Home Community Education Jewish Schools Unite to Fight Budget Cuts

Jewish Schools Unite to Fight Budget Cuts

The TEACH NYS group at a reception in a historic room in the Capitol

The TEACH NYS group at a reception in a historic room in the Capitol

After you have 15,000 people call the Governor to protest his proposed $62 million in cuts to New York’s private schools, how do you send an even stronger message to the powers that be in Albany? If you’re TEACH NYS, you arrange for 50 of the most important Jewish leaders from throughout New York to travel to Albany and tell their legislators, “We need help.” So, TEACH NYS arranged for a coach bus to pick up yeshivah leaders from Brooklyn, Manhattan, Queens, Long Island, Monsey and Westchester. Nearly 50,000 yeshivah students were represented by dozens of yeshivah leaders in Albany. The group met with over 40 elected officials, declaring their one clear message—stop the disproportionate cuts to private schools in New York.

“This was an unprecedented display of unity. By working together we sent a clear and united message that our community’s top priority is the affordability of a yeshivah education. It’s simple—we need government to provide our yeshivahs with their fair share of funds,” stated David G. Greenfield, Director and Counsel of TEACH NYS.

TEACH NYS worked with the Orthodox Union, Yeshiva University’s National Tuition Initiative, the Sephardic Community Federation and dozens of yeshivahs to bring together an incredibly diverse group of school administrators and lay leaders. After an initial burst of meetings in Albany, the group was welcomed to a glatt kosher lunch and reception hosted by Assemblyman Vito Lopez and Senator Carl Kruger. At the reception, over a dozen legislators stopped by and spoke of their support for yeshivahs in New York State. The Governor sent one of his top advisers, Deputy Secretary Marty Mack, to address this important gathering. Mr. Mack was incredibly gracious and pledged to work with the Jewish community leaders.

The leaders spent most of the day rushing from one meeting to the next advocating on behalf of their top priority—restoring the CAP funding for private schools. CAP is a state-mandated program for all schools. It is a security measure that requires schools to take attendance at the start of every period to ensure that students are attending their classes and not leaving the school during class time. While the Governor proposed a 3.3% cut for public school funding in his December budget, he wanted to cut funding to yeshivahs by an astounding 44% primarily by eliminating CAP funding for private schools. The average yeshivah receives over $100,000 in CAP funding each year. Unless the proposed budget is changed by April first, before it is passed into law, yeshivahs will lose these funds forever.

TEACH NYS extended special thanks to the nine team leaders who volunteered to lead the groups of community leaders to key meetings with elected officials. Those team leaders were: TEACH NYS’ David Greenfield, SCF Policy Director Jeff Leb, Yeshiva University’s Eli Shapiro, the Orthodox Union’s Howard Beigelman, TEACH NYS’s Andres Berry, Village of Lawrence Trustee Michael Fragin, Political Consultant Michael Tobman, International Political Strategist Shai Franklin and Former Assemblyman Ryan Karben.

“We took an issue that legislators were barely aware of in December and have moved it to the top of their respective lists. Everyone from the Assembly to the Senate to the Governor’s office now recognizes the importance of the CAP program not just to our communities but to the state of New York as a whole,” said TEACH NYS Vice President and CUNY Trustee Sam Sutton.

TEACH NYS is the only organization exclusively dedicated to solving the tuition crisis, working on behalf of the 500,000 private school students in New York State.