There is a saying in New York that all the state government decisions are made by “three men in a room”: the governor, the speaker of the Assembly, and the speaker of the Senate. The latter two have been indicted by the U.S Attorney on corruption charges. Now it appears that there is trouble ahead for Governor Andrew Cuomo.
The New York Times reported that leaders of the Moreland Commission on government ethics, which Cuomo created and then disbanded less than a year later, have complained that he interfered with their work.
Senior officials of a state anticorruption commission shut down last year by Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo have told federal prosecutors that they believed he and his staff intervened in its operations “in a manner that, at times, led them to question the independence” of the panel, the prosecutors said in a recent letter.
The letter, which briefly summarizes the officials’ statements, was attached to court papers filed on Friday night by lawyers for Sheldon Silver, the former Assembly speaker, as he prepares for his corruption case in federal court in Manhattan.
The officials have not spoken publicly about the involvement of the governor’s office in the operation of the panel, which was known as the Moreland Commission. Their statements to prosecutors are in contrast to Mr. Cuomo’s assertions last summer that his office did not inappropriately intervene in the work of the panel, which he created in July 2013 and abruptly disbanded nine months later.
Sheldon Silver, the speaker of the New York State Assembly, left the courthouse on Thursday in Manhattan.Sheldon Silver, Assembly Speaker, Took Millions in Payoffs, U.S. SaysJAN. 22, 2015
In Buffalo to discuss jobs, Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo on Monday was peppered with questions on the Moreland Commission.Defiant, Cuomo Denies Interfering With Ethics CommissionJULY 28, 2014
interactive The Short Life of an Anticorruption CommissionJULY 23, 2014
Now comes a report that Governor Cuomo took $200 million earmarked for school aid and gave it to the New York Racing Association, one of the governor’s major donors.
And, last comes a report from Perdido Street School blogger that Governor Cuomo’s “receivership program” for low-performing schools will be a boondoggle for the charter industry.
What we have here is “stacking ranking” for schools, with the state playing rank and yank every year, adding schools to the privatization, er, receivership list, setting them up to “fail” and then handing them over to the privatizers, profiteers and/or charter operators.
Just as with stack ranking for employees, the program will disempower, demoralize and ultimately destroy the system (this is also the same rationale behind Cuomo’s APPR teacher evaluation system, btw – ranking teachers every year and declaring 7% “ineffective” no matter what.)
Just ask Microsoft, which used stack ranking as its evaluation system for employees, how well that worked for them as Apple was kicking them to the wayside in competition.
But of course if you’re Andrew Cuomo, you want to destroy the system – that’s exactly what he promised to do in 2014 and that’s the plan he’s been carrying out since.

Did you happen to see the Times yesterday. At the end of this story it mentions Kathleen Rice and intimates that she told the investigators she felt Cuomo was throttling their work.
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Wow, all those dirty, back room deals coming to light, I hope they expose him and his cronies. L.A., you’re next. Not the governor but all those corporate deformers and their political monies buying public education.
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Cuomo’s compulsions to control caused the commission scandal, but I suspect it has also restrained him in terms of everything, as unethical as it all may be — he stops short of criminality, or so it seems. I don’t know what Bharara will be able to nail him on, but he may well have something now. And it may involve real estate.
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Cuomo needs to be caught and caged, period. He is blithering idiot who obviously cannot keep track of what he says to whom and when.
Now it has caught up with him, and he will have to face the music in some way or another.
I look forward to his demise. He is a monster.
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“Good” info to know in light of the fact that my school’s fourth grade was collapsed from four to three sections due to budget constraints this year. My child now has 32 kids in her class and my first grader has 29 kids in the classroom.
The school has been forced to collapse grades three years in a row.
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This happens in CA also – I have 29 in First Grade – too large for primary. Where does the money go? Class size is a priority.
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Let’s hope that Cuomo’s brazen, ill conceived plans catch up with him sooner rather than later before he has the chance to do anymore damage to the public schools he is so determined to destroy. You can judge a person by the company he keeps. With two tainted associates under investigation, it can’t be too long before one of them gives up the kingpin of the operation. I love a good mystery! Let’s hope he’s indicted before he plays God with the bottom 5%.
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There is little doubt that some of Cuomo’s deals were quid pro quo – proving it is the tricky part.
That so many of his donors seem to have benefited legislatively from his influence doesn’t seem in doubt – was any of it illegal though.
At the very least Cuomo comes off as severely unethical – and seems like he intended the Moreland commission to be a political witchhunt to threaten his opponents in the legislature – which again if it isn’t illegal, should be.
Given how much his campaign coffers have benefitted in addition to his personal accrual of wealth (how many copies of his biography sold again?) – I can’t imagine it would be hard to convince a jury that where there’s buckets of smoke there’s got to be a fire.
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Are you aware of the situation in Sachem school district on LI? They were told they would get $14M in state aid and budgeted for that amount. They got $6M. When the supt called Sen. Flanagan about the situation, he was told to be happy with what they got. After the school year started, they are saying they will lay off 40-45 teachers Oct. 1. Class sizes are already very big and will get bigger if they combine classes.
There is talk about the district going into receivership. It is the second largest on LI, so will be a coup for the privatizers and create inroads into suburban districts who are not traditionally labelled as failing.
We could use your help on this. I don’t work in the district but understand the implications for all that work under the 2% tax levy cap and budget accordingly. My father, a school business official, disliked senior Gov. Cuomo because he did similar things to school districts during his tenure. Apples and trees…
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I know Sachem too well….the 2% tax cap is a noose around the neck of larger districts and if the state doesn’t give more aide ensures a decline over time as teachers do not like a lack of job security in a fiscally insecure district or when the demands of the job are impossible not because they mind working hard, but because the workload is unreasonable but because circumstances demand it.
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This started way before the current administration.
http://www.buzzfeed.com/kevintownsend/200-million-of-school-funds-to-ny-racing-industry?utm_term=.bl5mvOdL3#.smX1j3lJw
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Cuomo is not going to get indicted or jammed up. The legal requirements for that have not and will not be met. There would need to be Cuomo on recording or in writing saying “I Andrew Cuomo am doing X for $X….” This will never happen. After Citizens United etc, the bar for quid pro quo is quite high….impossibly high. Cuomo has spent his entire career playing at the margins of ethical behavior. He knows the precise locations of all lines and will always stay just a micrometer away from crossing said lines.
Us teachers in NYS, faced with the monumental and existential threats Cuomo has posed to our profession, and his winning of almost all victories against us, understandably creates within us a deep longing for him to be indicted and therefore leave the scene. Unfortunately, our fight is actually much larger than Cuomo…..as much as him getting indicted would cause insane amounts of joy. We have to at some point begin the process of honestly assessing the past 10 years or so and the growth of the reform movement. This process was not done in secret and it was not hidden from view. It happened in the full light of day, every step. We need to ask ourselves why we, collectively, did not see every step for what it was….Coleman and the emergence of common core etc….it was all so obvious. And yet our collective voices (our unions) sat at tables, appeased, negotiated, and tried to become “part of the solution.” The privatizing/ reform movement followed and follows deeply legible historical pathways of other privatizing efforts. Missing this one is on us. We need to stop hoping for saviors in the form of US Attorneys, judges, and scholars. Our victory, if one happens, will not be because of them. It will have to come from us.
No more faith. No more hoping and praying. We need deep honesty, critical assessment of our recent past, and a willingness to engage in meaningful action.
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Brilliantly put!
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“On Saturday, Mr. Fitzpatrick declined to comment on the court filing, saying he was not privy to the exact substance of what was said in the interviews between prosecutors and the individuals in question. He added that there remains in his mind a big difference between interference and attempted interference.”
Big difference between interference and attempted interference.
Big difference for a co-chair, not so much for Cuomo. And he’s hedging on his original statement that there was no interference.
At the very least, Cuomo’s tactics should be fully exposed and reprimanded. Let him lose all clout. He did it to himself.
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For all the harm he’s doing to children and teachers, I hope they throw his sorry behind in prison!
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ADDED INTRIGUE: We also heard today that Attorney General Eric Schneiderman has given Tim Wu a position as lawyer and special advisor. Tim is not only the father of net neutrality and advocate for consumer protections against telecom price gouging, he got 40% of the vote (and a NYT endorsement) against Cuomo’s Lieutenant Governor Kathy Hochul.
Pollsters say a surging Wu only lost after Randi Weingarten made a late, surprise endorsement of Hochul through a robocall that made NY teachers cringe.
Schneiderman has a hot n’cold relationship with Cuomo, but this move by Schneiderman is likely giving Cuomo fits. At first it seems like Schneiderman is going for some progressive street cred (although Wu is actually quite pro-business), allying with a leader in a movement of a younger, tech-savvy corruption fighters.
Tim made a few headlines last year by spelling out four specific statutes he says were violated by Cuomo’s Moreland meddling: “criminal solicitation of official misconduct, conspiracy to perform official misconduct, obstructing governmental administration and hindering prosecution”.
Wu said then it was actually pretty cut and dry, and he was shocked at the inaction by Schneiderman, Comptoller DiNapoli or Preet Bharara for failure to act, and for state legislatures to stand by silently – that is until they themselves were indicted.
http://www.capitalnewyork.com/article/albany/2014/07/8549952/tim-wu-moreland-meddling-broke-state-laws
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Sachem sd is screwed. Closing a new school with a corrupt school board is unacceptable to our community. Loretta Lynch is being called upon to investigate.
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