ALGAE BLOOM IS BACK ON THE FRENCH AMERICAN SCHOOL OF NEW YORK POND

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WPCNR LETTER TICKER. From a White Plains CitizeNetReporter. September 3, 2019:

Unfortunately “algae bloom” is back again on FASNY’s property 

Dear Mayor and Common Council,


Hope you had an enjoyable Labor Day holiday. 


Unfortunately when we returned home we found that “algae bloom” is back again on FASNY’s property.  We all know that FASNY has never shown any concern or respect for their nearby WP neighbors. . .and we have lost count of how many times over the past 9 years residents have complained about FASNY not taking care of their own property.


As you probably know there has been a lot of negative publicity with algae bloom recently due to the death of 3 dogs down in North Carolina and the appearance of the same toxic strain in Northern New Jersey and other states. 

Some recent news reports on the dangers of algae bloom are below.
Of particular concern, according to the University of Michigan, algae blooms can become “airborne” in hot temperatures making FASNY’s situation a potential local health problem. 


For an educational institution we are shocked that FASNY has not displayed more respect and appreciation for our environment here in White Plains.

 We recall their prior submission of development plans for their Conservancy that included FASNY dumping  the carcinogenic herbicide, RoundUp, next to our own and our neighbors’ homes.   In recent court cases juries are agreeing with us on RoundUp’s  cancer-causing properties.  So shame on FASNY for submitting environmentally insensitive and threatening plans and not taking care of the property they bought.    

     
Is there a way our City Administration can get FASNY to safely clean up their algae bloom without causing harm to their nearby neighbors?  Maybe the City can fine FASNY for non-compliance for all of the prior maintenance complaints or threaten to return FASNY’s land back onto the property tax role as for the past 9 years FASNY has never used their WP land for any non-profit activities.


Thanks in advance for once again forcing FASNY to clean up their own mess,

Marie and Ron Rhodes

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Labor Day is a Memorial to Strikers Who Died. Here’s to Eugene Debs, John Mitchell–Heroes of Labor. Labor Day Celebrates those who Struggled, Died to Fight and Restrain Inhumane Working Conditions, Millionaire Murderers, Exploitative Owners and Won. It is 2019 and We Need Them NOW.

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WPCNR NEWS AND COMMENT. By John F. Bailey. AUGUST 31, 2019 Reprinted from the CitizeNetReporter Archives:

It is Labor Day Weekend 2019.

Teachers throughout the state continue to be under fire for not teaching effectively. Teacher union leaders protest against calls for change and possible elimination of tenure. Yet the latest test scores of the new assessment tests have been delayed until late August– good and late and of no use at all in helping articulate more effective curricula.

Yet corporate and bureaucratic advocates of the Common Core are not held accountable for the inexplicable test results of 2019 that still show more than half of New York State students are unable to read or write English effectively entering high school. It cannot be all the teachers’ faults. We only have those test results to go on because the 2019 results are explained as to how they can be so low. Nobody’s talking. The governor isn’t talking. The State Education Department didn’t hold a video news conference on these results, because they are a humilation of the State Board of Regents, the State Education Department and school districts across the state.

Perhaps it is the poor local grade by grade tests used in every school district in the state? Or are the local tests great and the assessment tests costing the state $44 Million an incompentent, ivory tower of babel?

Don’t our state senators and assemblypersons and hands-on governor want to find out what the assessment problem is? No. They did not when they had the chance in 2016 and 2017 when the teachers union was try to protect tenure and not find out why the tests were not being passed by the students. Well now’s another chance to fix education after 20 years of assessment testing that has not indicated whether New York State teaches well and test badly or teaches poorly and tests atrociously, educates white students well, and minority students poorly.

Why is it our State Senators and Assemblypersons and the Governor opted out of finding out why Johnny and Jane can’t read after 8 years of elementary and middle School? That is irresponsible. Buck-passing. Kicking the can down the road. Ducking the responsibility for a State Education Department and a Board of Regents that demonstrate a nose-in-the-air distaste for facts, truth, and accountability.

Labor across the nation is fighting back against low pay enforced by union-busting state governments committed to the dole of corporate robber barons of today.

Public enmity against unions is popular, especially the practice of jacking pensions by getting more overtime in the years just before retirements. I say it’s time to look at the city leadership and the state leadership and hold them accountable. They are the leaders and they do not lead. (Let me, rephrase that, Mr. Cuomo leads more than any other elected official in the nation, but he has to lead more on this education and pension problem). 2019 is a moment of truth for Governor Cuomo. Education is the single most vital problem New York faces.

No politicians talk about the offensive practice  of decrying  union pensions, while accepting political jobs after a politician leaves office  or is defeated, that politicians and political parasites have to get waivers for to retain their pensions, and they are routinely able to acquire such waivers to get 6-figure jobs in the private or public sector and still collect their pension, and do very little for those taxpayer dollars.

How about stopping that very nice perk? Money for nothing. And politicians cry about labor contracts? Please. Yet to buy union support they make settlements double the inflation rate.

Look back at the history of the labor movement, workers have always had to fight and die to make progress.

Because management is not fair, equitable, or humane. They don’t care about you as a person. They use you up. Use you. And when you get hurt. Too bad. And now our feckless Supreme Court has taken away the class action suit.

Business and government “internships” today are a nice word for slavery without whips.

Labor Day first made its appearance when low wages and long hours were protested against in the mid-nineteenth century during the American Industrial Revolution.

Management works for themselves, always.

Oregon instituted the first Labor Day in the 1870s, and New York in the 1880s.

The National Labor Day Holiday came about because of national outrage over two violent strikes that were ended by armed intervention by the military and private detectives, the notorious “Pinkertons.”

Let’s go back to the 1890s and learn what Labor Day is all about. It’s not about a day off. It is a memorial day. It’s not about “good job.”

The gay 90s were not so gay if you were a union worker.

They were a time when the so-called robber barons thought nothing of bringing out private security forces to shoot strikers. They  lowered wages with no mercy. It was all about them, their mansions, their fortunes, their tax-free profits. (No income tax before 1913, folks).

In the Homestead, Pennsylvania steel factory strike in 1892Andrew Carnegie, the steel baron, wanted to lower wages to make the Homestead factory  more profitable. (Instead of pulling down statues, they should change the name of the Carnegie Institute. Mr. Carnegie was no saint.)

Steelworkers in Homestead Pennsylvania, made $10 a week, working 12 hours a day, 6 days a week, as much as  84 hours a week.

Carnegie’s Deputy  Chairman Henry Frick wanted to pay them less, and attempted to bring in non-union laborers to replace them.

Two thousand union workers barricaded the plant.

Frick hired Pinkerton Detectives to disperse them. On June 29, 1892, “Pinkertons” killed 7 union workers with gunfire, and injured “countless” others and three Pinkertons were killed.

The Governor called in the National Guard to restore order. The armed intervention broke the Amalgamated Association union.

After this, according to “Steelworkers in America” by David Brody, wages of steelworkers at Homestead declined 20% from 1892 to 1907 and workshifts went up from 8 hours to 12 hours (96 hours a week). 

What a great fellow, Carnegie. What a humanitarian! That’s your robber baron. He’d fit right in with today’s Wolves of Wall Street, wouldn’t he? He’d be in the Trump cabinet.

This union-killing in Pennysylvania was followed by the 1894 Pullman Strike in Pullman Illinois.

George M. Pullman, the creator of the sleeper car, housed his workers in Pullman City, Illinois, and charged them rent. 

In the depression of the early 1890s, in 1893 wages at the Pullman Palace Factory fell  25%, but Pullman did not lower his rents to his workers.

The rent, if not met, was deducted from worker pay.Pullman was a garbage person.

A nice guy, George Pullman.  He could run a bank today, couldn’t he?

On May 11, 1894 workers with the American Railroad Union under the leadership of the great  Eugene V.  Debs, started a wildcat (unauthorized) strike in protest of Pullman’s policies.

On June 26, 1894, union members refused to service trains with Pullman Cars in their consist, to leave Chicago, delaying the U.S. Mail.

Twenty-four railroads in an organization called the General Managers Association announced that any switchman who refused to move rail cars would be fired.

Mr. Debs and his union stood their ground.

Debs said if any switchman was fired for not moving Pullman Cars, the union would walk off their jobs. On June 29, 50,000 union men quit.

Union supporters stopped trains on rails West of Chicago.

President Grover Cleveland was asked by the railroads to use federal troops to stop the strike.

Railroad management began characterizing the union as violent and lawless, calling Debs “a radical.”

When Debs went to Blue Island to ask railroad workers there to support the strike, rioting broke out, tracks were torn up. Railroad cars were burned.

The Attorney General of the United States Richard Olney, at the urging of the railroad owners, obtained an injunction July 2 that declared the strike illegal.

When Debs’ union members did not return to work, when they did not return to work—-

President Cleveland sent federal troops into Chicago.

Strikers stopped trains, destroyed switches and burned railroad cars.

Troops opened fire on strikers  attempting to stop a train traveling through downtown Chicago.

Debs and his union leaders were arrested for disrupting the delivery of mail.

Twenty-six civilians were killed for disrupting the mail.

Because the mail could not be delivered. Because the mail could not be delivered…how pathetic.

Debs, the union leader, stopped the strike.

Debs was sentenced to six months in jail and the union was disbanded. To my knowledge no federal troops who killed civilians were prosecuted.

A number of railroad workers were black listed and could not get a job on a railroad in the United States.

It was the first time federal troops were used to break up a strike.

Pullman workers were forced to sign a pledge they would never strike again.

The threat of the federal government stopping strikes lead to an end of strikes for at least 8 years.

President Cleveland, though, was facing reelection in 1894.

And, here’s how Labor Day became a national holiday.

Union leaders and citizens were alarmed at his handling of the strike.

As PBS put it in a documentary in 2001:

“But now, protests against President Cleveland’s harsh methods made the appeasement of the nation’s workers a top political priority. In the immediate wake of the strike, legislation was rushed unanimously through both houses of Congress, and the bill arrived on President Cleveland’s desk just six days after his troops had broken the Pullman strike.

1894 was an election year.

President Cleveland seized the chance at conciliation, and Labor Day was born. William Jennings Bryant ran for the Democratic Party and the Populist Party in 1896, losing to  Republican William McKinley.

Then came a sea change in the great coal strike of 1902, when another “exemplary” capitalist J. P. Morgan fought the coal workers.

It happened in the coal fields of Easton, Pennsylvania, when the United Mine Workers headed by John Mitchell struck the coal operators  pushing for an 8-hour day.

The coal operators employed private police and the Pennsylvania National Guard to protect non-union workers.

President Theodore Roosevelt summoned the parties to the White House to bring settlement of the dispute by arbitration. After 6 months, the coal miners won a 9-hour day and a 10% increase in wages.

T.R.’s personal intervention lead to Selig Perlman, economist and labor historian at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, saying “this was perhaps the first time in history a labor organization tied up for months a strategic industry without being condemned as a revolutionary menace.’

The 1902 leadership of the great Teddy Roosevelt resulted in elimination of private police forces long used  by management to combat workers.

When Governor Samuel Pennypacker became Governor of Pennsylvania, Pennypacker created the Pennsylvania State Police in 1903, the first in the nation to supplant the independent organizations hired by management that were little more than strong-arm boys.

The lesson of Labor Day is to remember the bravery of the union leaders who put their members first, did not make deals, did not sell out their members,(and I might add, sucomb to politicians’ whining) and held out for the good against managements that were neither kind, humane, fair, or appreciative of their workers’ contribution to their corporate success.

Management never  is. They talk a good game but it’s all talk.

So American workers should remember the struggles and the leadership of Debs and Mitchell. And the strikers and civilians who were shot down in the street for stopping delivery of mail.

They introduced a new era of workers’ rights at the costs of their lives.

The battle against worker exploitation never ends. It’s still happening today.

Let’s stop it. Let’s fight it. Let’s boycott the robber barons.

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WHITE PLAINS WEEK OF AUGUST 30 ON THE IMPASSE ON ACADEMIC ASSESSMENT TESTING…THE SOFT COUNTY ECONOMY…AND TOO OLD TO LEAD? NOW ON THE INTERNET: YOUTUBE AND WHITE PLAINS WEEK.COM OR WWW.WPCOMMUNITYMEDIA.ORG

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The youtube link..

https://youtu.be/fkdoIQ-xXlYwhiteplainsweek.com link… http://www.whiteplainsweek.com/

THE STATE ASSESSMENT TEST MYSTERY NOBODY WANTS TO SOLVE
A TIMELY TROUBLING JIM BENEROFE EDITORIAL: TOO OLD TO LEAD?
JOHN BAILEY AND JIM BENEROFE AT THE CITY LIMITS–19 YEARS OF WHITE PLAINS WEEK–TRUTH, JUSTICE AND THE AMERICAN WAY–THE COUNTY’S MOST RELEVANT NEWS PROGRAM
WHITE PLAINS WEEK CONTINUING IN-DEPTH ANALYSIS OF THE WESTCHESTER COUNTY ECONOMY– THE GRIM JULY NUMBERS
HAVE COFFEE WITH WHITE PLAINS WEEK SATURDAY MORNING AT 8:30 A,M. ON FIOS CH. 45 COUNTYWIDE OR ALTICE CABLEVISION CH. 76 OR RIGHT NOW ON
YOUTUBE OR WHITEPLAINSWEEK.COM
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HEAT WAVE WILTS CITY SALES TAX $$. COUNTY IS UP 2.5% IN 7 MONTHS. ECONOMY NEEDS TO RESUME 6% GROWTH RATE TO ERASE DEFICIT.

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WPCNR QUILL & EYESHADE. By John F. Bailey. Data From the New York State Department of Taxation & Finance August 28, 2019:

The July heat wave did not send city and county residents flocking to the malls and restaurants.

City Sales Taxes receipts were 6.7% lower to start the new fiscal year in July, down $279,762 to $3,883,985 compared to $4,163,747 in July of 2018.

Westchester County July sales tax handle for fiscal year 2019 through the first 7 months rose to $320,357,400 compared to July 2018 through 7 months ($312,561,853). These July County figures just kept pace with inflation.

The new 1% sales tax increase by the County  which took effect  August 1st  according to Westchester County, has not been reported yet and will not be known until mid-September.

Last August through December 2018, Westchester County collected $238,300,628 Million in sales tax receipts.

If you increase that figure by 1%, the amount of revenue of the sales tax increase generated to the county would be $2,380,006, when the county was averaging 5% increased sales tax receipts a month, but it slowed in last 5 months of the year. It had been averaging 5 to 6% growth the first 7 months of 2018.

 Total revenue the next 5 months in 2019 to be expected if sales continue at 2.5%  growth a month would be $244,258,143. Add the 1% sales tax increase to that and at 2-1/2 percentage sales tax revenue increase, the next five months even following 2.5% inflation would generate $2,442,581, or a total of a possible $246,700,724 over August, September, November and December.

Last year’s county sales tax receipts were $550,562,481. The present mild growth rate of 2.5% (if it continues), will generate a  gain in sales receipts to $567,058,481 ( a year to year gain of $16,495,643 or 3%.)

This makes it clear that the county justification for the sales tax increase of 1% does not quite balance the budget. .

 Continued strong growth in the county economy balances the budget.

 At the present growth rate the county makes up the $15 Million shortfall passed last year by the Democrat-controlled legislature, then settling the union contracts well ahead of the inflation rate retroactively,  aggravating the deficit. 

The $60 Million deficit was created in part, by the county throwing out the airport lease plan of the Astorino administration and delaying and eventually terminating the Playland lease with Standard Amusements; using fund balance to settle county negotiated contracts; and crossing fingers that the sales tax 1% increase will make up the fund balance bye and bye. You cannot use the same money twice for two different purposes.

The county may be making the classic mistake of betting on a growth rate that may not materialize., they made in the Astorino administration.

Let’s talk about how a 6% growth in sales tax receipts sustained through August, September October, November and December would improve things and if it would balance the budget:

The $238,300,628 from last year’s last five months of sales tax receipts if it sustains a 6% growth rate, would generate $14,298,037 more in sales tax receipts for a total of $252,598,665. The sales tax increase of 1% a month would generate an additional $2,525,986 or a grand total of $255,124,651.

Add that to the $320,357,400 earned the first 7 months through July, and 2019 could generate a sales receipts of $575,482,051, balancing the budget with a $25 Million sales tax receipts increase of 4.5% over last year (which was, as you remember, $550 Million).

That increase only happens if the Westchester economy starts to hum at an average 5 to 6% growth rate.  The 1% sales tax increase is insignificant in its effect.

I repeat the Westchester economy is the key to the county getting out of its budget mess.
 

So, accelerate your spending Mr. and Mrs. And Ms. Westchester.

Ask not what the county can spend for you, but what you can spend for your county.

Spend, people, spend.

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Library Plaza to Open.

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WPCNR BOOK BEAT. From the White Plains Public Library. August 26,
2019:

Three things.

One, we’re excited that the Library exterior is being power-washed.
Feel free to grab a sponge and come help out (joking!) This is one of the
most frequent questions I receive, but it made sense to wait until the
work in the Library plaza draws to a close. The washing will take two
weeks or so, and there may be some minor disruptions.

Two, watch over the next few weeks as the fencing comes down and the beautiful Library Plaza becomes available for use. We’re planning a
celebration on September 14.

Finally, our One Book, One White Plains program is underway. Go here for more information or to sign up for a discussion group.
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WHITE PLAINS WEEK AUG 23 SHOW ON YOUTUBE AND WHITE PLAINS WEEK.COM NOW AND WWW.WPCOMMUNITYMEDIA.ORG

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youtube link — https://youtu.be/f3xIjVtOip8

whiteplainsweek.com link — http://www.whiteplainsweek.com/

JOHN BAILEY AND JIM BENEROFE ON THE 2019 ASSESSMENT SCORES
DEVELOPERS INVESTING IN WHITE PLAINS SUCCESSFUL PROPERTIES. JIM BENEROFE EXPLAINS WHAT IT MAY MEAN

PLUS BAILEY AND BENEROFE DISCUSS THE LOCAL CABLE NEWS GAFFE WHAT’S AHEAD FOR REAL NEWS IN THE COUNTY

AT THE LIMITS FRIDAYS WHERE THE ACTION IS

BENEROFE & BAILEY: 19TH YEAR OF BRINGING YOU TRUTH, JUSTICE AND THE AMERICAN WAY ON WHITE PLAINS WEEK ON WHITE PLAINS TV EVERY WEEK

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NEW YORK ELA AND MATH 2019 ASSESSMENT SCORES STATEWIDE SHOW NO SIGNIFICANT IMPROVEMENT. WP Scores decline in ELA, Improve in Math.

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THEY’RE OUT!

WPCNR SCHOOL DAYS. From the New York State Education Department. August 23, 2019:

The State Education Department late Thursday released the results of the 2019 Grades 3-8 English language arts (ELA) and mathematics tests administered last April and May.

Editor’s Note: In the White Plains City School District, 43% of Students taking the ELA were “Proficient”, placing in levels 3 & 4, compared to 45% being deemed proficient in 2018. In Math, White Plains students improved to 44% “Proficient” compared to 41% in 2018.

“The Board of Regents and I are committed to ensuring that all children, regardless of where they go to school, have access to equitable opportunities and a high-quality education,” Chancellor Betty A. Rosa said.  “As our Every Student Succeeds Act plan emphasizes, we need multiple, interlocking strategies to address achievement gaps as well as opportunity gaps. State assessments are one tool that helps us do that.”

“During my tenure with the New York State Education Department, I’m proud of the progress we have made in terms of reducing gaps in student achievement,” State Education Commissioner MaryEllen Elia said.  “As I’ve consistently said, assessments are a part of the larger picture that we look at when we examine performance levels across the state.  This year’s test scores are a positive sign that we are making progress and I believe the deliberative and thoughtful approach outlined in our State’s ESSA plan will continue to benefit the students of New York State.”

2019 Results

The state did not make significant changes to the 2019 assessments; therefore the 2019 results can be compared with the 2018 results. However, due to the change in 2018 to the two-session test design and the performance standard review process, the 2017 Grades 3-8 ELA and Math results cannot be compared with 2018 and 2019 results.

Big 5 City School Districts

Of the Big 5 city school districts, New York City continues to have the highest percentage of students proficient in both ELA and math, with Yonkers having the second highest in each. In ELA in 2019, New York City exceeded the statewide proficiency rate by 2 percent, with 47.4 of students achieving proficiency, compared with 45.4 percent statewide. In math, 45.6 percent of New York City students scored at the proficient level, compared with 46.7 percent statewide.

20182019Percentage Point Change
NYC46.747.40.7
Buffalo23.424.71.3
Rochester11.413.21.8
Syracuse15.417.72.3
Yonkers26.731.54.8
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SATURDAY AT 7, DR. SHARON McLENNON-WIER BERKELEY COLLEGE DIRECTOR DISABILITY SERVICES ON REGISTERING THE PHYSICALLY DISABLED TO VOTE, EARLY VOTING AND GETTING TO THE POLLS ON “PEOPLE TO BE HEARD”

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PEOPLE TO BE HEARD NOW ON YOUTUBE AND WHITEPLAINSWEEK.COM AT

PTBH with Dr. McLennon-Wier has been posted on the internet

The YouTube link is https://youtu.be/H38DlBZ9064  

and here again is the wpweek.com link  http://www.whiteplainsweek.com/

JOHN BAILEY INTERVIEWS DR. McLENNON-WIER ON REV UP WESTCHESTER, GETTING OUT THE DISABLED TO VOTE, GETTING SERVICES FOR YOUR PHYSICALLY DISABLED LOVED ONE IN A UNIQUE PEOPLE TO BE HEARD SPECIAL AT 7 PM SATURDAY === ON VERIZON FIOS CH. 45 AND ALTICE CABLEVISION CH. 76 OR RIGHT NOW ON THE INTERNET AT WWW.WPCOMMUNITYMEDIA.ORG (SCROLL DOWN TO PEOPLE TO BE HEARD ON THE 
PROGRAM WALL
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QUESTAR, NEW YORK STATE ASSESSMENTS PREPARER AND GRADER IS TARDY WITH SCORES IN SECOND YEAR.

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WPCNR SCHOOL DAYS. By John F. Bailey. AUGUST 21, 2019:

May we have the results, please?

The New York State Education Department has not given a date for when New York school districts can expect the results of the second year of Questar,Inc.

Questar was chosen to prepare the assessments, given a five year contract for $44 Million, replacing Pearson (the world leader in performance test preparation), in 2015. QUESTAR has prepared the New York State Assessment Tests in 2017-2018, and 2018-19.

The effect  of the late results on the White Plains School District that begins the 2019-2020 the day after Labor Day on September 3, has been that curriculum and instruction specialists in the district have been unable to view district Grades 3 to 8 performances on the second year of the supposedly new and improved user-friendly, computer submitted tests.

Why? Because the test scores administered in April and May last spring have not been released yet.

The school district has had to plan curriculum without ability to compare with results of White Plains Students on the Math and ELA tests in the second year of Questar preparation effectively.

WPCNR asked the Superintendent of Schools of White Plains, Dr. Joseph Ricca, how this has affected the district.

WPCNR asked if teachers used assessment test scores of individual students to discuss with students with poor scores, areas the students needed to improve.

Dr. Ricca said this was not possible because of the time it has taken to receive the test scores. “The students have already moved out of your (last year’s teacher) classes, they are in this year’s classes.”

I asked if teachers got actual assessment test sheet results on each student from the previous year’s results.

Dr. Ricca said “No. We take a look at overall student performance on the assessments, and emphasize areas for improvement sensitive to individual students from (White Plains) assessments we give (in our classes). Our assessments give us current sense of where our children are. The state does not send individual assessment answer sheets related to each child.”

I asked if the state assessment test results indicate most missed questions. Again, the district has no transparency. Dr. Ricca: “A picture of the district failure rate by question—that doesn’t happen.”

I asked how the assessment tests are graded?

Ricca explained, “The test computerized answer forms are send to computer centers and Questar grades them by computer based grading . The written portion of the tests are reviewed and graded by individuals.”

“Dr. Ricca concluded: “The educators in the White Plains School District continue to work hard to support every one of our students succeed. Standardized assessments are simply one measure of growth. We are very proud of our children and they continue to grow and excel.”

He said as of Monday the school district had not been notified when the state assessment results would be released.

The State Education Department told WPCNR last week: “The scores will be released later this summer, on a similar timeline to the 2017 release (August 22) Unfortunately I cannot give a more specific  date. “

Asked why in 2016 test scores were released July 29, (not August 22), the Department furnished this statement: “The release of the scores was later in 2017 because the math tests were administered three weeks later than in 2016(April 13-2016, v. May 1-17, 2017).”

The State Education Department explained the Questar delay to September 23 last year on the 2017-2018 results because of a need for a performance review:

“In 2018, because of the switch from three days of testing to two, and the resulting need to conduct a new performance standard review, the statewide scores were released about a month later than usual.”

It is possible the scores could be released tomorrow August 22, or Friday August 23 and meet the 2017 date.

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