Q&A topics include: why the mayor and Governor Cuomo appear friendly and cooperative on pre-K when together but express different views when apart, will the city fund a single year of full day pre-K if the state does not, how many of the prospective new pre-K seats are in traditional public
schools v.
charter schools, what is the greatest challenge in
converting existing 1/2 day pre-K sites into full day sites, how can the mayor assure that proceeds of his proposed income tax surcharge would remain dedicated solely
to the pre - K / middle
school program, regulatory issues around pre-K operators, how there can be space available in neighborhoods where
schools are overcrowded, how many of the prospective new sites are in
schools v. other locations, why the mayor is so
opposed to co-locations of
charter schools while seeking
to co-locate new pre-K programs, the newly - announced ad campaign by
charter school supporters, his views on academically screened high
schools, his view on the
school bus contracts, why he refused off - topic questions Friday evening despite saying on Friday morning that he would take such questions, the status of 28
charter schools expecting
to open in fall 2014 in locations approved by the Bloomberg administration, his upcoming appearance on the TV series The Good Wife and his view on city employees marching in the Manhattan St. Patrick's Day Parade in uniform / with banners.
State superintendent candidate Lowell Holtz, a former superintendent of Whitnall and Beloit
school districts, said he is «adamantly
opposed»
to immediately
converting «failing
schools» into
charter or private voucher
schools or closing them.