Mark Weprin

Congestion Pricing Critic Praises Bloomberg

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Today is Earth Day! It’s also the one-year anniversary of Michael Bloomberg's formal announcement of a plan for congestion pricing.

To honor the occasion, a congestion pricing critic, Assemblyman Mark Weprin, is distributing a letter that commends Bloomberg for putting the issue on the table:

"So while I opposed the congestion pricing plan, I applaud the Mayor for appropriately placing traffic congestion and its environmental impacts at the forefront of public discourse. Indeed, every mayoral candidate running next year will now have to present a serious plan for traffic mitigation in New York City.

Here's the full letter:  read more »

Sheldon Silver and the Assembly Kill Congestion Pricing

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Congestion pricing is dead in the Assembly.

“Shelly just came out of our conference and said our conference does not have the support to bring this to the floor,” said Democratic Assemblyman Mark Weprin.

“I want to be clear that the conference was overwhelmingly against it,” he said, dispelling the notion that Silver, personally, blocked the plan. Weprin, who opposed the plan, said the program’s biggest supporter, Michael Bloomberg, should not be blamed for the failure, but rather, commended for making it an issue.  read more »

UFT Supports Weprin Against Klein, N.Y. Post

Joel Klein.
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Joel Klein.

A few weeks ago, Assemblyman Mark Weprin made some enemies in City Hall when he criticized high-stakes testing in public schools. Schools Chancellor Joel Klein disagreed. Michael Bloomberg went a bit further, blasting Weprin during his weekly radio show. (The two sort of buried the hatchet later).

Then the New York Post wrote this unflattering editorial about him.

Now, the United Federation of Teachers is getting into the mix.  read more »

Making Nice in Albany



Here’s a shot of Michael Bloomberg chatting with Mark Weprin at the State of the State in Albany, showing that Eliot Spitzer wasn’t the only one being nice to people he's disagreed with.

Recently, Bloomberg went on his radio show to blast Weprin for criticizing the school system's use of high-stakes testing. Weprin responded at the time by suggesting parents with kids in the schools now understand the issue better than the mayor.

So, what did the two talk about?

“We had a nice chat,” is all Weprin would say when I reached him just now.

Bloomberg Responds to Weprin on Schools

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Michael Bloomberg hit back at Assemblyman Mark Weprin this morning after Weprin criticized Bloomberg's use of high-stakes tests in public schools:

“You know, I don’t know what he’s running for," Bloomberg said on his weekly radio show, "but it’s hard to argue that you can do as much damage any other way as when you try to stop what has been a phenomenally successful, model program for the country, and arguably, lots of other countries.”

He added, “Maybe somebody in the legislature doesn’t understand it because they don’t work in the private sector or the executive branches of government, but the rest of us are all held every day to results, and we’re tested every day. And our children are tested every day.”

Weprin, who actually does have private sector experience, emailed me this response, “our students are spending too much time learning test taking skills. A parent or teacher of a 3rd-8th grader knows exactly what I’m talking about.”

As the comment suggests, Bloomberg doesn’t have a kid in the school system, while Weprin does.

A Song for Spitzer From His Legislators

Here's Assemblyman Mark Weprin singing about Eliot Spitzer at a charity show put on by Queens lawmakers.

The lycrics: “Eliot Spitzer is a caring, loving person. He just doesn’t fully appreciate the subtleties and pleasures of our job.” At the end of the tune he laments to the governor, “a legislator is more than just a social disease.”

Liz, who got a fancy front-row seat at the show, has a clip of Christine Quinn (in a blonde wig) here.

Weiner Guards Giuliani's Border Tradition

Yesterday, one of the quirkiest traditions returned to a major Memorial Day Parade that starts a few blocks inside Nassau County before winding its way through the Little Neck-Douglaston section of Queens.

“I refused to march on the Nassau side,” Weiner told me. He stood on the border, next to the 'Welcome to Nassau' sign and waited for the parade to get into New York City territory before joining in. A person who has been marching in that parade for a couple of years told me that the most notable politician to do that in the past was Rudy Giuliani.

Also attending the parade were regular marchers Mike Bloomberg Frank Padavan, Chuck Schumer, Christine Quinn, Bill Thompson, Adolfo Carrion, Eric Gioia, Melinda Katz, David and Mark Weprin, and Peter Vallone, Sr.