School Choice & Charters

1,000 Slots at Catholic Schools in NYC Offered to Public Students

September 18, 1996 3 min read
  • Save to favorites
  • Print

A plan that would move about 1,000 students from the severely overcrowded New York City public schools to private religious schools gathered momentum last week, although Chancellor Rudy F. Crew officially distanced himself from it.

The idea, originally proposed by Cardinal John J. O’Connor, the Roman Catholic archbishop of New York, has been floated in the district for years. But it took off earlier this month with an endorsement from Mayor Rudolph W. Giuliani.

The mayor’s statement came as the 1.1 million-student district found itself a staggering 91,000 students above capacity. Administrators are struggling desperately to find room for them, and classes are being held in stairwells, locker rooms, and old factories. (“Enrollment Surge Stretches Schools’ Limits,” Sept. 11, 1996.)

Following the mayor’s announcement, officials worked throughout the week to overcome the legal hurdles involved in sending public school students to religious schools. The plan calls for 1,000 academic underachievers to transfer to Catholic and other religious schools in the city.

News of the idea brought quick opposition from civil liberties groups, notably the New York City-based National Committee for Public Education and Religious Liberty and the New York City chapter of the American Civil Liberties Union.

Both groups raised concerns that the program would violate federal and state constitutional provisions that forbid paying for religious education with public money. Those concerns also lay behind the unwillingness of Mr. Crew and William C. Thompson, the school board president, to involve the district’s administration in such a plan.

“In reviewing the offer, we discovered that the plan was to expand the opportunity for privately funded scholarships to support free tuition, to parochial and private schools,” Mr. Crew said in a statement. “We wish Mayor Giuliani and the business community well in their efforts to raise money for this purpose. However, that is not the mission of the chancellor of the New York City public schools.”

To meet the funding issue, a number of businesses stepped forward last week and offered to pay the tuition for hundreds of failing students. Officials of the ACLU said private funding might pass constitutional muster, but they contended that the mayor’s office must remain on the sidelines.

“The government would have to remain neutral,” said Norman Siegel, the executive director of the local ACLU. He vowed to monitor the involvement of the mayor’s office in the program.

“If the mayor’s office is [in] up to its ears, then it’s constitutionally suspect,” Mr. Siegel said. “If they’ve only got their toes in, then it’s not as suspect.”

The New York City plan resembles recent efforts in other urban districts that have sought either to handle severe overcrowding or to give parents of poor families greater control over their children’s education.

Similar Efforts

In Milwaukee, the Lynde and Harry Bradley Foundation supplies money for low-income students to attend religious schools.

The foundation’s involvement came as an attempt to extend to religious schools the city’s private school voucher program became tied up in the courts.

The state-funded program provides school vouchers to low-income families. Money from the foundation allowed students who were scheduled to participate in the expanded program, but were barred by a court injunction, to enroll in religious schools. (“Blocked by Court, Milwaukee’s Voucher Program Gets Reprieve,” Sept. 6, 1995.)

And in Houston, overcrowding in the 200,000-student district has led officials there to propose contracting with private schools to help handle the overflow. (“Houston Looks at Private Schools To Ease Overcrowding,” Aug. 7, 1996.)

Houston administrators met last week with private school educators to discuss the plan.

Joe McTighe, the executive director of the Council for American Private Education, based in Germantown, Md., said private schools may prove a valuable option for crowded school districts.

“At a time when the school-age-population boom is causing classroom chaos,” he said, “it makes no sense whatsoever to construct new schools while classrooms in neighborhood nonpublic schools have empty seats.”

Related Tags:

A version of this article appeared in the September 18, 1996 edition of Education Week as 1,000 Slots at Catholic Schools in NYC Offered to Public Students

Events

This content is provided by our sponsor. It is not written by and does not necessarily reflect the views of Education Week's editorial staff.
Sponsor
Artificial Intelligence Webinar
AI in Schools: What 1,000 Districts Reveal About Readiness and Risk
Move beyond “ban vs. embrace” with real-world AI data and practical guidance for a balanced, responsible district policy.
Content provided by Securly
This content is provided by our sponsor. It is not written by and does not necessarily reflect the views of Education Week's editorial staff.
Sponsor
Recruitment & Retention Webinar
K-12 Lens 2026: What New Staffing Data Reveals About District Operations
Explore national survey findings and hear how districts are navigating staffing changes that affect daily operations, workload, and planning.
Content provided by Frontline Education
Education Funding Webinar Congress Approved Next Year’s Federal School Funding. What’s Next?
Congress passed the budget, but uncertainty remains. Experts explain what districts should expect from federal education policy next.

EdWeek Top School Jobs

Teacher Jobs
Search over ten thousand teaching jobs nationwide — elementary, middle, high school and more.
View Jobs
Principal Jobs
Find hundreds of jobs for principals, assistant principals, and other school leadership roles.
View Jobs
Administrator Jobs
Over a thousand district-level jobs: superintendents, directors, more.
View Jobs
Support Staff Jobs
Search thousands of jobs, from paraprofessionals to counselors and more.
View Jobs

Read Next

School Choice & Charters The Nation's Largest School Choice Program Excludes Muslim Schools, Lawsuit Says
The largest state to allow public funds for private schooling faces its first legal challenge.
4 min read
US NEWS TEXAS SCHOOL VOUCHERS DISCRIMINATION LAWSUIT DA
Kelly Hancock, Texas' acting state comptroller, speaks alongside Gov. Greg Abbott in Richland Hills, Texas, on May 17, 2022, when Hancock was a state senator. Hancock has excluded Islamic schools from Texas' new, $1 billion private school choice program, which he now oversees, according to a new lawsuit.
Elias Valverde II/The Dallas Morning News via TNS
School Choice & Charters Video Private School Choice Is Growing. What Comes Next?
States are investing billions of dollars in public funds for families to use on private schooling.
1 min read
School Choice & Charters The Legal Fight Over Private School Choice: Who Is Suing and Why?
Court battles are underway—or recently wrapped up—for programs in at least nine states.
1 min read
Arkansas Gov. Sarah Huckabee Sanders, left, attends a news conference with Tennessee Gov. Bill Lee, right, Tuesday, Nov. 28, 2023, in Nashville, Tenn. Gov. Lee presented the Education Freedom Scholarship Act of 2024, his administration's legislative proposal to establish statewide universal school choice.
Arkansas Gov. Sarah Huckabee Sanders, left, attends a news conference with Tennessee Gov. Bill Lee in Nashville, Tenn. on Nov. 28, 2023. Both Republican governors have championed new programs that let families in their states use public funds for private education. The programs in both states are facing legal challenges.
George Walker IV/AP
School Choice & Charters Opinion Civil Society Is Withering. How to Help Schools Restore Engagement
Can a new wave of initiatives stem the trend of isolation?
7 min read
The United States Capitol building as a bookcase filled with red, white, and blue policy books in a Washington DC landscape.
Luca D'Urbino for Education Week