The Politicker

Jackson Yells at Mark Page, Too

As this dispatch from intern Bharat Ayyar shows, Eric Gioia wasn't the only Council member who yelled at Mark Page today:

High above the action, seated on the upper level at the Council Chambers at City Hall, third and fourth grade students from P.S. 60 observed Friday's hearings on the budget.

"Pay attention. There'll be a test later," quipped Finance Committee Chair David Weprin.

As different members of the council lined up to grill Mark Page, the director of the city Office of Management and Budget, on the '09 budget, which must be approved by the end of June, it quickly became clear that much of the debate would center on education.

District 7 Councilman Robert Jackson of Manhattan butted heads with Page at the hearing on issues of funding and what he said was the city's wavering commitment to the Contracts for Excellence with the state.

At a hearing earlier this week, Schools Chancellor Joel Klein said that it would take $400 million to maintain city schools at 07-08 levels. Without that money, Klein made it clear that cuts would be made. The mayor's proposed budget allocates $428 million less for education than what had originally been planned. Various Council members have said that they will not allow the budget to pass if "there's a dime being cut from the classroom."

Jackson asked Page why the city could not appropriate the necessary money for a fundamental good like schools, citing a multi-billion dollar surplus. He also interrupted Page on several occasions.

"If you'd like to make speeches, which clearly you do, then clearly you are not interested in what I have to say," Page said, as Jackson started talking over him.

"Year after year after year you said that 'it's coming, it's coming, it's next year, it's next year,' " Mr. Jackson said of allegedly promised funding. "And here we are almost the last year of the entire term for Mayor Bloomberg ... And yes, I'm upset about it because our children are being impacted. Over four hundred million dollars are being cut out of the budget."

He paused, then emphatically added: "And If I don't stand up, then who's going to stand up?"

  • del.icio.us
  • Digg
  • Reddit
  • Newsvine
  • Google
  • Yahoo
  • Technorati
  • Facebook
  • Stumble Upon
  • Netvibes
  • Windows Live

Comments
Post a comment

Looking ahead (not verified) says:

Good government for Gioia, education for Jackson. Is this the beginning of a (hopefully) robust Public Advocate's race?

Eric From Uranus (not verified) says:

Speaker Quinn has a lot of nerve discussing the budget as if she is not a target of the federal investigation. I also find it appalling that Quinn wants photos of herself with Military Veterans on Memorial Day after she stole money from the City budget by placing it under the name of a phony veterans group. Quinn committed a crime and should be prosecuted. Speaker Quinn has cultivated a culture of corruption in City Hall.

When Speaker Quinn's aide Maura Keany comes back from her leave of absence she should have Laura Popa (Quinn's attorney) direct one of her poor interns to look up the following statue: Title 18, UNITED STATES CODE, Section 1341.

The above statute is basic federal mail fraud. When Quinn's aides put a stamp on a package containing the City's budget with Quinn's phony phantom groups, then mailed it, Quinn and her staff committed mail fraud. They all should be prosecuted accordingly.

Speaker Quinn got caught in her lies just like the defendant in the following video got caught in his lies:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nvysdk9CyLI&feature=related

Anonymous (not verified) says:

The DOI should have public hearings and have all of the City Council members testify under oath as to what they knew & when they knew it. That would put them in their places. What are they.. Gods? They should be accountable for what they did, to the taxpayers of this city of who they gave money to etc. etc. ect.!

Post a comment

The content of this field is kept private
  • Web page addresses and e-mail addresses turn into links automatically.
  • Lines and paragraphs break automatically.
  • Allowed HTML tags: <a> <em> <strong> <cite> <code> <ul> <ol> <li> <dl> <dt> <dd><br> <p> <i> <b> <embed> <img> <blockquote> <span> <strikethrough> <u>
  • Use <!--pagebreak--> to create page breaks.

More information about formatting options

By checking this box you are giving permission for Observer staff to contact you to obtain contact information and permissions required for publication.