Here's a summary of their findings:
• The Gates-funded program — which required Hillsborough to raise its own $100 million — ballooned beyond the district's ability to afford it, creating a new bureaucracy of mentors and "peer evaluators" who don't work with students.
• Nearly 3,000 employees got one-year raises of more than $8,000. Some were as high as $15,000, or 25 percent.
• Raises went to a wider group than envisioned, including close to 500 people who don't work in the classroom full time, if at all.
• The greatest share of large raises went to veteran teachers in stable suburban schools, despite the program's stated goal of channeling better and better-paid teachers into high-needs schools.
• More than $23 million of the Gates money went to consultants.
• The program's total cost has risen from $202 million to $271 million when related projects are factored in, with some of the money coming from private foundations in addition to Gates. The district's share now comes to $124 million.
• Millions of dollars were pledged to parts of the program that educators now doubt. After investing in an elaborate system of peer evaluations to improve teaching, district leaders are considering a retreat from that model. And Gates is withholding $20 million after deciding it does not, after all, favor the idea of teacher performance bonuses — a major change in philosophy.
• The end product — results in the classroom — is a mixed bag.
Hillsborough's graduation rate still lags behind other large school districts. Racial and economic achievement gaps remain pronounced, especially in middle school.
And poor schools still wind up with the newest, greenest teachers.
Financial instability and debt were not Elia's only track missteps - there were also the multiple instances of children dying under her watch without the district taking responsibility (and action) to make sure these tragedies didn't happen again.
Here's a post from May 28 that covers that:
Complicity And Cover-Up: MaryEllen Elia's Failure Of Leadership In The Deaths Of Hillsborough Students
The tragic stories of Isabella Herrera, a 7 year old who died in 2012 while on a Hillsborough school bus, and Keith Logan Coty, a 6 year old who died of a brain hemorrhage in 2014 after getting sick at his school, suggest the kind of leadership we'll get from new NYSED commissioner MaryEllen Elia.
Then Hillsborough superintendent, Elia never took responsibility for the failure of district personnel to call 911 in a timely manner when Isabellea Herrera was found unresponsive on a Hillsborough school bus.
In fact, Elia did all she could to deflect responsibility from herself and the district and cover-up district complicity in the child's death because of an outdated policy that had school bus drivers call dispatchers instead of 911 in an emergency.
As Joe Henderson of the Tampa Tribune wrote, if not for a lawsuit from the Herrera family, the circumstances of the girl's death - a direct consequence of school district policy continued under Elia - would not have come to light:
For all the community outrage over circumstances that contributed to the death of 7-year-old special-needs student Isabella Herrera, consider this: If her parents hadn't filed a federal lawsuit over the way her case was handled, the public still wouldn't know there was ever a problem.There wouldn't be a task force to study ongoing problems with how issues with special-needs students are addressed.
School bus drivers would continue to follow the 21-year-old policy of calling dispatchers instead of 911 in an emergency such as the one that led to Isabella's death.
Six of seven members of the Hillsborough County School Board would still be in the dark about what happened that January day on the bus taking Isabella home from classes.
Life would go on just always. Except, of course, for Isabella and her family.
She had a neuromuscular disease that made her neck muscles weak. She was supposed to have her head back as she sat in her wheelchair, but she tilted forward and it blocked her airway. When it was discovered, the driver called dispatch and the aide on board called Isabella's mother.
By the time Lisa Herrera arrived and dialed 911 herself, her daughter was blue and unresponsive. She was pronounced dead the next day.
But Superintendent MaryEllen Elia didn't make the news public. She relied on a sheriff's office investigation that she said found no criminal wrongdoing, and appeared to let it go at that. During an interview last week, I asked why she didn't release the news. She fell back on the sheriff's report.If you're the parent of a special-needs student, though, you would have liked to know there was a problem. I should say, is a problem. There have been three other issues with special-needs kids just this year, including the recent death of a student with Down syndrome who wandered away unnoticed and drowned.
The Herrera family filed its lawsuit a few days after that — about nine months after Isabella died. Now we have a task force, and a policy change allowing bus drivers to call 911 if the situation warrants. As school board Vice Chairwoman April Griffin told The Tampa Tribune though, "It goes way, way deeper than that. But I think it's a start."
This would be a better start: Expand the task force to probe the circumstances of why it took a lawsuit to bring this to a head. This isn't a witch hunt, but there has to be accountability.
What happened in the aftermath of this tragedy was at best a case of bureaucratic bungling.
When a child dies, a leader doesn't fall back on official reports and policy excuses. A leader gets to the bottom of things and then lets everyone know what went wrong so it doesn't happen again. A leader asks uncomfortable questions about the culture in a school system that values policy and procedure over good judgment and common sense.That didn't happen here. And if not for a lawsuit, no one would have known.
Two years later, another child died after Hillsborough school staff failed to call 911 in a timely manner:
TAMPA — Keith Logan Coty played baseball, soccer and football. He was a principal's honor roll student in the first grade at Seminole Heights Elementary School, his mother said.
He'd had a heart murmur, but the doctor had cleared him, his mother said.
He died a year ago at age 6 of a brain hemorrhage, and a lawsuit filed Friday blames staff at his school for failing to call for help quickly enough. The lapse is especially unfathomable, lawyers say, as the issue of timely 911 calls was cited in another high-profile student death in a Hillsborough public school.
"How many kids under the care of this school district must die before the district gets it right?" lawyer Steven Maher asked, announcing the federal suit in a news conference Friday.
Exactly a year ago — Jan. 17, 2014 — Keith began feeling sick after lunch, the suit says. He went back to his classroom about 12:24 p.m., complaining to his teacher about a severe headache. She told him to lie down. He did. Then he started vomiting.
About 12:51, the teacher called Keith's mother, Kaycee Teets. There was no sense of urgency in the voice mail message she left, which Maher played at the news conference. It simply asked Teets to pick up her son because he was throwing up.
Before Teets could arrive, another school employee entered the room and found Keith lying on his side, making a gurgling sound with foam streaming from his nose. "His lips were blue," the suit said. The school nurse was summoned. Although Keith was unresponsive, the suit alleges the nurse did not perform cardiopulmonary resuscitation; nor did she use the defibrillator at the school.
About 12:58 p.m., a worker in the front office called 911. The information given to the 911 operator was confusing, the suit alleges. At one point the caller said Keith was breathing. His mother insists he was not.
When an emergency vehicle arrived at 1:03 p.m., Keith was "in the corner, visibly blue, not breathing, and unresponsive." Paramedics were able to resuscitate the child, and they took him to St. Joseph's Hospital in Tampa.
A scan revealed he had a brain hemorrhage. But, according to the suit, no one told the doctors about his headache, information Teets learned hours later when she spoke with Keith's teacher. Not suspecting a neurological problem, doctors focused on possible cardiac issues instead.
Keith "went without oxygen for at least 10 minutes as a result of the delay in commencing CPR," the suit alleges. He stayed on life support long enough for his organs to be taken for donation, and he was pronounced dead later in the day.
The suit, filed days before Superintendent MaryEllen Elia could face a School Board vote on terminating her contract, is reminiscent of a suit the same firm filed in 2012, also involving a child alleged to have died after emergency treatment was delayed.
Isabella Herrera suffered a neuromuscular disability and was on a school bus when she stopped breathing. No one called 911 until Isabella's mother arrived. The school district ultimately settled that lawsuit for $800,000.
The Herrera suit was filed in federal court, alleging a civil rights violation; rather than a negligence suit in state court, where the award would have been limited under sovereign immunity. Maher was trying to prove a districtwide lack of training and care so severe, it amounted to a level of indifference toward disabled students that qualified as discrimination.
This time, Maher said, the 911 policy and procedures amount to discrimination toward all of Hillsborough's 200,000 students.
The district argued in the 2012 suit that there was no pattern of indifference. And, after the drowning death of a second special-needs child that same year, Hillsborough revamped its training of staff, particularly those who care for disabled children.
But 911 calls have remained a source of confusion. While Elia quickly stated there is no prohibition against calling 911, administrators sometimes advise staff to let the front office make the calls. Phone service is not always reliable in the classrooms, they say, and it's easier for emergency workers to find the office than a particular classroom.
Maher and Teets said that makes no sense to them.
"I would call 911. There would be no question," Teets said. "Any person would do that. I walked into a classroom and found my child, blue on the ground."
Stephen Hegarty, the district's spokesman, said, "I cannot comment on pending litigation."
Maher said his firm is asking for monetary damages, but did not specify the amount.
Where are the great leadership qualities Elia supposedly has in the aftermath of these tragedies involving Hillsborough students?
If one student dies as a result of the failure of staff to call 911 in a timely manner, wouldn't you think a "great leader" would put together an effective protocol so that such a tragedy wouldn't happen a second time?
Elia instead did her best to cover up the circumstances surrounding Isabella Herrera's death - something that was noted when Elia was feted with a commendation by the Tampa Bay City Council after she was fired as Hillsborough superintendent.
Mary Mulhern, a council member who voted against the commendation for Elia, told the Tampa Tribune:
"MaryEllen Elia was fired by her employers — by her boss, the School Board," she said. "I can't think of another case where someone gets lauded and celebrated after they've been fired from a job that is a public responsibility. … When you are responsible for the lives of children, I think one strike is too many."
Elaborating, Mulhern cited the deaths of three students:
• 7-year-old disabled student Isabella Herrera, who died in January 2012 after suffering respiratory failure aboard a school bus. A bus video show that the driver and an aide did not call 911, but used a radio to try to reach their supervisor, as was protocol, then called Herrera's mother, who arrived and called 911. The School Board, most of whose members were unaware of the death until the girl's parents sued, agreed to pay $800,000 last year to settle a federal lawsuit.
• 11-year-old Jennifer Caballero, who had Down syndrome and drowned in a pond behind Rodgers Middle School after wandering away from a crowded gym class in October 2012. The school district agreed to pay a negotiated settlement estimated at more than $500,000. Investigations led to three firings and several resignations at the school. The district also took steps after the deaths to improve safety for special-needs students on buses and in school.
• 6-year-old Keith Logan Coty, who died a day after suffering a cerebral hemorrhage in January 2014 at Seminole Heights Elementary School. In a lawsuit, his parents accuse the school district of being indifferent to student safety and of discouraging staffers from calling 911 in emergencies. The district denies the allegations.
"If somebody dies, it goes to the top," Mulhern said. In the Herrera case, she said, "her employers didn't know this happened for nine months. … For me, that's enough. That's three strikes."
Mulhern said she didn't "disagree that (Elia has) done very good work over 10 years," but the concerns about student safety were overriding for her.
"The powers that be in Tampa and Hillsborough County just circled the wagons around this powerful person," who, Mulhern noted, had the authority to give out contract.
Say what you will about former NYSED commissioner John King's flaws as a leader - covering up district complicity in the death of a student and a failure to fix emergency protocol for 911 calls involving students weren't on the list.
The more you learn about MaryEllen Elia and her "leadership," the more you see the big mistake the Board of Regents made by hiring her as NYSED commissioner.
Also, the more you learn about Elia as a person, the more you see how appropriate her nickname - MaryEllen EVILia - is.
Did the members of the Board of Regents talked to anybody other than reformer cheerleaders when deciding to hire Elia to replace John King King at NYSED?
Here's a "great leader" who left behind her a financial disaster in the district, three dead students (two of whom might not have died had she not covered up the district's responsibility in the first death), a lot of enemies and a "mixed" academic record at best (as the Tampa Bay Times piece on the Gates Foundation/Elia evaluation mess noted.)
Why was someone this awful hired to run the New York State Education Department?
She was hired primarily because of her willingness, or more properly, her eagerness to push the privatization agenda on the people of New York.
ReplyDeleteShe is bought and paid for by the billionaires who have little to no public education, but view children as financial cogs, and potential rate of investment returns to further enrich themselves at the expense of our youngest citizens.
She is illegitimately empowered by our political cronies such as Cuomo who too, are bought and paid for, but their corporate masters.
Elia is the bastardized child of the reform industry...when one position does not work, or is demonstrated to be a complete fallacy and lie to the people, they are merely "whisked away" to another place...as happened to John King and Chris Cerf.
When Elia fails in New York...and she most definitely will, she will demonstrate her position in billionaire "monopoly", and be carried away to her next gig, floating toward it on her financial carpet ride, just as King and Cerf, and many others under the corporate payroll to destroy public education are.
Perhaps, but the Obama admin's trying to walk back the testing today w/ rhetoric (though not real action) suggests the atmosphere is getting a little more complex for reformers these days. Failed reformers like Klein, King Cerf and Elia continue to fail upward, but it's getting slightly more difficult to justify these promotions given the reformer track record. I can envision a day where some of these may just get retied permanently per the damage they have done. This has seemingly happened w/ Michelle Rhee (who grows more toxic by the day due to her husband's sexual transgressions and her help in covering them up.)
DeleteI have a feeling Klein and Cerf will always manage to land on their feet, but Elia is less central to the reformer narrative and thus dispensable.
We all realize here that we are the only people who give a shit about this in NY right?. Nobody will pull these threads in our state government, media, or union.
ReplyDeleteNobody will unpack Elia's past here, except us. These things will go nowhere beyond us. Nobody cares that Elia was an awful reform-minded superintendent back in Florida. Like NOBODY CARES except us right here....because we need this stuff so we can continue to face, with some small crumb of dignity, our mostly dead and dying profession where we are chronically and increasingly infantilized, threatened, bullied, coerced, and herded towards our dissolution. We need the comfort of knowing for a fact that Elia sucks and has always sucked. But ours is the knowledge and comfort of the condemned, knowing some dirt on the executioner.
It's fucking meaningless this knowledge. It will never attract real media focus within NYS. It will never be taken up by our legislators. It will never become part of our dead union's ammunition bag. Beyond that, the vast bulk of working teachers will never know this information, never know what to do with it if they did, have no clue where to place it, and have no clue what to do about it. Basically the very small percentage of teachers who read blogs like this will know. We are the saddest lot in a way, because we get to see our demise coming. Most everyone else will get popped on the back of the head with a proverbial bat one clear day and be fumbling for meaning as their financial and professional throats are cut, bleeding out faster than their mind's can comprehend. Thats mercy. For us, ignorance is mercy it seems.
We plant seeds of doubt that over time grow to full-grown problems for the elites.
DeleteHappened w/ John King, who came in with a flourish of positive PR and left w/ to the sounds of Poughkeepsie boos (a debacle from which he never recovered, though the Dr. Ted Morris Jr. mess did damage to him as well.)
It's happening now w/ Eva Moskowitz, who was clearly shocked to be challenged by John Merrow on the News Hour over suspensions, having had a dutiful media for the most part report her story w/ pro-SA frames. But that is changing (and not just w/ Merrow - the Kate Taylor NY Times piece was very damaging to her own brand as well as SA's.) These stories were all on the blogs before they made it into the media at large.
And so, w/ MaryEllen Elia we slowly and methodically chip away at her (false) image of competency, responsibility and penchant for collaboration w/ the truth - she did real damage to the finances of the Hillsborough school district, children died under watch who might not have died had she taken responsibility (and action) after the first child's death, and she left, at best, a half-baked reform "success" that calls into question the credentials of competence and collaboration the Regents cited when they hired her at NYSED.
Mary Ellen Elia is closely connected to former WNY Regent and former Chancellor Robert Bennett. Check out the marriage connection.
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