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Wednesday, January 14, 2009

Is It Possible To Have A Rule or Law of Credibility?


I think the case posted below is interesting because the United States Court of Appeals For the Second Circuit overturned the Second Circuit District Court and the Board of Immigration Appeals on the issue of the credibility of the Petitioner, Dong Zhong Zheng, and granted him political asylum.

When Michael Mukasey became US Attorney General there were many people in New York City who were very unhappy with this choice, due to Mr. Mukasey's decisions made prior to his appointment. (Mukasey's predecessor Alberto Gonzales had his own difficulties with the justice issue).

Mukasey (pictured at right) told the American Bar Association on August 12, 2008:
"Violations of the law are not always crimes...not every wrong, or even every violation of the law, is a crime", with "only violations of the civil service laws" being found among hiring practices during Gonzales' tenure as Attorney General. Oh, really?

In disciplinary hearings, the "preponderance of the credible and admissible evidence" is the deciding factor to which supposedly all hearing officers must adhere. So, if the NYC BOE Attorney assigned to the case cannot "find" or "produce" evidence, let's say the records of a child who assaults a teacher in the classroom, then I would think that the Attorney defending the teacher would make notice of an "adverse inference" from this omission. Then it is up to the hearing officer to determine whether or not sufficient effort has been made to get these records, and here is the randomness factor: what if the hearing officer finds that the records are "not necessary"? What does that mean? Well, perhaps the hearing officer has already decided the case, or, the matter will be decided based upon the credibility of the people who testify. Again, this is a subjective decision. There is no "rubric" for "credibility". My question is, "Can we make one?"

CIVIL PROCEDURE, IMMIGRATION LAW
Zheng v. Mukasey, No. 07-1073
Petition for review of a BIA decision affirming an order denying Chinese native's applications for asylum and related relief is granted, and the BIA decision vacated, where the IJ committed errors both as to the timeliness of petitioner's application for asylum and in finding that petitioner had not testified credibly in support of his claims.

Read the decision:

Zheng v. Mukasey, No. 07-1073

On the ABA website, you can read the following statement by Mr. H. Thomas Wells, Jr.:

Statement of ABA President H. Thomas Wells, Jr. on Department of Justice
Decision Regarding Ineffective Assistance of Counsel for Immigrants

WASHINGTON, D.C., January 9, 2009 - "For anyone whose future and freedom is at stake, it’s important we offer a fair shake in the courts and a chance for serious wrongs to be righted. That's why immigrants whose cases were botched through incompetent legal representation must have a way to fix their situation.

Yesterday's decision by the attorney general may adversely impact such individuals by significantly narrowing, if not foreclosing, their opportunity to seek redress in these cases.

The ABA strongly believes that the substantive and procedural rights of applicants for immigration relief should be protected when they are victimized by the ineffective assistance of counsel, and urges the government to set rules that clearly uphold such fundamental principles of fairness".


More on Mukasey:

DHS quietly expands border search policies
09/23/2008 @ 3:49 pm
Filed by Nick Juliano
LINK

The Department of Homeland Security quietly expanded its authorization to examine, copy and archive an array of documents and electronic files from citizens and visitors crossing US borders, according to reams of internal documents released Tuesday.

The changes implemented last year reverse a two-decade-old policy requiring border agents to have reasonable suspicion of a crime before reading documents someone is bringing into the country; probable cause was required before documents could be copied.

Those standards have been thrown out the window in favor of lenient standards that allow Customs and Border Patrol agents to read or copy essentially anything they would like from a person entering the United States. The new policies also make it easier for CBP to share documents it copies or confiscates with other law enforcement agencies.

Civil liberties advocates say the new standards raise troubling questions about protecting citizens' First Amendment rights and could lead to customs agents serving as and end-run around the Fourth Amendment by conducting searches that would be prohibited from other agencies.

"For more than 20 years, the government implicitly recognized that reading and copying the letters, diaries, and personal papers of travelers without reason would chill Americans' rights to free speech and free expression," said Shirin Sinnar, a staff attorney with the Asian Law Caucus. "But now customs officials can probe into the thoughts and lives of ordinary travelers without any suspicion at all."

The ALC and the Electronic Frontier Foundation filed a Freedom of Information Act lawsuit against DHS to obtain more than 600 pages of internal documents outlining its policies concerning document collection and interviews conducted at the border. The organizations obtained the documents this summer and published the documents Tuesday.

In an interview Tuesday, Sinar said she hoped the documents' release would spur Congress to enact clearer and stricter standards governing border searches.

The documents themselves were heavily redacted, and the organizations are continuing to appeal for fuller disclosures, she said. DHS does not reveal the procedures or equipment it uses to search electronic equipment. Such disclosures could reveal its use of the CSI Stick, which allows for the quick and easy extraction of cell phone call logs, phone books, text messages and more information.

"We don't know if customs is using that or other programs," she told Raw Story, "but I suspect that they would be."

According to an analysis of the documents (pdf) published by EFF and ALC, DHS reversed several key components of border search guidelines that were instituted in 1986 and updates to the policy made in 2000.

Where customs officers previously could only "glance at documents to see if they were merchandise," the latest policy allows officers to "review and analyze" any documents in a traveler's possession with no suspicion at all. Previous prohibitions on copying documents without a traveler's permission or probable cause also were eliminated, allowing customs to "detain documents or copies for a 'reasonable period of time to perform a thorough border search.'" (Emphasis in original.)

DHS's border search policies have come under scrutiny particularly as they relate to electronic devices and information. Sen. Russ Feingold (D-WI) has raised concerns about the government's ability to copy the contents of travelers' laptops, cell phones, digital cameras and PDAs.

"The invasion of privacy represented by a search of a laptop differs by an order of magnitude from that of a suitcase," Feingold said during a June hearing on the laptop searches. " I guarantee you this: neither the drafters of the Fourth Amendment, nor the Supreme Court when it crafted the 'border search exception,' ever dreamed that tens of thousands of Americans would cross the border every day, carrying with them the equivalent of a full library of their most personal information."


A Feingold spokesman said the senator would have no immediate comment on Tuesday's release of the documents.

DHS refused to send anyone to face questions from Feingold during the June 25 hearing. Instead the agency passed along some superficial prepared testimony from a deputy DHS commissioner in charge of customs. The testimony included some anecdotes about stopping pedophiles at the border but did little to address the privacy concerns regarding the department's extraordinary search authorities. The department also provided the committee with a copy of its border search policy.

The policy provided in June, as well as the wider cache of documents made public Tuesday makes clear that DHS has wide latitude over how and when it can share the information it collects. For example, customs agents can hand over collected documents or files if they need "technical assistance" to translate or decrypt computer files or to determine whether the documents provide reasonable suspicion of a crime.

The border search policy reads, in part:

Officers may encounter information in documents or electronic devices that is not in a foreign language or encrypted, but that nevertheless requires referral to subject matter experts to determine whether the information is relevant to the laws enforced and administered by CBP.

Once the information is in the hands of another agency, that agency can keep a copy of it "to the extent that it has the independent legal authority to do so."

Such a set-up makes it quite easy for other agencies to access copies of private documents from travelers.

"It's quite easy to say you need technical assistance," Sinnar said.

Once they see what's in those documents they can rely on that information to decide whether they have the authority to hold on to them, she added.

DHS says its expanded authority is necessary. An official justified the policy to the Washington Post, which reported on the new policies Tuesday.

DHS spokeswoman Amy Kudwa said the updating of policies reflects an effort to be more transparent. In an e-mail, she wrote that the decision of U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) "to change some of the standards in its old policies reflects the realities of the post-9/11 environment, the agency's expanded mission and legal authorities, and developments in the law, including the Homeland Security Act of 2003. Although certain aspects of the policies have changed, the policies have always reflected the notion that officers have the constitutional authority to inspect information presented at the border" without requiring suspicion of a particular traveler.

Civil liberties groups like EFF and ALC, though, say too many innocent Americans are getting caught up when they try to enter the country.

Amir Khan, an IT consultant who lives in the Bay Area, says he has spent between 20 and 25 hours detained by customs agents when returning from five separate trips abroad. Khan's travels took him mostly to Europe for business and once to visit family in Pakistan.

He said a border agent demanded to examine files on his laptop and quizzed him on the books he was reading, including some religious texts.

"I asked many times, 'What can I do to resolve this?'" he told Raw Story. "They told me there's nothing I can do."

Monday, January 12, 2009

Excellent Teacher Becomes a "Potential Killer"



The following story was told to Betsy Combier over more than 4 hours, with every step documented; the teacher wants to remain anonymous.

"I was a talented educator with a stellar reputation on the East Side of Manhattan for 8 years, in a new magnet school that I had helped to put on the map because of the reading scores and writing skills, of my seventh grade students whom I taught Communication Arts. I was adored by most of my students and their parents, because my adolescent students thrived and were accepted to the top high schools. My successful teacher-practice was observed by the University of Pittsburgh's LRDC (Learning and Research Development Center), the educators who "know what learning looks like," and thus, they were chosen to go into the classrooms of the hundreds of schools in the 12 districts- across the nation- that were chosen to participate in Harvard's research on teacher-practice, which became known as The New Standards.
In 1998, based on the assessment by the LRDC, I was awarded the NYSEC (New York State English Council) "Educator of Excellence of Award," a much coveted and PRESTIGIOUS award. The comments and compliments of administrators (including the very ones who would, months later, put out charges of incompetence), colleagues, parents, & students were submitted to NYSEC. It did not matter to the people who went after me. They knew about me. They rose to national prominence on the standards project, which I had helped attract to our district.
It is interesting to note the words of the principal who eventually documented me as "incompetent," after my return from the ‘rubber room'. Regarding my successful program, she had at one time stated: "I showed your work at the standards workshops and they went crazy over it!" However, upon my return, she stuck me in a new program that was deliberately doomed to failure so she could find me "incompetent." She knew the quality of my work because she was the point man for the Standards project in our district as Director of Curriculum, and head of staff development. She had begun, at my school, as a district’s staff developer, and loved to visit my classroom, bringing prestigious visitors (educators, publishers and administrators) to see my innovative work. Thus, she had to devise a failing program in order to prove I was an incompetent teacher.
The only purpose for doing so, when the evidence of not only competence, but of excellence is so overwhelmingly documented, is to harass a teacher into retirement. My case proves it all! To my face, and in front of the union rep, and the Director of Secondary Education at the time, the superintendent of district 2, said to me, “You are 58, why don't you retire?" This from a woman, who 8 years earlier had asked me if I wanted to teach in her school, when she was a mere principal.
The superintendent charged me with “corporal punishment” based on an alleged verbal assault, which even if it had been true, did not rise to corporal punishment under the Education Law. The rubber room was my first stop in the road to persecution.
Heinous charges were made against me, among some others (all of which are criminal in nature), all of which were outrageous and false, and designed to remove me and all teachers, similarly situated, immediately and without access to the union grievance procedure.
This is such a simple thing to grasp. You see, if allegations and complaints are put through the investigations and grievance procedures AT THE SITE, they will be resolved in the teacher’s favor, since the petty and grievous nature of these allegations will be revealed. It has to be a complaint that rises to the level of “criminal” in order to rip a teacher out of her classroom and doom her to the fate that the administration desires.
I never returned to that wonderful learning environment, with the 1000 books, AND FABULOUS ART MATERIALS that I had purchased with my own money, or to the outstanding curriculum that I alone had created at my middle school, and which included not only literature, media studies, reading and writing, but a full NYS seventh grade art curriculum. I was thrust into a windowless storeroom - the ‘rubber room’ and incarcerated there for six months with no information as to the reason.
In an act that stands alone in its arrogance and contempt for the law, THE SUPERINTENDENT OF THE DISTRICT in collaboration with a person at the DOE's Special Office of Investigation, took it upon herself to publish a letter that I had been found guilty of Corporal Punishment. I had no hearing and no opportunity to meet my accuser, or to defend myself when I was summoned to the meeting room in the District Office where this letter was read - despite the fact that the investigatory procedure that is carefully spelled out in the teacher contract had NOT taken place. They accused me and sabotaged my career based on a calculated interview of six 12 year-old children, where only two girl friends of the accuser, out of thirty children present at the time of the alleged event, backed her tale. The students were listed as “student B and student E, from an alphabet soup of students A through F. Can you imagine such a witness to a crime in a court of this land, which I thought was America.
My attorney, hired at a cost to me of over $25,000, filed a lawsuit and he made it clear that the charges must be dropped.
It said: "Discipline her, or send her back," and they did send me back but not to my proven curriculum. I was now a “pull-out” teacher, handed a list of kids, and a time schedule, by this woman whom I had known for years, as she gave me her back, and took me to a filthy storeroom, which was to be my new "classroom.” I was given no materials and one day to get it ready. This made it easy for this ex-director of curriculum, now principal to "document my incompetence.” But it backfired, because I did a good job, and students annoyed her with requests to be assigned to my program.
Ignoring my attorney's command to expunge the false guilty charges, or face a 40 million dollar lawsuit, the letter stating my guilt had been published to my school, before I arrived, and despite dire warnings in the lawsuit papers that no supervisor, or employee should use the letter or any reference to the heinous allegations, this principal used the allegations in that egregious letter of "guilt" to humiliate me in front of parents, students, office staff and colleagues - many of whom I had mentored.
On my first day back, this woman whom I had known for years, entered the dirty storeroom on the fourth floor, which I was endeavoring to turn into a learning environment. I had covered the glass window on the door, because so many of my former students were wandering from their fifth floor classes, to wave hello.
The principal entered and tore the construction paper from the glass. I tried to explain, but she screamed in my face. “ Shut-up. You just shut-up, or I will be forced to tell everyone you were found guilty of corporal punishment!”
Despite there being direct evidence of abuse presented by my attorney, and the lawsuit, nothing detered the administration from slandering me.
This woman holds a PhD, would go on from this ‘interim’ job, to the superintendent of a Brooklyn school district, yet knew how to bully a fine teacher. This was the beginning of six months of humiliation designed to send me packing. I had been taping my log when she entered, and so, for all eternity, her words are there for me to remember.
When I went looking for some of the 1000 books she had redistributed to classroom libraries, she entered the room where I was looking through a bookcase, and humiliated me in front of the young teacher and the kids, screaming and ordering me into the hall as if I was a delinquent child.
Eventually re-assigned by her, as a “push-in,” I had no classroom of my own, and was assigned to the all-purpose room, another filthy room on the fourth floor, which contained a table, a few computers, and stacks of cartons and litter. Occasionally, a teacher might take a break here, working on some lesson plans.
I was given a student desk and chair in a corner by an unlocked closet. Before and after photos show that I removed the litter, put out a variety of periodicals and books on the now clean windowsill, and used the little unused bulletin board by the closet, to put up a photo of my family.I added some attractive literacy posters to the closet door, and flowers to my “desk.”
For my efforts she placed a letter in my file claiming insubordination. She claimed that I was infringing on the rights of the other teachers who used that room. The truth was, that my colleagues could not face me, and even when I made a small luncheon, inviting them to this now cheerful room, not one of them came. I ate alone.
The ‘push-in’ program she created made me an unwelcome intrusion into the rooms of the very colleagues whom I had mentored when they first came to our school as novice teachers. With no instructions, it was easy for her to find fault with what I did. One egregious moment stands out, because she entered with the Supervisor of Principals, a director at the district level. I was actually addressing the class, with an additional piece of information about the ongoing discussion on Greek history. Not only did this occasion an outburst of monumental proportions, she placed a letter in my file, charging insubordination, claiming that I had no right to speak to the class, and that my job was to assist students. MY sixty-thousand dollar salary, and several college degrees, my training in the standards notwithstanding, I was expected to do the work of a para. The visitor, months later, would meet me in the halls of the district office and apologize for witnessing that abuse. “I know your work,” she said sadly.
The videos of my former CA classroom, made for the LRDC capture a vibrant classroom and a dedicated talented teacher. Yet, her assessment of me in this degrading assignment was the ‘documentation’ that administration would try to use to destroy me, having failed to harass me into a rubber room, with the corporal punishment charges.
I became a pariah, and my reputation on Manhattan's East Side, and elsewhere, as a premier educator was shattered. I lost a book deal, too. Robbing me of my career was not enough to seal my fate. To remove me once again, a charge was put out that I allegedly had “threatened to kill the principal.” Putting out such charges are just a ruse, to push a teacher into a rubber room, but this one pushed me to the edge of nervous collapse. My blood pressure, when I stopped at a doctor’s office on the way home with a banging headache, had skyrocketed.
Thus, in the course of a little more than a year, I had fallen from a celebrated educator to an abuser of children and a potential killer. And this was not enough, either. With my return to the rubber room on that insane, new charge of threatening the principal, charges of incompetence were "put-out" for the very years that I had been observed and filmed by the LRDC.
Even after I was allowed a medical leave, thanks, finally, to the intervention of Randi Weingarten, the superintendent (before she left NYC for a job in California where her abusive methods to staff were also condemned) mailed the charges, week after week, in packages containing all the bogus charges and "documentation” in the form of those "observations" and scores of file letters, made during the bogus ‘pull-out’ and ‘push-in’ assignments. When I began returning these POISON PACKAGES unopened, the superintendent sent to my door, a young law clerk from the DOE, holding red-balloons to trick me into opening my door, so he could give them to me.
How could this happen? At the site level, my union rep - assigned to teach physical education, not what she had transferred to the school to teach - did not help me. I have e-mails that I received, at that time, from former students, asking why this woman was saying that I “had ruined the lives of two girls.”
The superintendent entered the fateful meeting on the day that the ‘’guilty verdict” was read, and kissed this union leader, hello, so as to ‘show me’ her power. This illegal and shameful ‘verdict’ was read, not by her, but by the Director of Secondary Education -- with eyes lowered. He knew me, too, having witnessed my talent and expertise many times.
Through all the grievances, NYSUT, the state umbrella union was not much better; it simply encouraged me to settle. I eventually went to state arbitration, and knowing what would happen if I returned, I resigned, taking what little sanity and self-esteem remained, and returning to a wonderful family, with a new grandson, to recover.
During my experience in the rubber room I learned:
• that Habeas Corpus does not exist for teachers; that lies and harassment are the rule and that perjury is justified if it is done by administration.
• that criminals often run the schools and that with no accountability, their crimes have gone beyond petty and egregious to criminal.
• that the DOE is not interested in educating children, but only with maintaining its own power.
• that the children of NYC mean nothing to them, and teachers have absolutely no human or civil rights, AND THAT THE AMERICA WE KNOW DOES NOT EXIST IN THE RUBBER ROOMS.

ADMINISTRATORS who abuse power and ignore the law for decades, come to believe that they are above the law, and finally that they ARE the law. The time has come to show administrators that the schools are failing, even as governments do when the rule of law disappears and the business of the people, in this case --the nation's children-- become second to their need to remain in power as tyrants with absolute power to rule the domain... and destroy the lives of teachers, even as they destroy the hope of a great education for children."

Sunday, January 11, 2009

Workplace Investigations:NYC Employees are in Danger





In New York City, employees of the City of New York are in danger. My personal opinion is - and I have been victimized, threatened, and my kids have been harmed - that we must look at the personnel records of Department of Investigations Rose Gill Hearn (pictured below) and of Special Commissioner of Investigation Richard Condon (pictured at right).


New York City's Commissioner of the Dept. of Investigation Rose Gill Hearn listens to a report during a Dept. of Investigation Comm Stat meeting, Friday Aug. 15, 2008. Under the leadership of Hearn, 46, a blunt former federal prosecutor, the DOI has moved aggressively to counter any impressions that it wasn't willing to tackle serious cases - ones that could potentially embarrass a mayoral administration.

Both these people say that they are independent of the City of New York, yet they are both paid by the City. Richard Condon, for example, is paid by the Department of Education, just like Joel Klein and the Parent Coordinators are. Go to my blog at "News to Use: New York City Government Payroll, FOIL, PERB, Budget, and more", then click "Payrolls", "Search City Government", and Branch/Entity: New York,
Agency: Education Admin, Dep. and Sub-Agency: Education Admin, Dep., then "Condon, Richard". You can do the same for Joel Klein, your school's Parent Coordinator/"Community Associate", etc.

Proof, I believe, that Richard Condon is NOT independent and cannot be impartial in any investigation. News to use.

We parents, teachers and interested taxpayers are buying the services of an 'investigator' paid by the very agency who is victimizing and harming our lives and careers?

Why dont we all do something?

I have put together an article on the generalities involved in a "fair" - unbiased, impartial - investigation, and will write about Mr. Condon and his colleagues Rose Gill Hearn and Thomas Fennell soon.

Betsy Combier

NYS Department of Labor



Workplace Investigations - Who Should Conduct The Investigation?
LINK

In determining who should conduct a workplace investigation, the nature of the conduct alleged, the persons accused, and persons available with the necessary level of investigation training and experience must be considered. The investigator must be fair and impartial with respect to the issues and the parties. Common choices in the selection of an investigator include human resources personnel, attorneys, outside consultants, and law enforcement personnel. Here are some advantages and disadvantages of each choice.

Human Resources: HR personnel will likely be familiar with the employees involved and have extensive knowledge of the employer's policies, practices and culture. However the openness of communication could be impeded and cause a fear of retaliation.

Attorneys: Attorneys will likely be aware of legal boundaries, but may or may not be a good investigator or interviewer. They also may be unfamiliar with the employer's policies, practices and culture. An attorney may be more useful as an overseer of the entire investigative process.

Outside Consultant: An outside consultant may appear more objective and neutral than insiders, particularly if upper management is accused. There is also less risk of a confidentiality breach. However, as with attorneys, an outside consultant may not be familiar with the employer's policies, practices, and culture.

Law Enforcement Personnel: A law enforcement personnel must provide Miranda warnings and other constitutional protections to the accused. Also, the employer looses a great deal of investigative control when using law enforcement personnel. Lack of familiarity or interest in the organization's policies, practices, and culture could be considered a negative. Plus, due to a reasonable doubt standard of proof, there may be a need to impose higher investigative standards than necessary.

Whoever is selected to investigate, it should be someone who:

* understands the purpose of the investigation,
* appreciates the legal and practical issues,
* knows the employer's practices, policies, and culture,
* has good interviewing skills,
* is credible, respected and impartial,
* would be effective as a witness,
* is able to maintain confidentiality,
* pays attention to detail, resolves inconsistencies, addresses all open issues and prepares good documentation, and
* can weigh competing and conflicting information, make a recommendation to the decision make and support it.

And finally, a good investigator is someone who can execute the plan but is flexible enough to adapt to the twists and turns that arise during workplace investigations.

Saturday, January 10, 2009

Shango Blake Loses His Appeal After Being Terminated



Mr. Shango Blake was Principal of I.S. 109, and was accused of stealing money, assaulting a child, even running into two teachers with his car. He was terminated by the New York City Department of Education, and then he appealed to New York State.
Below is the decision of Commissioner Mills - who says no, you are not getting your job back.

Appeal of SHANGO BLAKE, from the determination of Joel I. Klein, Chancellor of the New York City Department of Education, to implement an arbitrator’s decision to terminate him as Principal of I.S. 109.

Decision No. 15,856

(December 18, 2008)

Bernbach Law Firm PLLC, attorneys for petitioner, Jeffrey M. Bernbach, Esq., of counsel

Michael A. Cardozo, Esq., Corporation Counsel, attorney for respondent, Robert Katz, Esq., of counsel

MILLS, Commissioner.--Petitioner (also referred to as “appellant”) appeals the determination of Joel Klein, Chancellor of the New York City Department of Education (“the Chancellor” or “respondent”), implementing an arbitrator’s decision to terminate petitioner from his position as Principal of I.S. 109. The appeal must be dismissed.

In January 2000, the New York State Legislature amended Education Law §3020 by adding a new subdivision three, which authorizes the City School District of the City of New York (“District”) and any employee organization representing employees or titles that are or were covered by any memorandum of agreement executed by the District and the Council of Supervisors and Administrators of the City of New York (the “Council”), on or after December 1, 1999, to negotiate agreements that modify or replace the procedures set forth in Education Law §§3020-a and 2590-j(7). It further provides that the Commissioner shall review any appeals brought according to the terms of such agreements.

Pursuant to Education Law §3020(3), on December 16, 1999, the Council and the District entered into an initial agreement providing for modified disciplinary procedures. The parties then entered into a successor agreement (the “Agreement”), dated April 20, 2007, covering July 1, 2003 through March 5, 2010. For allegations of misconduct with respect to principals, the parties, in Article VII(J)(4)(a) of the Agreement, established modified disciplinary procedures. Specifically, the Agreement provides that at the principal’s option, allegations of misconduct may be presented to an impartial arbitrator who will decide whether just cause exists for the proposed action. Thereafter, the Chancellor may, at the request of the principal, review the arbitrator’s decision. If the Chancellor implements the arbitrator’s decision against the principal, the principal may then apply to the Commissioner for review of the arbitrator’s decision.

Pursuant to the Agreement, a written notice of specifications of misconduct and proposed adverse action was prepared and served on petitioner, alleging that petitioner engaged in conduct unbecoming his position, neglect of duties, and criminal conduct. Petitioner was charged with 14 specifications of misconduct including, but not limited to, allegations of financial wrongdoing, an allegation of corporal punishment against a student, failing to report an incident, hindering an investigation and causing widespread negative publicity to the District.

An arbitration hearing was subsequently conducted on several dates in February, March, April, May and June 2008, and the arbitrator rendered his final decision on September 30, 2008. The arbitrator found petitioner guilty of the charges alleged in specifications 2(b), (c), (d), (e), (f) and (g), 4(e) and (f), 5(a) and (b), 6(a) and (b), 7(a) and (b), 8(a) through (h), and 11 [throwing or pushing a student into a radiator, threatening the student by stating words to the effect of “don’t you f****** say something about my son or I’ll break your neck” and punching and choking the student], but not guilty as to the remaining specifications. He concluded that petitioner should be terminated from his position as Principal of I.S. 109, based on the corporal punishment of the student.

Upon receipt of the decision, petitioner requested the Chancellor’s review of the arbitrator’s findings and conclusion that petitioner should be terminated from his position for inflicting corporal punishment on a student.

By decision dated October 24, 2008, the Chancellor agreed with the arbitrator’s determination and decided to implement it.[1] Petitioner then commenced this appeal by serving the Community Superintendent and the Chancellor on October 30 and 31, respectively, at their offices. Petitioner requests that I reverse the Chancellor’s decision and the arbitrator’s determination to terminate petitioner from employment, for inflicting corporal punishment on a student, on the grounds that they are irrational, arbitrary and capricious and unsupported by substantial evidence.

Initially, I must address whether service of this appeal was proper. Section 281.6 of the Commissioner’s regulations specifically addresses the service requirements for appeals to the Commissioner pursuant to Education Law §3020(3). Section 281.6 provides, in pertinent part, that an appellant shall institute an appeal to the Commissioner by effecting personal service of a copy of the appeal upon;

1. the chancellor, or a person designated to accept service on behalf of the chancellor; and
2. the community school district superintendent who initiated the arbitration proceeding, or a person in the office of such superintendent who has been designated to accept service.

In this case, the affidavits of service reflect that petitioner served the appeal on Monica Davis, a clerk to the Chancellor, and Camelia Brogdan-Cruz, the District Family Administrator for District 29. Respondent maintains that these persons are not authorized or designated to accept service on behalf of the Chancellor or the superintendent, and that the only agent authorized to accept service on their behalf is the New York City Law Department. It is undisputed that petitioner failed to serve the Law Department. Therefore, I am constrained to dismiss the appeal for improper service (Appeal of Tchoukanine, 47 Ed Dept 334, Decision No. 15,715; Appeal of Harmon, 43 id. 478, Decision No. 15,057; Appeal of Malley, 31 id. 149; Decision No. 12,601).

Even if the appeal were not dismissed on procedural grounds, it would be dismissed on the merits. The issues in this appeal are whether the arbitrator’s finding of guilt on the corporal punishment charge is supported by the record and whether that finding warrants termination. I find that the record supports both the finding of guilt and the penalty.

This case turns on the credibility of petitioner, the student and the other witnesses who testified before the arbitrator. The Commissioner will not ordinarily substitute his judgment for that of a hearing officer with respect to the credibility of witnesses (Appeal of Morrison, 39 Ed Dept Rep 675, Decision No. 14,346; Appeal of Grihin, 38 id. 399, Decision No. 14,064; Appeal of Bd. of Ed. of Community School District #22, 30 id. 238, Decision No. 12,448). In order for the Commissioner to substitute his judgment for that of a hearing officer, there must be clear and convincing evidence that the hearing officer’s determination of credibility is inconsistent with the facts, or that the hearing officer’s decision is contrary to the weight of evidence and the hearing officer has not adequately explained his rejection of otherwise convincing testimony (Appeal of Morrison, 39 Ed Dept Rep 675, Decision No. 14,346; Appeal of Gibbs, 33 id. 684, Decision No. 13,196; Appeal of the Bd. of Ed. of Community School District No. 2, 32 id. 391, Decision No. 12,864). Upon my review of the record, I find no reason to substitute my judgment for the arbitrator’s determinations regarding the witnesses’ credibility or his factual findings based thereon.

The arbitrator heard testimony from a number of witnesses for both sides, including petitioner. A review of the arbitrator’s 68-page decision reveals that he assessed and evaluated the testimony of all witnesses, including petitioner, and provided detailed reasons for crediting certain testimony and not others. The arbitrator’s decision summarized each party’s position, discussed every specification individually, outlined both sides’ arguments and referred to specific pages of the more than 3,300-page transcript to support his determination.

With respect to the corporal punishment charge, the arbitrator credited the testimony of the student and the District’s witnesses. The student testified that on June 26, 2006, petitioner pushed the student’s hat off his head and threw it to the floor, that “he pulled [him] to the radiator and ... choked [him]”. The student then testified that petitioner told him “‘you say anything about my son again, I’m going to break your neck,’ and he started punching [him] with his arms.” According to the student, petitioner then punched him in the chest. After the incident, the student testified that he looked at the two other eye-witnesses, Troy Edwards (“T.E.”) and James Holder (“J.H.”), and said “‘you’re not going to do anything about this?’” and petitioner said to T.E. and J.H., “‘did you see anything’” and both replied, “‘no, I didn’t see nothing. I don’t have a problem.’” When the student returned home that day, he testified that he noticed red marks on his neck. The student’s written statement supports his testimony to the extent he indicates that petitioner threw him into the radiator, punched him in the chest and choked him.

In addition, the student’s recollection of the events that day was corroborated by other witnesses. Linette Edwards (L.E.), petitioner’s secretary, was seated at her desk outside the principal’s conference room and she testified that she heard petitioner say to the student “‘if you threaten my son, I’ll break your damn neck’”. After they exited the conference room, L.E. also heard petitioner say “‘I didn’t see or hear anything, [J.H.], did you” even before the student made any accusation that petitioner had punched or choked him. When the student heard J.H. say he didn’t say or hear anything, L.E. testified that the student asked J.H. how he could lie and stated, “‘you know you saw [petitioner] choke me.’” She further testified to observing fingerprint marks on the student’s neck.

Ernest Alvarez, the program director at Project HOPE, a program that the student attended regularly, testified that when the student arrived at the program on June 26th, he observed fingerprints on the student’s neck and when he asked the student “what happened to your neck?”; the student told him that petitioner grabbed him.

Moreover, two other employees at the school testified that petitioner admitted that he choked the student. Susan Druss, the Purchasing Secretary at the school, testified that two days after the incident petitioner called her into a conference room and brought up the incident with the student. At this time, petitioner told her that he lost it and blacked out and that he “put [the student] up against the wall, and ... choked him until he couldn’t breathe.” In addition, Tesha Forbes, the School Treasurer, testified that on June 30, 2006, petitioner called her into the main office and raised the incident and explained that “he didn’t realize it, but he went off on [the student] ... [and] started to choke him”.

Even though petitioner denies pushing, punching or choking the student and two other eye-witnesses, J.H. and T.E., deny that petitioner had any physical contact with the student, the arbitrator chose to credit the testimony of the student and the District’s witnesses, and upon my review, I find no basis to disturb the arbitrator’s determination, which I find to be supported by the preponderance of the evidence.

Moreover, I find no merit to petitioner’s argument that the Chancellor improperly relied upon the arbitrator’s decision because the arbitrator made two erroneous statements in his determination. While I agree that the arbitrator misstated that T.E. testified that petitioner “screamed he would break [the] student’s neck”[2] and that petitioner testified that he “was not angered by [the student] when he threatened [petitioner’s] son”, I find that these misstatements did not affect his overall findings, and any error in the language of the decision was de minimis.

In determining whether to substitute my judgment for that of hearing officer, the standard is whether the discipline imposed is proportionate to the offense (Matter of Mockler v. Ambach, 79 AD 2d 745, lv to app den 53 NY 2d 603; Appeal of the Bd. of Educ., Wellsville CSD, 35 Ed Dept Rep 523, Decision No. 13,620; Appeal of the Bd. of Ed., City School District of the City of New York, 35 id. 35, Decision No. 13,455). An appropriate penalty should underscore the inappropriateness of the conduct and serve as a warning against future improper conduct (Appeal of the Bd. of Educ., Greenburgh CSD No. 7, 34 Ed Dept Rep 506, Decision No. 13,397). The verbal and physical abuse of a student by an administrator is wholly inappropriate and intolerable. In light of the seriousness of petitioner’s conduct, I find that termination of his employment is warranted, and I will not substitute my judgment for the penalty imposed by the arbitrator and Chancellor (see Matter of Pell v Bd. of Educ., 34 NY2d 222, 233; Appeal of Blumenblatt, 33 Ed Dept Rep 249, Decision No. 13,041).

In light of the foregoing disposition, I need not address the parties’ remaining contentions.

THE APPEAL IS DISMISSED.

END OF FILE
[1]I note that the Chancellor’s decision refers to the prior collective bargaining agreement entered into on December 16, 1999; however, a review of that agreement and its successor agreement reveal that the terms of both agreements relating to modified disciplinary procedures for principals are substantially the same.

[2]The entire statement reads “[Petitioner’s] own witness Troy Edwards confirmed [petitioner] was angry in the face of [the student’s] threat. Troy Edwards agrees [petitioner] screamed he would ‘break [the student’s neck’, if [the student] threatened his son.”

More on Blake:

New York City Board of Education Reports That Principal Shango Blake Misused School Funds and Punched a Student


October 14, 2007
Queens Village
The Two Shango Blakes
By EMILY BRADY, NY TIMES

ONE of the unusual works at last year’s Tribeca Film Festival was a rap video titled “Tuck That Shirt In” that was written, produced and performed by the students, parents and staff of Intermediate School 109 in Queens Village.

The star of the video is Shango Blake, the school’s 37-year-old principal. Mr. Blake, who is built like an N.F.L. linebacker, is seen bobbing down a school hallway, dressed in a sharp black suit and gold tie, rapping about the school uniforms he established when he took over in 2003.

The uniforms — pastel shirts neatly tucked into navy blue pants or skirts — symbolize the changes Mr. Blake has been credited with bringing to the school. After his arrival four years ago, reading and math scores increased, and new programs, like the one that used the production of rap videos as a learning tool, were introduced.

As one student raps at the end of the video, “Mr. Blake changed the school we call 109; now we look like the school where it’s time to shine.”

In the two years since the video was made, Mr. Blake’s professional role has continued off camera — and lately it has taken a dark turn.

In a report issued Aug. 13, the Office of Special Investigations of the city’s Department of Education found that Mr. Blake had mismanaged more than $30,000 in school funds, most of which had been collected from parents and students for school lunches, class trips and graduation events. The report, which followed an 18-month investigation, also said that Mr. Blake had punched and choked a 13-year-old student who had made negative remarks about Mr. Blake’s son.

After the findings were issued, Schools Chancellor Joel Klein — who made a cameo appearance in “Tuck That Shirt In” — suspended Mr. Blake and began proceedings to fire him.

The story might have ended there were it not for a large group of parents, community leaders and elected officials who are rallying around Mr. Blake and demanding that he be reinstated and allowed to defend himself.

“We take pride in Shango,” Archie Spigner, a former city councilman from southeast Queens, said this month. “He’s to be commended, not condemned.”

And Representative Gregory Meeks of Queens is so supportive of Mr. Blake that he honored him with an Educator’s Award at an Oct. 5 fund-raising dinner in Queens Village at which Gov. Eliot Spitzer was the guest speaker. Before an audience of 800 that included two dozen I.S. 109 students, Mr. Blake was given a plaque and a standing ovation.

“We don’t know what the facts are, other than he turned the school around, the parents love him and want him back, the kids love him and want him back and the community loves him and wants him back,” Mr. Meeks said after the event. “He’s worth fighting for.”

These feelings are shared by many other local officials, seven of whom, including Mr. Meeks, sent a joint letter to Mr. Klein on Sept. 13 saying Mr. Blake had been denied due process and should be reinstated immediately.

Jeffrey Bernbach, Mr. Blake’s lawyer, described the charge involving the misuse of funds as “absolutely untrue.” As for the accusation of assaulting a student, Mr. Bernbach said, “He doesn’t deny he became angry and yelled at the kid, but he never laid a hand on him.”

According to Dina Paul Parks, a spokeswoman for the Department of Education, Mr. Blake will have a chance to defend himself at a disciplinary hearing. No date for the hearing has been set.

Meanwhile, with a new interim principal in place at I.S. 109, many parents are afraid that changes instituted under Mr. Blake will disappear.

“We don’t see the same vigilance now,” said Kangela Moore, president of the school’s Parents’ Association and the mother of a seventh grader. In recent weeks, Ms. Moore said, the number of fights outside the school has increased; she attributes the increase to Mr. Blake’s not being there to patrol the block as he used to.

An emergency parents’ meeting was held after a fight in a school hallway on Oct. 5 left one student with a concussion, Ms. Moore said, and two seventh graders were subsequently arrested.

In response, Ms. Parks said that while she understands parents’ concerns, she is confident in the acting principal, Miatheresa Tate.

Ms. Moore said that she had faxed to the chancellor’s office letters from 600 parents in support of Mr. Blake, and that more than 400 parents showed up at a prayer vigil held in the principal’s honor at the Embury United Methodist Church in Jamaica.

“The overwhelming sentiment was that we need him to come back to the school,” Ms. Moore said. “We needed him back, like, yesterday.”

'SKIMMING' KIDS' MILK MONEY
By YOAV GONEN, New York Post
LINK

August 14, 2007 -- A flamboyant Queens principal who has been hailed by Chancellor Joel Klein once used students' lunch money to help foot the bill for limos to the premiere of a school-produced rap video, investigators charged yesterday.

School probers said the funds were among more than $30,000 misappropriated by Shango Blake, the four-year principal of IS 109.

Blake, 37, of Queens, allegedly misused funds he had collected from students and parents for school lunches, snacks and graduation expenses between May 2005 and June 2006.

"Shango Blake's financial mismanagement and inappropriate conduct makes it clear that he has no place in New York City public schools," concluded the report by the Office of the Special Commissioner of Investigation.

The report found that even as the school was accumulating more than $18,000 in debts to the Office of School Food, its treasurer was handing Blake up to $600 in cash per week to pay various other expenses. There is no indication he used any of the funds for himself.

When education officials asked Blake about the lack of payments, he reportedly said he had spent money on limousines to shuttle students to the premiere of the hip-hop video, "Tuck That Shirt In."

The video was screened at the 2006 Tribeca Film Festival.

Investigators found nearly $11,500 in expenses tied to that school digital production, as well as another.

Department of Education spokeswoman Dina Paul Parks said the agency was taking steps to ax Blake.

Reached by phone, Blake's wife declined to comment.

Officials also charge that the principal is a bully.

Blake, who was once cited by Klein for improving school safety, punched, choked and threatened a 13-year-old student last year for making remarks about his son, who also attended IS 109, officials said.

According to the report, the unidentified student told investigators that after being confronted by Blake about a discipline problem, he made a passing remark about Blake's son that set the principal off.

The student claimed that in the presence of two school employees, Blake threw him against a radiator and threatened to break his neck if he mentioned his son again.

When Blake challenged him to repeat the remark, the student did - leading Blake to punch him in the chest three times, grab his neck and choke him, the student said. While Blake and the two employees refuted the student's version of events, investigators found witnesses who corroborated the account.

Additional reporting by John Mazor and Erin Calabrese

yoav.gonen@nypost.com

Principal To Be Removed After Beating, Theft Accusations
By ELIZABETH GREEN, Staff Reporter of the Sun | August 14, 2007
LINK

A Queens principal accused of using corporal punishment against a student who insulted his son and misusing thousands of dollars in students' lunch money is being removed from his middle school weeks before school starts, the Department of Education said yesterday.

The student who was allegedly attacked, a 13-year-old male, was first sent to his principal's office for using "the �f' word" over a cafeteria sound system late last June, the report said. While walking out of the office after being reprimanded, the 13-year-old told investigators he said to the principal, Shango Blake, "Have a good life you and your son."

He said Mr. Blake then punched him three times in the chest and choked him, leaving fingernail marks on his neck that were observed by several witnesses, according to the report.

Mr. Blake's son also attended the middle school, the Jean Nuzzi Intermediate School, or I.S 209, in Queens, the investigators wrote. Of the four people who were in Mr. Blake's office at the time - the principal, the student, and two staff members - only the student claimed an attack occurred. Mr. Blake, whose attorney did not respond to a request for comment, denied that any abuse occurred during an interview conducted under oath, calling the student an "emotionally disturbed kid" who "had lied in the past," the report said.

Investigators cited several other witnesses who confirmed the 13-year-old's report. One, a secretary, said she heard through a conference room door Mr. Blake threatening to break the student's neck and then watched the student walk out with marks on his neck. A school treasurer said Mr. Blake told her he pushed the student up against an air-conditioner in his office and choked him "until he heard the boy gasping for air." The investigators, who work for the Department of Education's special commissioner of investigation, Richard Condon, also alleged that Mr. Blake had misappropriated $30,000 in funds � money students turned in to pay for school lunches, snacks, and graduation expenses � between May 2005 and June 2006.

A Department of Education spokeswoman, Dina Paul Parks, said the city is pursuing Mr. Blake's termination and will discipline the two other staff members in the room that day.

Wednesday, January 7, 2009

Term Limits Lawsuit Continues in Court


Attorney Randy Mastro, right, argues for the plaintiffs, while Corporation Counsel Stephen Kitzinger, left, representing the city, listens, Wednesday, Oct. 22, 2008 in New York as Mastro argues to stop a proposed Oct. 23 vote that could alter term limits for some of the city's elected officials, including Mayor Michael Bloomberg. Judge Jacquelyn Silbermann denied the request to block voting on Mayor Bloomberg's proposal to change the term-limits law so he can run for a third term.

January 6, 2009
Term Limits Get Reprise, This Time in Court
By FERNANDA SANTOS, NY TIMES

A decisive round in the battle over who can run for re-election in New York City in November played out on Monday in a packed courtroom in Brooklyn, where lawyers for the city and for a group challenging an extension of term limits argued their cases before a federal district judge.


Each side tried to make its case, and the judge, Charles P. Sifton, (pictured at right) acknowledged how difficult a decision this might be for him.

“We’re talking about different interests,” said Judge Sifton, whose ruling will essentially decide the makeup of the citywide ballot. “It’s difficult to convert into some common denominator.”

Two months have passed since Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg signed the law allowing him and most other elected city officials to seek third terms, circumventing two plebiscites that set two consecutive four-year terms in public office as the limit for all of them.

One primary issue in the lawsuit filed by the challengers is whether the law extending term limits violated the voters’ constitutional rights to free speech, by annulling a decision they had endorsed at the polls, and their due process, by giving two-term incumbents an unfair advantage over challengers.

Arguing on behalf of the city, Stephen Kitzinger, (above) senior counsel in the city’s Law Department, said the claims “have no merit whatsoever” and added, “This law does not preserve an incumbent’s position for another four years.”

With that, Mr. Kitzinger apparently hoped to discredit some of the lawsuit’s other claims, including one that called it a conflict of interest for politicians to vote on a law expanding their own time in office. When Judge Sifton asked about the salaries and pensions a three-term incumbent might earn, Mr. Kitzinger replied impatiently, “They still have to be re-elected.”

Randy M. Mastro, the lead lawyer for the plaintiffs, squarely disagreed.

“A term-limited mayor and a term-limited City Council majority made a conscious choice out of naked incumbent protection to vote themselves the opportunity for a third term,” Mr. Mastro said.

Overturning the law extending term limits would most likely cause chaos in the city’s political world, compelling politicians who would be forced out of office to come up with new plans and candidates who had given up running against entrenched officeholders to rethink their strategies.

Judge Sifton, who last month denied a city request to have the case moved to Manhattan and combined with another lawsuit challenging the law, did not set a date for his decision. “I’ll issue a written opinion as fast as I can,” he said.

A total of 25 elected officials, aspiring politicians and other people filed the lawsuit on Nov. 10, charging that the term limits extension was unconstitutional.

In a written response submitted late last month, city lawyers scoffed at the notion, calling it a “startling premise” and a “radical proposal” that would essentially undermine the power of legislatures to amend or revoke laws passed by referendum.

The bill sparked one of the most divisive battles in the city’s recent political history, at one point pitting Mr. Bloomberg against some of his top aides, who advised him against a re-election bid. It also sparked countless protests on the steps of City Hall, prompted petition drives and nearly split the City Council in half.

The Council passed the bill on Oct. 23 in a 29-to-22 vote and Mr. Bloomberg signed it into law 11 days later, after sitting through almost five hours of emotional — and often harshly critical — public testimony.

The mayor said that he wanted to run for a third term to give voters the option of choosing a seasoned leader during a period of extraordinary fiscal hardship for the city.

He has also said that a charter revision commission could revert to the two-term limit as early as next year.

November 11, 2008 10:30 AM
Gibson Dunn's Mastro Leads Term Limits Suit Against Bloomberg
Posted by Dimitra Kessenides
From The Am Law Litigation Daily
LINK

A diverse group of folks has filed a suit against New York mayor Michael Bloomberg, challenging the constitutionality of the recently passed legislation that will permit him to run for a third term. The coalition suing the mayor includes elected officials, private citizens, and public interest groups. Not surprisingly, one of the group's lawyers is Randy Mastro of Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher, who once served as Rudy Giuliani's deputy mayor. As we reported last month, (see below - Ed.) Mastro first signed on to represent two City Council members who had filed a petition for a temporary restraining order to halt the Council's October 23 vote.

Given his loyalty to Giuliani, Mastro's work on the legal campaign to block Bloomberg's efforts had already raised eyebrows even before he coauthored the coalition's complaint. "If Mastro succeeds in derailing Bloomberg's plan for another four years, he'd embarrass [Bloomberg]," wrote Jacob Gershman in a recent New York magazine story. "Taking Bloomberg down a peg could only help Giuliani, who's positioning himself to mount a comeback by seeking to unseat [New York governor] David Paterson in 2010."

In the same article, one veteran political operative jokingly described Mastro as the "Luca Brasi" of the term limits operation. But Mastro denied that his firm's pro bono work in support of term limits was influenced by his ties to Giuliani. "It has nothing to do with anyone I worked for in the past," Mastro told the magazine.

Mastro sees the term-limits move by Bloomberg and the Council members supporting it as "an assault on our democracy," he told The Am Law Daily last month.

The complaint also lists Gibson attorneys Jim Walden, Richard Bierschbach, and Gabriel Herrmann, and solo practitioner Norman Siegel. Lovells attorney Pieter Van Tol is listed as counsel to the New York Public Interest Group.

Download Term Limits Complaint

Comments (1)

There does not seem to be much difference between what Hitler did to gain power and what Bloomberg is doing. If Mr. Bloomberg thinks with his large ego that he is the only one to save NYC, then why cant he volunteer his services. I am sure that if another person was mayor they would listen to his advice. Or is it the 1st rule of power, which is to keep it. A referendum is the voice of the people, which in the past Mr. Bloomberg was all for. That is until it got in the way of his ambitions. Dictator: a person exercising absolute power, esp. a ruler who has absolute, unrestricted control in a government without hereditary succession. One who imposes or favors absolute obedience to authority. A ruler who is unconstrained by law.
Does it sound familiar Mr. Bloomberg, or should people start calling you mien fuehrer instead of mayor.

Comment By Ogel - November 11, 2008 at 2:44 PM

October 22, 2008 5:44 PM
NYC Judge Green Lights Term Limit Vote
Posted by Rachel Breitman
LINK

A New York City judge said Wednesday that a City Council vote on extending term limits can move forward as planned. Earlier in the day, two New York City Council members, represented by Gibson Dunn & Crutcher's Randy Mastro, filed a petition for a temporary restraining order to halt Thursday's scheduled vote.

Mastro, co-chair of Gibson Dunn & Crutcher's litigation practice and crisis management groups, argued that council members who stand to benefit from term extensions have a conflict of interest in voting on the matter. The former deputy mayor under Rudolph Giuliani was tapped to represent Brooklyn council members Bill de Blasio and Letitia James, both outspoken critics of Mayor Michael Bloomberg's plan to extend his term.

"We think some of the council members' personal interests in extending term limits are self-serving," Mastro tells The Am Law Daily. "It's an assault on our democracy," he says. Gibson Dunn is handling the case pro bono.

The suit tried in vain to slow the trajectory of Bloomberg's fast-moving campaign for a third term. Bloomberg announced October 2 that he would seek a change to the term limits rules, and said there wasn't enough time for a citywide vote on the matter.

Mastro previously locked horns with Bloomberg in a lawsuit over the city's controversial West Side Stadium project.

Stephen Kitzinger, senior counsel from the New York City Law Department, represented the rest of council, arguing that the city's legislative body has the power to change the term limits without opening the matter up to the public.

"We are gratified the court ruled in favor of the City's position, thus allowing the council to vote on this critical issue," Kitzinger said in a statement.

Under the current term limits law, passed by a city referendum in 1993, New York City's elected officials can serve only to two four-year terms. Under the current law, two out of three council members will be looking for work once their terms end come 2009, including Speaker Christine Quinn. Quinn supports the vote.

A recent op-ed by Mastro published in the New York Times argued that Bloomberg's only legitimate path to a third term would be through the approval of city residents in a special election referendum.

Barring a reversal by the appellate division Thursday, the council will move forward with a scheduled vote.

October 6, 2008 5:36 PM
Lawyers Debate Legality of Opening Door to a Third Bloomberg Term
Posted by Rachel Breitman
LINK

Even before Mayor Michael Bloomberg formally declared his desire to serve a third term last Thursday, lawmakers and lawyers had begun questioning the legality of the plan.

Conceding that there wasn't enough to time to give the public a chance to vote on whether to amend the city's term-limit law, the mayor said the City Council should be allowed to make the decision.

"The [City] Charter allows the Council to change the law - and it doesn't favor one method of adoption over another,” Bloomberg said in a statement. The mayor added that he expected Council Speaker Christine Quinn (pictured at right) --also set to be term-limited out of office next year--to lead the charge on the matter.

But council members, good-government advocates and politicians eyeing higher office expressed skepticism about the validity of using a council vote to undo the 1993 term limit law, which was passed via public referendum and caps at two the number of four-year terms that elected officials may serve. Critics -- some of whom gathered at City Hall on Sunday to protest any move to extend term limts -- note that voters already rejected a move to overturn the limits by defeating a 1996 referendum on the issue.



Opposition to Bloomberg's third-term push could build inside City Hall this week, fueled in part by the efforts of council members with designs on higher office. Queens Councilmember -- and announced comptroller candidate -- David Weprin (pictured above) plans to introduce a bill shortly that would require a public vote in advance of any term-limit changes. Brooklyn Councilmember Bill de Blasio, a borough president hopeful, has teamed up with Councilwoman Letitia James, (pictured at right) whose term runs through 2011, on a bill that would place the question before voters in a special spring referendum.

A term limit bill could also face legal challenges from other mayoral hopefuls, including City Comptroller William Thompson Jr., a Democrat who has labeled Bloomberg's move “an attempt to suspend democracy,” or supermarket magnate John Catsimatidis, a potential GOP candidate.

“The people voted on term limits twice, and the will of the people should stand,” Catsimatidis spokesman Robert Ryan tells The AmLaw Daily.

Norman Siegel, director of the New York Civil Liberties Union from 1985 to 2000, tells The AmLaw Daily that he would be keen to help out with a legal challenge to the mayor. “The people have spoken two times by public referendum,” says Siegel, who is planning a third run for public advocate next year. Siegel has previously challenged the Bloomberg administration over such issues as citywide parade rules and mourners' access to Ground Zero. “The question is whether you can allow a legislative body to undo the people’s will by legislative fiat.”

Siegel downplayed the 1961 court decision in Benzow v. Cooley--often cited by Bloomberg supporters as a powerful precedent---when the New York State Court of Appeals upheld Buffalo city council’s right to overturn term limits. “The Buffalo decision is limited and not controlling in this case,” says Siegel.

The mayor's backers point to a 2003 New York City appeals court decision, which supported the council's power to tweak the 1993 term limits bill for candidates elected during mid-term special elections.

“It is absolutely clear that the city council can change the term limits, and it does not require a referendum,“ Robert Joffe, a partner in Cravath Swaine and Moore's litigation department, who represented the city council in the 2003 case, tells The AmLaw Daily. But he says there will still be debate over what a new term limit law might look like. “The question is, would they abolish term limits outright? Change the limits to three terms for all elections, or just this one because of fiscal emergency?”

Another potential wild card could be cosmetics heir Ronald Lauder, a longtime term-limits proponent and the driving force behind passage of the original law. Lauder says he will only support a one-time extension to the term limits bill, and will actively campaign against any council bill that would permanently change term limit restrictions.

The mayor has, however, won the support of several prominent lawyers, including Candace Beineke, chair of Hughes Hubbard & Reed and Martin Lipton, a founding partner of of Wachtell, Lipton, Rosen & Katz. The two joined 28 corporate executives in an open letter that was published in several New York City newspapers on Thursday supporting a third Bloomberg term.

“I am not an expert on term limits,” Beineke tells The AmLaw Daily. Nonetheless, she believes New Yorkers should see Bloomberg on the ballot next year. “I think the voters ought to have a chance to give Bloomberg a third term because it is the most democratic option.”
Make a comment

Comments (2)

I wanted to update your readers. After the City Council's introduction of two pieces of legislation relating to this matter yesterday, New York City Comptroller William C. Thompson, Jr. issued the following statement: "Today, the New York City Council introduced two measures, one that would allow the Council and the Mayor to single-handedly grant themselves the ability to run for a third term. The other measure would allow New York City voters to make the decision. The choice is clear: People must come before politics. It is inappropriate for the Mayor and City Council to pass legislation that ignores the will of the voters. A government should serve its people and not itself. New Yorkers deserve nothing less."

Comment By Jeff Simmons - October 8, 2008 at 2:26 PM

Why was the Mayor afraid to put in a referundum before the Sept. 24th deadline....No answer from him. WHY

Comment By james wachowiak - November 3, 2008 at 1:50 AM

Tuesday, January 6, 2009

News to Use: New York City Government Payroll, FOIL, PERB, Budget, and more



Now, everything would be fine if only the people of our government would replace random and arbitrary actions with due process, justice, accountability and transparency....in sum, follow the law and implement it fairly.
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Sunday, January 4, 2009

Caroline Kennedy Did Not Submit Personal Financial Documents When Hired By Joel Klein in 2002


Pictured at right: Caroline Kennedy in January 2004, while she was working for New York City’s Education Department. She was paid $1 a year.

What I think is interesting about Ms. Kennedy's star quality is: she allowed the rules for financial disclosure to be bent for her when she accepted a position with the New York City Board of Education.

Most of us know that Joel Klein and Mike Bloomberg make different rules for different people. They also believe that they "know" what is best for New York City, and buy services with no bid contracts. Mike Bloomberg's push to get a third term as Mayor without a referendum was a good example of this policy. So, when Joel Klein wanted Caroline Kennedy to be involved with the fund-raising for public schools, of course they allowed her to by-pass the vetting process which involved filing details about her personal financial situation. Rudy Giuliani tried to do this with Bernard Kerik, even to the level of a Bush cabinet appointment - and look what happened there.

The fact that Caroline Kennedy was not asked to provide her financial portfolio when she became an employee of the New York City Department of Education (for $1/year) is not surprising, therefore, but I think she should have said then - and she should be saying now - "I am not above the law or rules, I'll disclose my assets just like everyone else".
"Why do New Yorkers accept this "arrogance of immunity"? We need to bring back the rule of law.
Betsy Combier

January 4, 2009
Kennedy Was Spared Financial Disclosure as a Top Aide at City Schools
By ALISON LEIGH COWAN

Like it or not, roughly 7,000 employees of New York City file 32-page disclosure forms each year divulging personal information about their family finances in an effort to bolster confidence in open government.

But when Caroline Kennedy was employed by the city Department of Education from 2002 to 2004, as the chief executive of the Office of Strategic Partnerships, she was not required to file, even though two people who worked for her had to disclose information about their finances.

City officials have offered a variety of explanations over the last few weeks why Ms. Kennedy did not have to meet this filing requirement despite her title and the responsibilities she has cited in her efforts to convince the public that she has the experience to take Hillary Rodham Clinton’s seat in the Senate.

City officials have most often pointed to Ms. Kennedy’s decision to accept $1-a-year in salary. More recently, Joel I. Klein, chancellor of New York’s schools, explained that she was ultimately exempt from the requirement because the department did not deem her to be a “policymaker.”

On Friday, Ms. Kennedy’s spokesman, Stefan Friedman, (pictured at right) declined to comment on the issue.

Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg, a billionaire who takes $1 a year from the city, is required to file disclosure forms each year. At least three of his appointees who have worked for nothing over the years have also filed — a sometimes awkward process, but one intended to serve as a conflict-of-interest safeguard for city officials and the public.

Ms. Kennedy’s finances have been a source of curiosity since she entered the contest to be named New York’s next senator. She has property in New York and on Martha’s Vineyard, and estimates of their worth have varied greatly. Great wealth, of course, can be an asset in an age of expensive campaigns.

Until 2004, public servants were generally required to file disclosure forms if they were officers or directors of agencies or if their salaries indicated high-level responsibility. That year, the city was able to shrink the rolls of those required to file by scrapping the salary test, and instead declaring that anyone holding a policymaking position had to file, regardless of income.

The city even spelled out what it meant to be considered a policymaker: someone who has “major responsibilities and exercises independent judgment in connection with determining important agency matters.”

“Public servants with substantial policy discretion include, but are not limited to, agency heads, deputy agency heads, assistant agency heads and public servants in charge of any major office, division, bureau or unit of an agency,” according to the city. Each agency or department makes the initial determination of who should be deemed a policymaker. The list is then subject to the review of the city’s conflicts-of-interest board, which has ultimate responsibility for collecting the annual forms and making them available to the public.

Though the Education Department is supposed to follow the same rules as every other arm of city government, it has issued its own regulations over the years as to who must file. The conflicts-of-interest board has not protested the department’s decisions regarding the Office of Strategic Partnerships, which Ms. Kennedy headed.

Last week, the board again referred all questions about the matter to the Education Department.

The department’s own written regulations make no mention of a class of “policymakers” who must file. Instead, it notes that employees have to file if they are in the management pay plan or have responsibilities over “contracts, leases, franchises, concessions and applications for variances and special permits” or if they are “serving in sensitive, confidential positions.”

In interviews, Ms. Kennedy has said that should she be chosen for the Senate job, she is “going to comply with every kind of disclosure that’s available.”

When she first went to work for Mr. Klein in October 2002, the job was a break from her former low profile. With fanfare, Mr. Klein put Ms. Kennedy in charge of raising money for the public schools from private sources, and said she would work closely with the department’s affiliated nonprofit organization, the Fund for Public Schools.

The department also announced that she would be in charge of the office of special adviser for the arts, and volunteer efforts like tutoring and mentoring. The next year’s official guide to New York City government listed Ms. Kennedy fifth from the top on the list of executives in the office of the chancellor.

By the middle of 2003, the department announced that Ms. Kennedy had second thoughts about accepting the $90,000 salary initially offered and would instead work for $1 a year.

City officials told The Daily News that July that she alone among those who had elected to forgo a paycheck would not be filing disclosure forms for the prior year because “the Ed Department deleted salary specifications from Kennedy’s specially created post.”

But people who drew nominal salaries at other city agencies at the time were still required to file. Deputy Mayor Daniel L. Doctoroff filed, as did Andrew Alper, then serving as chief of the Economic Development Corporation.

“The department determined that she did not fall into any of the categories in the pre-2004 disclosure law,” that governed the filing for 2002, said Michael Best, the general counsel for the Department of Education. Likewise, he said, Ms. Kennedy was not obliged to file for 2003 or 2004 because “she did not fit into any of the categories” once the law changed and the department concluded that “she did not have any policymaking position at the Department of Education.”

In August 2004, Ms. Kennedy announced that she was quitting her post in city government, though she continues to raise millions of dollars for the schools through her role as vice chairwoman of the board of the Fund for Public Schools.

While her departure from the city’s rolls cut short the debate over whether she should have been filing, two of those who worked for her were not spared.

Aida Bekele, a lawyer who reported that she was making $115,000 a year as chief of staff for the Office of Strategic Partnerships in 2003, had to file disclosure forms for 2003. So did Charissa Fernandez, who listed herself that year as a director of the Office of Strategic Partnerships, making $100,000 a year.


THE KENNEDY QUESTION
Rev. Al Sharpton and Caroline Kennedy break bread at Sylvia’s restaurant in Harlem.
(Bill Moore Photo)
By SAEED SHABAZZ, Amsterdam News
Special to the AmNews
Published: Wednesday, December 24, 2008 11:34 AM EST

Queens Congressman Gary Ackerman (D) told a national television audience watching the CBS Sunday morning show “Face the Nation” that Caroline Kennedy has been Sarah Palan-ized, because her staff answers the questions from the press that have to be submitted in writing.

“DNA in this business can take you just so far,” Ackerman said, laughing at his own statement.

New York print media outlets reported over the weekend that Kennedy’s people responded to 15 questions with answers that were mostly “brief” and “some did not fully address the questions.”

Gov. David Paterson, who has to make the appointment to fill the Senate seat of Sen. Hillary Clinton—provided she is the next U.S. Secretary of State— told Albany reporters that Kennedy told him that “she’d like at some point to sit down and tell me what she thinks her qualifications are.”

So, observers keep hacking away at the daughter of assassinated president John Kennedy, saying she is a non-practicing attorney with little familiarity of the legislative process who has never been tested in the world of electoral politics.

Former Democratic Party vice presidential nominee Geraldine Ferraro sent a letter to Paterson, according to press reports, asking him to appoint one of the six sitting females representing New York in the Congress. Referring to Kennedy, she said, this is not the time for on-the-job-training, because New York is facing a fiscal crisis.

The Associated Press reported on Dec. 19, that Kennedy hasn’t voted in at least six major elections in the last 20 years, including the 1994 election for Clinton’s Senate seat. Kerry Kennedy, a cousin, stated on the television talk show “Hardball” that she didn’t know if her cousin was pro-choice.

“Her short tour of New York, visiting Harlem and Buffalo and talking to political leaders, but making no public statements and taking no media questions, has set exactly the wrong tone,” stated a writer for Salon.com.

Another glimpse into the political goings and comings of Kennedy was reported in the New York Observer in a story claiming that her political debut happened in the Big Apple some 10 years ago, when she showed up at a “teach-in” against the impeachment of former president Bill Clinton. “Her speech was not memorable—nor did she display passion as she read it,” stated the story. So, did Ackerman invoke the name of Sarah Palin as an insult?

baltimoresun.com
Caroline Kennedy eyes U.S. Senate
JFK's daughter tells N.Y. governor of interest in Clinton's seat

Associated Press, December 16, 2008
LINK

ALBANY, N.Y.

Caroline Kennedy told New York's governor yesterday that she's interested in the U.S. Senate seat being vacated by Hillary Clinton, making her the highest-profile candidate to express a desire for the job.

Democratic Gov. David A. Paterson will choose the replacement.

"She told me she was interested in the position," Paterson said. "It's not a campaign. She'd like at some point to sit down."

Caroline Kennedy's spokesman, Stefan Friedman, declined to comment.

Clinton is expected to be confirmed as President-elect Barack Obama's secretary of state.

At an afternoon news conference to discuss last week's paralyzing ice storm, New York's senior senator, Charles E. Schumer, said he has also talked to Kennedy about the job.

Kennedy is the daughter of President John F. Kennedy. Her uncle, Robert F. Kennedy, once held the Senate seat she wants. Both men were assassinated.

Paterson has sole authority to appoint a replacement for Clinton, who was elected in 2000 and re-elected by a wide margin in 2006. Paterson will appoint someone to fill Clinton's seat for two years if she is confirmed as secretary of state.

During the past week, Kennedy, who lives in Manhattan, has reached out to prominent New York Democrats to tell them of her interest in the Senate seat. They included Joel Klein, chancellor of the New York City Department of Education. Kennedy worked closely with Klein as executive of the Office of Strategic Partnerships for the New York City Department of Education, where she raised about $65 million for the city's schools.

Other Democrats who appear to be on Paterson's short list include New York Attorney General Andrew M. Cuomo, who has declined to say publicly whether he's interested.

Republicans wasted no time in criticizing Kennedy as unqualified for the job and unfamiliar with the state.

"If anything, it makes me more determined to run," said Rep. Peter T. King, a Long Island Republican who has expressed interest in the seat.

"As far as record of achievement, I strongly believe that I'm much more qualified, much more experienced and have an independent record," King said. "Nothing against Caroline Kennedy, but I don't think anyone has a right to a seat."

Besides being a member of America's famous political family, Caroline Kennedy Schlossberg, 50, is president of the John F. Kennedy Library Foundation and a member of the John F. Kennedy Profile in Courage Award Committee.

She also is a director of the Commission on Presidential Debates, a director of the NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund, honorary chairwoman of the American Ballet Theatre and vice chairwoman of New York City's Fund for Public Schools.

She received a bachelor's degree from Harvard University and a law degree at Columbia University. She and her husband, Edwin Arthur Schlossberg, have three children.

The Rev. Al Sharpton, a prominent civil rights activist, said Kennedy called him yesterday. Sharpton could be an important Democratic ally, and an early call on political matters can be a critical show of respect. If Sharpton eventually supports Kennedy, his endorsement could go a long way toward helping ease any criticism that a black candidate was passed over.

Sharpton said he disagrees with those who say that Kennedy is not qualified to be a U.S. senator.