Anticorruption activist Zephyr Teachout in a protest on the the steps of the Tweed Courthouse in New York City. Molly Hensley-Clancy for BuzzFeed News
A small group of parents and activists
targeted hedge fund billionaires Dan Loeb, Paul Singer, and Paul Tudor
Jones in a protest today over New York state education funding.
Led by Zephyr Teachout, an anti-corruption activist who ran against
Andrew Cuomo in the recent New York governor’s race, the protestors
decried the political influence of New York’s wealthiest financiers on
public education — namely through the billionaires’ longstanding
political and financial support of charter schools.
The group’s rallying point was a rumored special session of the New
York legislature, which Teachout said was likely to take place next
week. At that session, Teachout said, Governor Cuomo will push to raise
the maximum number of charter schools allowed by the state, at the
urging of charter advocates like Loeb. If the cap is not raised, as it
was in 2010, there will likely be just 17 slots left for new charter
schools in New York City.
At the protest, drenched in freezing rain on the steps of Tweed
Courthouse in New York City, demonstrators held signs printed with the
faces of hedge fund billionaires. Beneath were the campaign
contributions each had made in New York, mostly to pro-charter
advocates. Protestors chanted, “Hey hey, ho ho, these hedge funders have
got to go,” and “Hey governor one percent, who do you represent?”
Teachout said today’s protest would be the beginning of a week-long
effort to fight against increasing the charter cap and advocate for more
funding of public schools. In coordination, she released her first white paper, “Corruption in Education: Hedge Funds and the Takeover of New York Schools.”
Teachout pointed to the pro-charter group Families for Excellent Schools, which spent almost $6 million
in a lobbying blitz in the first half of 2014, largely on a fight for
charter school space, which the group won. The New York Teachers’ union
spent $2.6 million in the same period.
As with most education debates in New York City, rhetoric at the
protest quickly turned to Eva Moskowitz and Success Academy, a charter
school that has long been a lightning rod for pro- and anti-charter
advocates. Moskowitz’s charter school group is poised for a massive
expansion in New York City, adding 14 schools in the next two years and
bringing Success to a total of 50 schools in the city.
Loeb, the CEO of Third Point Capital, has been an outspoken supporter
of charter schools and especially of Success Academy, where he chairs
the board of directors. He has a net worth of $1.5 billion. Tudor Jones,
Singer, and the billionaire Carl Icahn have all prominently backed
other charter schools and legislation. . . .
Here's another good interview with Teachout
ReplyDeletehttp://www.ny1.com/content/politics/inside_city_hall/219815/ny1-online--teachout--advocate-talk-about-protest-against-wealthy-charter-school-investors/