthodox schools in Brooklyn, seemingly not cooperating with regulators — the initial cohort of which was first reported by the Daily News. The agency's Board of Regents is expected to take up the topic at its monthly meeting on Monday. With the final details of any possible deal still under wraps, some proposals have included extending the deadline for schools to comply with the regulations by as long as eight years, sources said. Others add potentially less rigorous assessments for schools to demonstrate compliance, or allow those with older grades to skip a test entirely if they meet requirements in younger grades, though one source had not heard those specifics. The most sweeping changes, which have been called for by the Legislature's Republican leadership, would involve repealing the regulations in the name of parental rights in education and respecting the autonomy of religious schools. 'I have a general rule after 23 years in Albany,' said state Sen. Liz Krueger, a Democrat and chair of the finance committee. 'If someone comes along at the last second and tries to stuff something into budget negotiations — where there's been nothing in writing, no opportunity for public review or expert review, and you're being told, 'we've got to do this to get the budget done' — whatever that proposal is, it smells to high heaven, and you should run the other way.' Sources said there appeared to be more enthusiasm for changes in the Assembly than the Senate. The governor's office did not return a request for comment on Friday afternoon. There is speculation Gov. Kathy Hochul could have her own reelection prospects in mind as gubernatorial candidates start to vie for a powerful Hasidic voting bloc. 'It's three-dimensional chess — with the yeshivas as just a pawn,' said David Bloomfield, a professor of education leadership, law, and policy at Brooklyn College and The CUNY Graduate Center.

NY lawmakers may weaken, stall tougher educational requirements for yeshivas
NY lawmakers may weaken, stall tougher educational requirements for yeshivas

Yahoo

time02-05-2025

  • Politics
  • Yahoo

NY lawmakers may weaken, stall tougher educational requirements for yeshivas

NEW YORK — New York lawmakers are brokering a deal that would delay and weaken educational requirements for religious schools — a major setback for yeshiva reform advocates who believe all students should receive some secular instruction, The New York Daily News has learned. The plan is to include the changes in the next state budget, which is in its final stages of completion and more than a month late, according to sources familiar with the negotiations. On Thursday, the state education commissioner, Betty Rosa, called the last-minute effort a 'travesty' for students during an interview with The New York Times. 'It's gutting this whole mechanism that exists for compliance and caring if kids are able to get a basic education,' said Adina Mermelstein Konikoff, executive director of the group Young Advocates for Fair Education. The New York State Education Department passed regulations in 2022 related to government oversight of private schools. The schools were given multiple ways to show how they were complying with a century-old state law, which requires private schools provide secular instruction at least 'substantially equivalent' to that offered at a public school. The vast majority of private schools, including most yeshivas, are following the law. But the years-long fight came to a head this year when the agency moved to revoke funding from six ultra-Orthodox schools in Brooklyn, seemingly not cooperating with regulators — the initial cohort of which was first reported by the Daily News. The agency's Board of Regents is expected to take up the topic at its monthly meeting on Monday. With the final details of any possible deal still under wraps, some proposals have included extending the deadline for schools to comply with the regulations by as long as eight years, sources said. Others add potentially less rigorous assessments for schools to demonstrate compliance, or allow those with older grades to skip a test entirely if they meet requirements in younger grades, though one source had not heard those specifics. The most sweeping changes, which have been called for by the Legislature's Republican leadership, would involve repealing the regulations in the name of parental rights in education and respecting the autonomy of religious schools. 'I have a general rule after 23 years in Albany,' said state Sen. Liz Krueger, a Democrat and chair of the finance committee. 'If someone comes along at the last second and tries to stuff something into budget negotiations — where there's been nothing in writing, no opportunity for public review or expert review, and you're being told, 'we've got to do this to get the budget done' — whatever that proposal is, it smells to high heaven, and you should run the other way.' Sources said there appeared to be more enthusiasm for changes in the Assembly than the Senate. The governor's office did not return a request for comment on Friday afternoon. There is speculation Gov. Kathy Hochul could have her own reelection prospects in mind as gubernatorial candidates start to vie for a powerful Hasidic voting bloc. 'It's three-dimensional chess — with the yeshivas as just a pawn,' said David Bloomfield, a professor of education leadership, law, and policy at Brooklyn College and The CUNY Graduate Center.

NYS Education Dept. directs families at 3 Brooklyn yeshivas to find another way to educate their children
NYS Education Dept. directs families at 3 Brooklyn yeshivas to find another way to educate their children

Yahoo

time18-02-2025

  • Politics
  • Yahoo

NYS Education Dept. directs families at 3 Brooklyn yeshivas to find another way to educate their children

The New York State Education Department is instructing families at a few Brooklyn yeshivas to find other schools — the first major test of how education officials will enforce controversial regulations of failing religious programs. Parents have until July 1 to find an 'appropriate educational setting' for their children and notify the local school district of their new enrollment status, according to a letter template shared with the Daily News. Their former schools will be cut off from all public funds — for child nutrition programs, transportation, textbooks and other services — in what advocates suggested was a new phase of a years-long effort to ensure all students graduate with basic skills in core subjects, such as English and math. The schools are two locations of Yeshiva Bnei Shimon Yisroel of Sopron, and Talmud Torah of Kasho, the Education Department confirmed. The trio, all in Williamsburg, had been found out of compliance with state regulations that oversee the quality of instruction at religious and independent schools. Under state law, all private schools must provide students with an education that is at least 'substantially equivalent' to that offered by a public school. 'This is an unprecedented and important step,' said Adina Mermelstein Konikoff, executive director of Young Advocates for Fair Education, or YAFFED. 'For the first time under these regulations, NYSED has formally notified a school that it no longer meets the standards for providing compulsory education. 'It is unfortunate that it has come to this but every child has the right to a 'substantially equivalent' education, and we hope that this will be a wakeup call for the non-compliant schools to follow state law.' Local and state education officials determined the three yeshivas were out of compliance in 2023. The schools were given 60 days before any extensions to work with the city on remediation plans. J.P. O'Hare, a spokesman for the Education Department, said the schools did not respond or engage with education staffers. The yeshivas represent a small number of the many Jewish day schools in New York otherwise providing a quality education. In the letter template from the state's Office of Religious and Independent School Support, parents were given a choice: Find a different religious school, enroll in public school, or supplement with home school while monitored by the district. The memo was translated into Yiddish and given to yeshivas to distribute among their families, though it was unclear if school leaders were distributing the memo in full under department letterhead. The schools did not respond to a request for comment. The state regulations have been at the center of a bitter legal battle involving a separate group of yeshivas. In 2023, a trial court judge ruled the Education Department could not force families to yank their children out of noncompliant schools, effectively forcing the programs to shutter. New York's highest court will soon weigh in on the matter after a panel of appeals judges decided there must be consequences. But some school leaders are not waiting. Last month, several yeshivas filed a federal discrimination complaint a week before President Trump's inauguration, asking the civil rights office of the U.S. Education Department to intervene in what they see as an attempt to impose secular views on Jewish schools. It was not clear if the Trump administration had initiated an investigation, though the office has indicated that allegations of antisemitism would be a priority. A publicly available list of open probes, which had been updated weekly, was last revised on Jan. 14.

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