NY school experiences tense claims of racism, anti-Semitism

Supporters of public schools turn their backs on the East Ramapo school board during a meeting on Tuesday, March 19, 2013, in Spring Valley, N.Y. Allegations of racism and anti-Semitism are afflicting the district, where the board is dominated by ultra-Orthodox Jews and the public school children are mostly black and Hispanic. (AP Photo/Jim Fitzgerald)
Supporters of public schools turn their backs on the East Ramapo school board during a meeting on Tuesday, March 19, 2013, in Spring Valley, N.Y. Allegations of racism and anti-Semitism are afflicting the district, where the board is dominated by ultra-Orthodox Jews and the public school children are mostly black and Hispanic. (AP Photo/Jim Fitzgerald)
By Jim Fitzgerald
Associated Pres

SPRING VALLEY, N.Y. — School board meetings descend into shouting matches. Accusations of racism and anti-Semitism fly. Angry parents turn their backs on board members in a symbolic stand of disrespect.

Tension in a suburban New York school district is rooted in an unusual dynamic: The families who send their children to public schools are mostly Hispanic and African-American. The school board is almost entirely made up of ultra-Orthodox Jews who send their children to private schools and are bent on keeping taxes low.

“It’s as if the board of directors of Coke only owned stock in Pepsi,” said Steven White, an activist for the public schools.

Public-school parents accuse the board of the 9,000-student East Ramapo Central School District of cutting teachers, guidance counselors, art programs, all-day kindergarten and the high school marching band, while diverting public resources to favored Orthodox institutions.

Peggy Hatton, who co-hosts a radio program that features school issues, said, “It’s just becoming impossible for our students to apply to colleges when the advanced placement classes are cut, the extracurriculars are cut.”

How a public school district that’s 57 percent black, including Haitian, and 29 percent Hispanic came to be governed by ultra-Orthodox Jews is a case study in changing demographics and the power of democracy.

The district, 25 miles north of New York City in Rockland County, has been settled rapidly in recent years by Jews from the Hasidic and other sects who came from their traditional strongholds of Brooklyn. They quickly built their own schools, or yeshivas, raised large families and became a powerful voting bloc. Though not a majority of the population, they have organized to defeat school budgets that increase taxes and to elect members of their own communities to the board.

At the same time, public-school supporters are less organized; many are believed to be non-citizens who don’t vote. And the area’s older residents have also tended to vote against school budget increases.

At least seven of the nine board members are ultra-Orthodox Jewish men. A man and a woman who represented the public-school community resigned from the board in January, alleging intimidation by the rest of the board. Two men, one black and one Jewish, were appointed to replace them.

The stark division has led to a flurry of lawsuits and petitions, and New York State has intervened, blocking the sale of a public school building to a Jewish congregation and warning the board to change the way it uses public special education money for private schools.

While state law provides for a school district to pay some private school expenses, for transportation, textbooks and special education, the state alleges that East Ramapo has been too quick to move children — mostly Jewish children — from the public schools into special education schools run by the Orthodox. Each case funnels thousands of taxpayer dollars to the private schools.

The state is also insisting that the district balance its budget, which has an estimated $8 million deficit this school year. At a meeting Tuesday night, the board approved borrowing $7.5 million.

That meeting illustrated the apparent disdain each side has for the other. There seemed little in common between the board members, most in yarmulkes and black coats, and the onlookers, mostly from racial minorities.

About 20 residents shouted in protest, then stood and turned their backs on the board when it decided that in the future, students could address the board only at the end of meetings.
“You’re not doing right by these children!” shouted Mae Davis of Spring Valley. “What about freedom of speech?”

Daniel Schwartz, president of the board, had complained that public comment has become insulting, and he said there’s no requirement to offer it at all.

“I think there are people who want to be abusive to the board and when it starts we’re not going to tolerate it,” he said Monday.

Some parents have petitioned the state Education Department to remove the school board, a rare step. Department spokesman Tom Dunn would not comment specifically about East Ramapo, but said the commissioner has the authority to remove local officials “for willful violation of law or neglect of duty or willfully disobeying a decision, order, rule or regulation.”

The board denies any wrongdoing. It announced at Tuesday’s meeting that it is suing the state in federal court, seeking a judge’s declaration that its methods for special education placement are legal.

He says the district’s problems stem from its being “a square peg” — a district that has about 9,000 public school children and an estimated 20,000 in private schools, almost all of them Jewish.

He said money — “more money from the state” — is the solution to East Ramapo’s problems. But state Assemblyman Ken Zebrowski said the division in the community is too deep for that to work.

“Public school parents have said, ‘We don’t want any more money.’” Zebrowski said. “They don’t trust their own school board with additional money.”

The Democratic assemblyman has proposed instead that East Ramapo be divided into two school districts, one for public schools and one for private schools.