New York City district school enrollment dropped by about 64,000 students, or about 4.7 percent, from pre-pandemic levels, whereas charter school enrollment increased 3.2% this school year. That’s bad news for the district because public schools are funded based on enrollment counts. Perhaps ironically, the news is doubly bad for the teachers unions, considering the recent surge in support for — and expansion of — school choice.
Here we go again
Now it’s happening all over again.
More than 5,500 US public schools closed each of the first two weeks of 2022, according to school information aggregator Burbio.
Nearly two years after “two weeks to slow the spread,” many teachers unions are still fighting to close public schools. Factions within New York City’s largest teachers union, the United Federation of Teachers, pushed to close schools for in-person instruction earlier this month. Some union members even filed a lawsuit to close schools for “two weeks” again.