A reader in NYC writes:
Diane,
People in Staten Island, which is the borough with the greatest loss of life, is getting very little assistance compared to lower Manhattan. Some areas are not getting food or water. Those people are desperate. When Bloomberg said yesterday that temps in the low 50s is not cold, I wanted to slap him through the TV since this is the same man who had a window-sized air conditioner installed in his SUV so the interior can remain cool during the summer when it’s parked outside City Hall. But the marathon will go on. I suppose if people from around the world and other parts of the US are already here, then maybe it should. But I worry for the people in our city who need the assistance of the police department. Looting is on the rise.
But I think you should know how heartless the DoE is being. Today teachers are to report back to work. The fear is that it’s for useless PD which I hope is not the case. But many are without gas and transit is still running slowly and the crowds are huge.
So what did Walcott do??? Late last night, when most people are asleep or not checking their DoE email, he announced a 10am arrival time.. I am sure the majority of teachers did not see that notice. This late start time could have been announced yesterday or the day before. It made perfect sense given the overcrowding on highways, buses and trains. The lack of common courtesy and respect for teachers is so evident. I wonder if Walcott informed his own daughter??? Walcott does not act without the mayor’s permission since mayoral control. This was a deliberate slap in the face to teachers, many of whom have lost property, living without hot water and electricity, or stuck in their high-rise apartments. Many of whom cannot find enough gas to get them to and from work. There was nothing to “prepare” for. Teachers know how to conduct a lesson on a hurricane and its aftermath. I just hope the teachers who show up today are given the courtesy to decide for themselves what needs to be done since report cards are soon due, along with any other paperwork for the ending of the first marking period, parent-teacher conferences, and of course preparing their classroom for November which usually requires new bulletin boards.
I sincerely hope they take the time to find out if any other staff or members of their school community need assistance and what they can do to help. Common Core and testing be damned!!

This is the height of absurdity! Risk life and limb to report to work when highways are clogged with hours and hours of grid lock, buses aren’t running and subways are a watery mess! Having experienced the depths to which systems that would issue such draconian orders will sink to, it causes me to pause to ascertain this “command.” Even the serfs of the Middle Ages got a break when disasters struck. Wonder if the reason behind this heartless, cruel and irrational order has anything to do with eliminating older, more expensive faculty for dereliction of duty? I’ve seen actions taken by districts that are equally absurd, but none the less used for terminations. Systems pick and chose who will be capriciously destroyed under just such draconian decrees!
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At my school today teachers had a meeting with our administrators who reached out to those who had losses. Then we went to our rooms to do whatever we deemed necessary. I happily put up my bulletin board for novemeber and did a few other odds and ends. My principal came to each classroom to personally ask how each of us was managing and about our families.
I don’t live far from my school so transportation was not an issue. There is an out for those who couldn’t make it in. There is a form to complete so the day is waived. I knew about the 10 AM time last night but made the decision to come in my regular time. It would have been nice to have been told earlier but we are sort of used to the mayor and the chancellor keeping everything a secret until the last minute.
For me, it was good to see colleagues and know everyone was safe and have a chance to work in my room without students. I thought how nice if we could have that kind of time on a regular basis. Usually I have to come in super early or stay late to get things done.
I was also happy to get away from my house for a few hours and take my mind off Sandy.
None of this says anything about the way the mayor treats his teachers. That is how he is. He isn’t going to change. I am hopeful the next mayor will be better
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I find his behavior towards teachers to be reprehensible. I remember when the Goldman
Sachs employee wrote an article for the NY Times in reference to corruption and greed. Bloomberg went to the GS offices the next day to offer moral support and told them to keep their chins up.
That’s all you need to know about this man….money guides all of his decisions.
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I’m under 3ft of water. I live on SI and teach in Brooklyn. My principal called me and said not to worry about coming in on Friday. I agree with your comments. Thank you for your post.
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Even Floridian teachers got a week off after Charlie and Frances. To expect teachers back after such a short recovery period is inhumane.
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I was informed that those of us that did not show up today will have our pay docked.We have been displaced from our homes ,paying to live elswhere and dealing with real tragedy .We would love nothing more than to be able to be with our students . They haven’t figured out that being a teacher in our great city is NOT ABOUT MONEY IT IS ABOUT LOVE!!!!! IT IS A DISGRACE THAT THAT OUR DEAR CHANCELLOR AND MAYOR HAVE FIGURED OUT HOW TO MAKE MONEY FROM OUR TRAGEDY
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In Texas, after Hurricane Ike, we were off for nearly 2 weeks. I couldn’t imagine having had to go back within a week. We had no water, no electricity, where would I have put my kids!!?? Everything was shut down.
Teachers need to get some marbles and stop allowing this abuse. Women are historically an abused group, but it’s time to SAY NO–NO! “I am mad as hell abd I’m not going to take no more!!”
Enough already!!
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Correction…nearly three weeks.
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There was an email from the DOE regarding those who were unable to show up on Friday. Please read it. The day will not be deducted from CAR if you complete the form.
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It was wrong of the DOE to require teachers to go in today.
It could have been made optional for teachers who could get to school easily and wanted to take care of a few things.
There was no good reason to send teachers on cumbersome treks when many were dealing with home damage and other effects of the storm.
A gesture of goodwill and understanding would have done no harm.
I didn’t have to go in, since I normally work Mondays through Thursdays (and won’t be paid at all for this week). But had I been required to go in, it might easily have taken me more than two hours each way.
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Diane,
While some principals allowed teachers to do what THEY felt needed to be done in their classrooms, it wasn’t the same experience for a displaced teacher who left this comment on the UFT FB page:
“Since our school was displaced, we shared a hot auditorium with 2 other schools and were subjected to a video on NYS Alternate Assessment! I would have felt much more productive volunteering to help clean a park or distribute water.”
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I was one of those who did not receive Walcott’s email and reported early to my school in Queens, NY. Most of my colleagues are without power, many have had property destroyed, several have lost everything. My principal did the right thing and spoke about the destruction to our colleague’s lives. We spoke about setting up a system of support for our community. Then, we spent the rest of the day preparing for our student’s return on Monday. It was wrong to require teachers to report to work, but we made the best of it, Walcott and Bloomberg be damned.
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I also did not hear about the 10:00am start until my husband called from his school to tell me. Since I was ready anyway and the house was dark and cold without heat and electricity i went in usual time. We sat in a classroom having PD all day long but first we had our doom and gloom lecture. it seems that we are going from a B to a C on the progress reports coming out, for a few years we actually had an A. So we had to listen to all the things WE have to do to make the kids succeed. We have to get them college ready and they must graduate in four years. Finally someone raised their had and spoke the truth. She told the principal that the just aren’t smart and we’re doing the best we can. I rest my case!
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