UNMET NEED FOR SEATS IN NEW 2015 2019

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UNMET NEED FOR SEATS IN NEW 2015 -2019 CAPITAL PLAN INCLUDING CLASS SIZE AND

UNMET NEED FOR SEATS IN NEW 2015 -2019 CAPITAL PLAN INCLUDING CLASS SIZE AND OVERCROWDING DATA FOR COMMUNITY SCHOOL DISTRICT 21 Leonie Haimson, Class Size Matters July 2014

School Utilization Rates at critical levels • Citywide, schools have become more overcrowded over

School Utilization Rates at critical levels • Citywide, schools have become more overcrowded over last six years. More than 480, 000 students citywide are in extremely overcrowded buildings. • Elementary schools avg. building utilization “target” rates at 97. 4%; median at 102%. High schools are not far behind at 95. 2%. • High ES rates in all boroughs, including D 10 and D 11 in the Bronx 108% and 105. 6%, respectively. • In Queens, D 24 (120. 6%), D 25 (109. 7%), D 26 (110%), D 27 (106. 1%), and D 30 (107. 3%) all extremely overcrowded. • At the MS level, D 20 in Brooklyn, D 24, and D 25 in Queens have building utilization rates over 95%. • Queens high school buildings have avg. utilization rate of 110. 7% and Staten Island high school buildings 103. 2%. Data source: Blue Book target utilization rates 2012 -2013

Average Utilization Rates City-Wide 2012 -2013 100% 97. 4% 95. 2% 95% 90% *Calculated

Average Utilization Rates City-Wide 2012 -2013 100% 97. 4% 95. 2% 95% 90% *Calculated by dividing building enrollment by the target capacity 85% 80. 9% 80% 75% 70% Elementary Schools Middle Schools Source: 2012 -2013 DOE Blue Book High Schools

Proposed capital plan vs. needs for seats • Proposed capital plan has (at most)

Proposed capital plan vs. needs for seats • Proposed capital plan has (at most) 38, 754 seats – and this if Cuomo’s “Smart School” bond act is approved. (806 more seats funded only for design) • Plan admits real need of 49, 245 (though doesn’t explain how this figure was derived). • DOE’s consultants project enrollment increases of 60, 000 -70, 000 students by 2021 • At least 30, 000 seats needed to alleviate current overcrowding for just those districts that average above 100%. • Conclusion: real need for seats at least 100, 000.

Proposed capital plan vs. needs for seats part II • These figures do not

Proposed capital plan vs. needs for seats part II • These figures do not capture overcrowding at neighborhood level, including schools with K waiting lists, or need to expand pre-K, reduce class size, restore cluster rooms, or provide space for charters as required in new state law. • Does not capture need to replace trailers with capacity of more than 10, 890 seats. • Though DOE counts only 7, 158 students attending class in TCUs, actual number is far higher & likely over 10, 000. • Also, DOE utilization figures underestimate actual overcrowding according to most experts and Chancellor, who has appointed a “Blue Book” taskforce to improve them. • Revised utilization formula should be aligned to smaller classes, dedicated rooms for art, music, special education services, and more.

Class sizes have increased for six years in a row • Despite provisions in

Class sizes have increased for six years in a row • Despite provisions in 2007 state law requiring NYC reduce class sizes, classes in K-3 in 2013 -2014 largest since 1998; in grades 4 -8 largest since 2002. • K-3 average class size was 24. 9 (Gen Ed, inclusion & gifted classes) compared to 20. 9 in 2007, increase of 19%. • In grades 4 -8, the average class size was 26. 8, compared to 25. 1 in 2007 –increase of 6. 8%. • HS “core” academic classes, class size average 26. 7, up slightly since 2007. (Yet DOE’s measure of HS class sizes is inaccurate and their methodology changes, so estimates cannot be relied upon. ) • Averages do NOT tell the whole story – as more than 330, 000 students were in classes of 30 or more in 2013 -2014. • There were 40, 268 kids in K-3 in classes of 30 or more in 2013 -2014 – an increase of nearly 14% compared to the year before. • The number of teachers decreased by over 5000 between 2007 -2010, according to the Mayor’s Management Report, despite rising enrollment.

K-3 Class sizes are the largest since 1998 General ed, CTT and gifted: data

K-3 Class sizes are the largest since 1998 General ed, CTT and gifted: data from IBO 1998 -2005; DOE 2006 -2013 24. 90 24. 86 24. 46 23. 89 23. 25 22. 90 22. 38 22. 10 21. 6821. 55 21. 40 21. 2821. 12 21. 0020. 90 1998/99 1999/00 2000/01 2001/02 2002/03 2003/04 2004/05 2005/06 2006/07 2007/08 2008/09 2009/10 2010/11 2011/12 2012/13 2013/14

4 th – 8 th grade Class sizes largest since 2002 Gened, CTT and

4 th – 8 th grade Class sizes largest since 2002 Gened, CTT and gifted: data from IBO 1998 -2005; DOE 2006 -2013 28. 1 27. 5 27. 2 27. 4 27. 0 26. 8 26. 6 26. 7 26. 4 26. 3 25. 9 25. 8 25. 6 25. 1 25. 3 1998/99 1999/00 2000/01 2001/02 2002/03 2003/04 2004/05 2005/06 2006/07 2007/08 2008/09 2009/10 2010 -11 2011/12 2012/13 2013/14

Total no. of teachers dropped by 5, 000 since 2007 -8 data source: Mayor's

Total no. of teachers dropped by 5, 000 since 2007 -8 data source: Mayor's Management Report 79, 109 79, 021 76, 795 74, 958 73, 844 72, 787 FY 08 FY 09 FY 10 FY 11 FY 12 FY 13

Class sizes in CSD 21 have increased in grades K-3 by 20. 9% since

Class sizes in CSD 21 have increased in grades K-3 by 20. 9% since 2007 and are now far above Contracts for Excellence goals 26 25. 5 24. 8 24. 5 24. 9 23. 9 students per section 23. 5 C 4 E goals 22. 4 22. 9 Citywide actual 22 22. 0 21. 6 21 21. 0 22. 1 D 21 21. 4 21. 1 20. 9 20. 7 20. 5 20. 3 20 20. 1 19. 9 18 Baseline 2007 -8 2008 -9 2009 -10 2010 -11 2011 -12 2012 -13 2013 -14 Data sources: DOE Class Size Reports 2006 -2013, 2008 DOE Contracts for Excellence Approved Plan

CSD 21’s class sizes in grades 4 -8 have increased by 6. 5% since

CSD 21’s class sizes in grades 4 -8 have increased by 6. 5% since 2006 and are now far above Contracts for Excellence goals 30 27. 7 28 Students per section 26. 2 26 25. 6 27. 1 26. 6 26. 2 25. 1 24. 8 25. 8 26. 3 27. 6 27. 8 26. 6 26. 7 27. 9 C 4 E target 26. 8 25. 3 Citywide actual 24. 6 24 23. 8 23. 3 22. 9 22 20 18 Baseline 2007 -8 2008 -9 2009 -10 2010 -11 2011 -12 2012 -13 2013 -14 Data sources: DOE Class Size Reports 2006 -2013, 2008 DOE Contracts for Excellence Approved Plan D 21

Class sizes city-wide have increased in core HS classes as well, by 2. 3%

Class sizes city-wide have increased in core HS classes as well, by 2. 3% since 2007, though the DOE data is unreliable* 27 26. 6 26. 5 26 26. 1 26 26. 7 26. 5 26. 4 26. 2 26. 3 25. 7 C 4 E Target 25. 5 Citywide Actual 25. 2 25 24. 8 24. 5 24 2007 -08 2008 -09 2009 -10 2010 -11 2011 -12 2012 -13 2013 -14 *DOE’s class size data is unreliable & their methodology for calculating HS averages have changed year to year Data sources: DOE Class Size Reports 2006 -2013, 2008 DOE Contracts for Excellence Approved Plan

. . 30 E. 33 32 30 30 32 D 21 2 nd Grade

. . 30 E. 33 32 30 30 32 D 21 2 nd Grade 31 P. S. 101 THE VERRAZANO 31 P. S. 97 THE HIGHLAWN . . H s I. . . H N A S C or ri M 2 15 S. P. AA IS 9 0 9 S. P. 32 SO EN B 1 28 R. . . R 32 32 31 31 31 30 S. D 21 Kindergarten P. VE E H 25 T . . 27 1 01 E. N O 28 P. S. C E TH 0 1 0 25 S. 25 P. 26 AR G L. . . AR M . . . 26 M AR 09 2 S. E H 31 P. N 26 H T 77 31 1 . . E. 26 S. EN SO R EC M 26 P. B 28 1 . . 31 S. O H s 26 P. H 3 31 1 5 . . . I. . . A S C or ri M AA 27 P. S. 15 S. 2 P. . AV R G E 29 IS 99 0 S. R R VE E 2 8 S. 8 T 2 H E P. 38 S S. AN HI R 9 N P. 0 E E . . . S S. 0 DN UL A. . . 9 P. 9 S. IS CO A 9 H P. 7 T AC . . . S. AS H 1 E 88 HI I. . . P. G H S. MI L. C P. 21 H AE. . 5 S. M 2 L o 1 P. 6 A rris. . . S. R TU H. . P. 90 . S. ED RO. 1 N A T. . P. 01 S. TH CO. 1 H E P. 53 V. . . E S. H 0 OM RR 9 P. 5 E. . S. TH CR. 1 77 E G E. . T R. A H E V. . M AR. L. . . P. 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 P. H 0 95 T H 53 2 S. P. 34 33 33 32 32 31 31 30 30 29 29 P. S. T 01 1 S. P. Examples of schools in CSD 21 with large class sizes, K-3 D 21 1 st Grade 32 32 31 31 D 21 3 rd Grade 32 32 31 31 30 30 29 P. S. 215 Morris H. Weiss

CSD 21 Schools with large class sizes • At the Kindergarten level, there are

CSD 21 Schools with large class sizes • At the Kindergarten level, there are 13 schools in District 21 with an average class size of 25 or more, according to DOE’s November 2013 report. • In grades 1 -3, there are 11 schools in District 21 with at least one grade level averaging 30 students per class or more. • PS 099, PS 101, PS 128, and PS 215 have at least two grade levels in 1 -3 with 30 or more students. • In grades 4 -8, 20 schools have at least one grade level with an average class size of 30 or more.

At least 30, 000 seats currently needed just in districts averaging over 100% #

At least 30, 000 seats currently needed just in districts averaging over 100% # of Seats Needed in all districts with building utilization rates higher than 100% at HS level # of Seats Needed in all districts with ES building utilization rates higher than 100% 8, 000 7, 295 6, 000 7, 000 5, 318 5, 000 6, 000 3, 912 4, 000 5, 000 4, 000 3, 000 2, 279 2, 000 1, 929 1, 822 1, 637 1, 231 1, 451 1, 476 3, 000 2, 000 1, 000 518 189 0 0 D 11 D 15 D 20 D 22 D 24 D 25 D 26 D 27 D 30 D 31 QUEENS HS *These figures are the difference between capacity & enrollment in the organizational target # in 2012 -2013 Blue Book Source: 2012 -2013 DOE Blue Book STATEN ISLAND HS

Average Utilization Rates in CSD 21 compared to City-Wide 2012 -2013; elementary schools in

Average Utilization Rates in CSD 21 compared to City-Wide 2012 -2013; elementary schools in CSD 21 are very high at 95. 5% target utilization 100% 95. 5% 97. 4% 95. 2% 88. 6% 90% 79. 5% 80. 9% 70% *Calculated by dividing building enrollment by the target capacity 60% 50% 40% 30% 20% 10% 0% District 21 Citywide Elementary Schools District 21 Middle Schools Citywide Middle Schools Brooklyn High Schools Source: 2012 -2013 DOE Blue Book Citywide High Schools

Over-utilized ES buildings in CSD 21 and HS buildings in Brooklyn • 11 buildings

Over-utilized ES buildings in CSD 21 and HS buildings in Brooklyn • 11 buildings in CSD 21 are over-utilized, meaning 100% building utilization or higher. The seat need for these buildings is 1, 200. • In Brooklyn, 21 high school buildings are at or over 100% building utilization. The seat need for these buildings is over 9, 000. • Please note that the seat need here is higher than in the average building utilization rates for the respective districts because it only takes into account buildings that are over-utilized (100% or higher).

11 CSD 21 ES Buildings above 100% utilization 250% 198% 200% 144% 150% 141%

11 CSD 21 ES Buildings above 100% utilization 250% 198% 200% 144% 150% 141% 138% 131% 126% 123% 113% 105% 101% 100% 50% SP T R AN 09 S. 2 P. Source: 2012 -2013 DOE Blue Book *1, 200 ES seats needed to reduce all over-utilized buildings to 100% utilization 9 0 S. P. 00 1 S. O P. 9 9 S. R TA S. P. E BL 53 2 9 7 S. P. S. 1 77 15 2 S. P. 01 1 S. P. 3 2 5 S. P. S. 9 5 T R TR AN AN SP SP O O R TA BL BL E E 0%

EA L (A AD D T BK ER LY N M ID SHI CO

EA L (A AD D T BK ER LY N M ID SHI CO P D LE SC LL) FO CO H O R T LLE OL H EA AM GE H ST IL N TO S M Y FA IDW N H S M O IL O D Y N EW AC HS A JA U TR DE M M E E Y BR S M CH AD T H O O S IS K O BE LY N N D AB FO TE HS R C R ED AH D A H H S FR WA AM CA D L AN R AD E I M KL D R NC AM Y O. I M N LN S U D ST H R. R S R BR RE O L O O ET EO W O S O KL ED N G EV HS E O YN UC LT AT LD H S S TU IO TE S N D I TE IO AL N H C S (T LE AN AM C P O D U M S. A EM K R AC SU TS 128 N O SE & T ) R EC N E C T P N AR H. Y O M VO C K M L H C S H AR UN A IT S Y B O H A F S TR RT O AN N SI HS T TE C H. IT Y AC LL C L O C N AL LY BK 21 Brooklyn HS buildings above 100% Utilization 250% 202% 200% 150% 172% 164%163%159% 157% 149% 138% 124%123%122% 118%115% 109%106% 103%100% 50% 0% *9, 207 seats needed in Brooklyn to reduce building utilization to 100% Source: 2012 -2013 DOE Blue Book

New Seats in Capital Plan and DOE Enrollment Projections for CSD 21 5000 4,

New Seats in Capital Plan and DOE Enrollment Projections for CSD 21 5000 4, 434 4500 4000 3500 3, 156 3000 2500 2000 1, 416 1500 1000 912 500 0 ES and MS New Seats from Capital Plan FY 2015 -2019 Enrollment Projections, Statistical Forecasting 2011 -2021 Enrollment Projections, Grier Partnership 2011 -2021 Housing Starts, Estimated Growth 2012 -2021 According to enrollment projections 4, 572 to 5, 850 new students by 2021 but only 912 seats are allocated in the capital plan

City-wide Enrollment Projections K-8 vs. New Seats in Capital Plan *Statistical Forecasting does not

City-wide Enrollment Projections K-8 vs. New Seats in Capital Plan *Statistical Forecasting does not include D 75 students; K-8 Seats in Capital Plan are categorized as Small PS and PS/IS and includes 4, 900 seats for class size reduction if Bond issue passes. 60, 000 51, 954 50, 000 40, 589 38, 244 40, 000 36, 654 30, 000 20, 000 10, 000 0 Statistical Forecasting 2011 -2021 Grier Partnership 2011 - Housing Starts, Estimated Capital Plan, New Seats 2021 Growth 2012 -2021 2015 -2019 Source for Housing Starts: NYSCA Projected New Housing Starts 2012 -2021, http: //www. nycsca. org/Community/Capital Plan. Management. Reports. Data/Housing/20 12 -21 Housing. Web. Chart. pdf; Projected public school ratio, https: //data. cityofnewyork. us/Education/Pr ojected-Public-School-Ratio/n 7 ta-pz 8 k

City-wide Enrollment Projections HS vs. New Seats in Capital Plan 20, 000 *Statistical Forecasting

City-wide Enrollment Projections HS vs. New Seats in Capital Plan 20, 000 *Statistical Forecasting does not include D 75 students; HS Seats in Capital Plan are categorized as IS/HS and does not include seats for class size reduction 19, 461 18, 387 Source for Housing Starts: NYSCA Projected New Housing Starts 2012 -2021, http: //www. nycsca. org/Community/Capital. Plan Management. Reports. Data/Housing/201221 Housing. Web. Chart. pdf; Projected public school ratio, https: //data. cityofnewyork. us/Education/Projec ted-Public-School-Ratio/n 7 ta-pz 8 k 18, 000 16, 000 14, 000 13, 483 12, 000 10, 000 8, 000 6, 000 4, 000 3, 102 2, 000 0 Statistical Forecasting Grier Partnership 2011 Housing Starts, Capital Plan, New Seats 2011 -2021 Estimated Growth 20122015 -2019 2021

Also Kindergarten Waitlists in many neighborhoods # of Kids on waitlists for Kindergarten 2011

Also Kindergarten Waitlists in many neighborhoods # of Kids on waitlists for Kindergarten 2011 -2013 by Borough 1000 900 800 700 600 500 400 300 200 100 0 883 751 720 679 569 946 942 622 2011 462 2012 211 114 112 Man Bronx 2013 163 47 Brooklyn Queens % of Schools w/ Waitlists by District* 2013 50% 43% 45% 38% 37% 40% 33% 31% 35% 31% 30% 23% 25% 18% 20% 14% 15% 13% 15% 8% 8% 8% 7% 7% 6% 10% 5% 5% 5% 4% 4% 5% 0% 2 3 4 5 6 8 9 10111213141516171819202122242526272829303132 Districts 1, 7, 23 not included as they are "choice districts") 110 SI Zoned Kindergarten wait lists, citywide 2009 -13 3000 2588 2500 2382 2361 2000 1885 1500 1000 500 499 0 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013

2014 Kindergarten Wait Lists in CSD 21 • According to DOE, the wait list

2014 Kindergarten Wait Lists in CSD 21 • According to DOE, the wait list for zoned Kindergarten spots in 2014 is smaller citywide than in 2013, with 1, 242 zoned students on wait lists as of April 21, 2014. • 19 of 32 school districts currently have at least one school with a waiting list. • 63 schools have zoned wait lists: 20 in Brooklyn, 17 in Queens, 11 in Manhattan, 11 in The Bronx, and 4 in Staten Island. • DOE less transparent than ever: the number of zoned students for particular schools if less than 10 is not revealed – and methodology for creating wait lists unexplained. • Over 7, 000 families got none of their choices but unclear how many were put on wait list for their zoned school. • There are three schools in District 21 that have waiting lists for Kindergarten. These schools are PS 101 The Verrazano (24 students), PS 121 Nelson A. Rockefeller (1 -9 students), and PS 128 Bensonhurst (27 students). • At least 52 and no more than 60 zoned students are on wait lists for Kindergarten in District 21.

8 District 21 Elementary Schools and 1 Brooklyn High School in TCUs • There

8 District 21 Elementary Schools and 1 Brooklyn High School in TCUs • There are eight TCUs at four schools in CSD 21. These schools are PS 95, PS 97, PS 203 and PS 253. The reported enrollment in these TCUs is 310. • The total capacity for the eight TCUs in CSD 21 is 277. • One school, East New York Family Academy, has six TCUs with no enrollment reported and thus not reflected in the DOE statistics. It has twelve classrooms and the capacity listed for each classroom is 0. • At least 310 seats needed to remove students from CSD 21 trailers.

Seats Need for CSD 21 and Brooklyn High Schools • The proposed FY 2015

Seats Need for CSD 21 and Brooklyn High Schools • The proposed FY 2015 -2019 Capital Plan will add 912 elementary and middle school seats in District 21 despite the enrollment projections showing 4, 500 to 5, 850 more new students by 2021. • In District 21, 1, 200 new seats are needed just to reduce the elementary and middle school students in buildings at or over 100% utilization. • More than 300 elementary school seats are needed to remove students from TCUs. • The Capital Plan will not address roughly 6, 000 to 7, 350 seats needed in District 21. • In Brooklyn high schools, over 7, 000 new seats are needed to address present overcrowding in buildings over 100% utilization. • Yet according to the Capital Plan, no seats are currently expected to be added in Brooklyn high schools.

New charter provisions passed in state budget • Any charter co-located in a NYC

New charter provisions passed in state budget • Any charter co-located in a NYC school building cannot be evicted and has veto powers before they leave the building – even if they are expanding and squeezing out NYC public school students. • This includes any charter co-location agreed to before 2014 – including the three Success charter schools approved right before Bloomberg left office. • Any new or charter school in NYC adding grade levels must be “provided access to facilities” w/in five months of asking for it. • If they don’t like the space offered by the city, they can appeal to the Commissioner King, who is a former charter school director and has never ruled against a charter school. • . • NO FISCAL IMPACT statement or analysis accompanying this bill. • In addition, the state will provide all charter schools with per-pupil funding increases, amounting to $500 over the next 3 years and provide them funding for pre-K.

Charter space provisions ONLY apply to NYC • Upstate legislators fought off making charters

Charter space provisions ONLY apply to NYC • Upstate legislators fought off making charters eligible for state facilities funds – which would have been better for NYC. • Yet legislators did not block these onerous provisions for NYC , where we have the most expensive real estate & the most overcrowded schools in the state. • If the DOE doesn’t offer charter schools free space, the city must pay for a school’s rent in private space or give them an extra 20 percent over their operating aid every year going forward. • After the city spends $40 million per year on charter rent, the state will begin chipping in 60% of additional cost.

How many charters will there be entitled to free space? • We have 183

How many charters will there be entitled to free space? • We have 183 charters in NYC, 119 in co-located space. • 22 new charters are approved to open next year or the year after, all entitled to free space. • 52 additional charter schools left to approve until we reach the cap raised in 2010 – with legislative approval – all entitled to free space. • Any new or existing co-located charter can also be authorized to expand grade levels through HS and will be entitled to free space. • DOE will be paying $5. 4 M in annual rent for four years for 3 Success Academy schools that only have 484 students next year – at a cost of $11, 000 per student. • This doesn’t count the unknown renovation costs in these 3 schools, also paid for by the city.

Blue book data & Utilization formula inaccurate & underestimates actual level of overcrowding •

Blue book data & Utilization formula inaccurate & underestimates actual level of overcrowding • Class sizes in grades 4 -12 larger than current averages & far above goals in city’s C 4 E plan & will likely force class sizes upwards • Doesn’t require full complement of cluster rooms or special needs students to have dedicated spaces for their mandated services • Doesn’t properly account for students now housed in trailers in elementary and middle schools. • Doesn’t account for co-locations which subtract about 10% of total space and eat up classrooms with replicated administrative & cluster rooms. Small schools use space less efficiently • Instructional footprint shrank full size classroom only 500 sq. feet min. , risking building code/safety violations at many schools as 20 -35 sq feet per student required. • Special ed classrooms defined as only 240 -499 sq ft, thought State Ed guidelines call for 75 sq ft per child with special needs; classrooms this small would allow only 3 - 7 students.

Comparison of class sizes in Blue book compared to current averages & Contract for

Comparison of class sizes in Blue book compared to current averages & Contract for excellence goals Grade levels UFT Contract class size limits Target class sizes in "blue book" How many sq ft per student Current average C 4 E class Size required in classrooms class sizes goals according to NYC building code Kindergarten 25 20 23 19. 9 35 1 st-3 rd 4 th-5 th 32 32 20 28 25. 5 26 19. 9 22. 9 20 20 28 27. 4 22. 9 20 30 26. 7* 24. 5 20 30 (Title I) 6 th-8 th 33 (non-Title I) HS (core classes) 34 *DOE reported HS class sizes unreliable

Some Recommendations • 38, 000 seats in capital plan is too low, esp. given

Some Recommendations • 38, 000 seats in capital plan is too low, esp. given existing overcrowding, projected enrollment, pre. K expansion, class size reduction, new mandates to provide charter schools with space • Also very low as compared to Mayor’s plan to create or preserve 200, 000 affordable housing units. • Council should expand the seats in five year capital plan. • Commission an independent analysis by City Comptroller, IBO or other agency. • Adopt reforms to planning process so that schools are built along with housing in future through mandatory inclusionary zoning, impact fees etc. • Over half of all states and 60% of large cities have impact fees, requiring developers to pay for costs of infrastructure improvements, including schools.