I submitted the following testimony to the Committee on Education of the New York City Council, when it held public hearings February 10, 2026, on the current system of natural control of the schools.
I studied mayoral control and other forms of governance when I wrote my first book, The Great School Wars: New York City, 1805-1973.
My testimony follows:
The time has come to rethink the governance of the New York City public schools.
Mayoral control in its present form was enacted by the Legislature in 2002, at the behest of newly elected ayor Michael Bloomberg.
The Legislature was no doubt dazzled by Mayor Bloomberg. He was and is an amazing businessman who built an iconic technology-media corporation.
To think that this titan of American business was willing to take responsibility for the school system was an exciting prospect.
What is more, the Mayor boldly said that he could fix the schools. He projected confidence. He believed, and he was convincing.
The Legislature gave him an unprecedented level of control over the system. The Mayor would appoint a majority of a new board, which he called the Panel on Education Policy, its name a signal of its powerlessness. The eight of 13 members appointed by Bloomberg served at his pleasure, not with a fixed term. This arrangement eliminated any likelihood that his appointees would exercise independent judgment. On the rare occasion that they did, he fired them.
And of course, the legislation gave Bloomberg the power to pick anyone he wanted as Chancellor.
For Chancelor, Bloomberg appointed a lawyer, Joel Klein, who had no experience as an educator or an administrator.
Klein spent 8 1/2 years as Chancellor.
During the 12 years of the Bloomberg mayoralty, there were many changes–the dissolution of large high schools, the creation of scores of small schools, the opening of charter schools, the imposition of a standardized citywide curriculum in math and science, the launch of a Leadership Academy to train new principals, and a heavy emphasis on standardized testing to judge students, teachers, principals and schools.
Schools received A-F grades, based on whether their test scores went up or down. Schools were closed if their scores were persistently low. Test scores were everything.
When Klein left on the first day of 2011, the Mayor appointed a retired magazine publisher who had no relevant experience. That didn’t work. After 3 months, she was gone.
While there was much breathless reporting about a “New York City Miracle,” there was no miracle. New York City’s public schools are not a paragon for other cities to follow.
The problems of educating New York City’s public school children have not been solved.
Mayoral control in the administrations of DiBlasio and Adams continued to reflect the inherent flaws of the concentration of power in the hands of the Mayor.
If we step back for a minute, the nation is now experiencing a Presidency in which almost all power resides in one person: the President. Surrounded by a servile Cabinet, a Congress whose majority supinely obeys almost every Presidential order, and a Supreme Court with a sympathetic conservative majority, Americans can see daily the dangers of a government that has no checks and balances.
The New York City public school system is no different. Checks and balances are necessary. Presently, there are none.
Top-down management with no checks and balances is especially inappropriate for the school system. Parents and communities feel that they have no voice, and they are right.
The truth is that there is no organizational structure that is perfect. Mayoral control has been tried for nearly a quarter-century. We now know that it has multiple flaws. We know that there has been no”New York City miracle.”
Some adjustment is needed now.
I propose reviving the Board of Education. Every borough should be represented on that Board. The Board should select the Chancellor, who reports to the Board on a regular basis. The Board should be composed of people devoted to improving the public schools–either as educators or community advocates. They should know the schools and school leaders in their borough. They should regularly attend meetings of local school boards. They should serve for a set term and should be free to exercise their independent judgment. They should receive a salary for their time, so that their service on the Board is properly compensated. It would be a full-time position.
Clearly, the Mayor has a large stake in the schools. He or she should have representatives (but not a majority) on a reconstructed Board of Education.
The Mayor’s ultimate power is that he or she controls the budget.
Will such an arrangement solve all problems? No. But it will create a structure where parents and communities have a voice and are heard. The Board, when choosing a Chancellor, should select an experienced educator, whether chosen from the city or from another school system.
There will still be controversies. It’s inevitable. Over funding. Over building new classrooms to meet the requirement to reduce class sizes. Over charter schools. Over admissions to gifted programs and selective schools. Over racial segregation in a system whose students are overwhelmingly Hispanic, Black, and Asian.
The Mayor–every Mayor–has a full plate of issues to deal with: economic development, public safety, transportation, natural disasters, building codes, public health, housing, and much, much more. He or she doesn’t have time to run the school system, nor is he or she likely to be an experienced educator.
I can’t think of any important problem that mayoral control has solved.
My advice: Create a stable and democratic structure.

How dare you, Diane? You speak from experience, and common sense! That is no way to talk when choosing School Boards and- from what I have seen in NYC – Chancellors. 😀😃
Anyway, I hope they listened to you. I want the new Mayor to succeed, and more than that, the schools and students in all the NYC boroughs. If Mamdami can create an environment for success, more power to him!
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Most other school districts in New York state adhere to a democratic system of management that Diane describes. It promotes citizen engagement and input since it allows parents and community members to have say in what is happening in their schools. It avoids the usual pitfalls of making appointments wholly political and detached from stakeholders. Why should the people of New York City be denied participating in their community schools in the same way as other New York residents can simply because it is a large system?
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Hi Diane, Why did you originally think that there might be a benefit from Mayoral control? Why did you think the traditional democratic system with an elected school board was not working?
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The system is so large–at that time, about one million students–and had so many problems–that I fell into the camp of “why not try something different?” There was no evidence that intense centralization would work, but Bloomberg convinced the Legislature (and me) that he could fix any problem. Instead, he unleashed disruption and chaos. MBAs running around with brilliant ideas, detached from reality. Gates, Broad and others poured huge sums into the Bloomberg-Klein agenda. And they had a slick PR operation that regularly crowed about their successes.
The only time NYC had had mayoral control was during the reign of Boss Tweed, who used the concentration of power to give contracts to his friends.
The Bloomberg regime essentially copied the tenets of NCLB–heavy emphasis on test scores, accountability, charter schools. I soured on both of them.
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One more thing: NYC did not have an elected school board when Bloomberg came in. Its members were appointed by the five borough presidents and the mayor. Although NYC had elected community boards, the central board had not been elected in more than a century.
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I recall for a time the NYC district was split up into several community school boards under local in control. However, if I remember correctly, many of them fell into the same patronage and nepotism trap that seems to plague a lot of organizations. I was offered a coordinator job in the Bronx when I was “excessed” one summer, but I returned my former district offered me another position opened up. It was why I left the high school and started working in an elementary school. I wanted to teach, not sit in an office.
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Yes, there was a period, late 20th century, when schools were overseen by local community boards. Some of them were corrupt. But the fact that some were corrupt was used to undermine all community input.
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Interesting to know, retired teacher! Thanks for sharing this!!
There are different council options and configurations out there. In the 80s, in my city (which never had an elected school board at all until recently), under mayoral control, an elected local school council was added for every school. I’m not aware of reports about corruption on those, except regarding discoveries of some elected council members who were ineligible due to criminal convictions –and which they had not disclosed. (You’d think they’d automatically do background checks on them, as with faculty and staff…)
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Well thought out Diane.
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Thank you, Mark
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While people may grow tired of the difficulties of making representative government work, it is inherently more morally uptight than power-centralized forms of government. When power lodges within a few people or within one person, corruption is waiting at the door like poverty and ignorance.
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“The Mayor’s ultimate power is that he or she controls the budget.”
Do you think that is ideal? If so, why –and would you recommend that POTUS have “the power of the purse” instead of Congress?
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These different levels of government are not analogous.
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My mom was elected to a suburban school board for many years and the board had the power of the purse there, not the mayor.
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That was a small village, and I’m not sure about how that works in large cities because in mine we don’t have a fully elected school board yet (it’s new and just partially elected for now). But wouldn’t the city council control the budget?
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(Or maybe it varies by location and size?)
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“If we step back for a minute, the nation is now experiencing a Presidency in which almost all power resides in one person: the President. Surrounded by a servile Cabinet, a Congress whose majority supinely obeys almost every Presidential order, and a Supreme Court with a sympathetic conservative majority, Americans can see daily the dangers of a government that has no checks and balances.”
A completely inappropriate paragraph to include in this article. It shows Diane’s untreated TDS. I agree with the overall point she made. Being less politically charged 27/7/365 opens up people to be more willing to consider your opinions.
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