News of Carranza’s departure brings ‘sense of optimism’  
 to some Queens elected offi cials and education activists 
 BY ANGÉLICA ACEVEDO 
 After a tumultuous three  
 years leading the nation’s  
 largest public school system,  
 Schools Chancellor Richard  
 Carranza  announced  he  is  
 resigning from his post next  
 month.  Some  of  Queens’  education  
 advocates  and  elected  
 officials have begun reacting  
 to the news, welcoming new  
 leadership to the Department of  
 Education. 
 On  Feb.  26,  Carranza  said  
 he’s leaving his position in mid- 
 March due to the personal toll  
 the COVID-19 pandemic has  
 had on him, and to take time to  
 grieve  the  11  family  members  
 and friends he’s lost to the virus. 
 “This is a bittersweet moment  
 for me,” said Carranza.  
 “I came to New York City three  
 years ago with a mission to help  
 the  Department  of  Education  
 reach its full potential and of  
 course to serve and lift up all,  
 not just some, but all of our public  
 school children.” 
 Meisha Porter, who currently  
 serves as Bronx executive superintendent, 
  will succeed Carranza. 
  Porter, a Queens native,  
 is the first Black woman to hold  
 the chancellor’s office. 
 Carranza  counts  the  initial  
 closing  of  the  public  school  
 system and move to remote  
 learning  in  March;  distribution  
 of half a million devices for  
 remote learning; distribution  
 of  80 million meals; as well as  
 school reopenings last fall as  
 some of his tenure’s successes  
 during an unprecedented  year  
 of navigating the COVID-19  
 pandemic. 
 He  said  he  felt  comfortable  
 finally taking time to process  
 the impact the virus has taken  
 on his family now that officials  
 have “stabilized” the public  
 school system. 
 Yet,  for many  parents,  educators  
 and students, the public  
 school system — which serves  
 more than 1.1 million students  
 — is still far from stabilized  
 during the ongoing pandemic. 
 Phil Wong, president of  
 Community Education Council  
 24  representing  parts  of  western  
 and central Queens, said  
 there is still much to be fixed —  
 from reopening all schools for  
 in-person learning to ensuring  
 all students who live in homeless  
 shelters have access to the  
 internet. 
 “Overall there’s been poor  
 planning, poor organization  
 and poor execution,” Wong told  
 QNS. 
 But  Carranza’s  time  as  the  
 head of the city’s public school  
 system was filled with backlash  
 from some Queens parents and  
 elected officials, even prior to  
 the pandemic.  
 One  of  the  main  points  of  
 contention was Carranza’s efforts  
 to reform both the Specialized  
 High  School  Admissions  
 Test (SHSAT) and Gifted and  
 Talented program, as part of his  
 mission to desegregate schools  
 and bring equity into the city’s  
 public school system. But that  
 has been a complex issue to address  
 in New York City, which  
 is considered one of the most  
 TIMESLEDGER   |   QNS.18     COM   |   MARCH 5-MARCH 11, 2021 
 segregated school systems in  
 the nation. 
 Reports from The New York  
 Times suggest arguments between  
 the chancellor and Mayor  
 Bill de Blasio over the Gifted  
 and Talented program may be a  
 reason behind his departure.  
 UFT President Michael Mulgrew’s  
 statement regarding  
 Carranza’s  departure  alluded  
 to possible tensions. 
 “Richard Carranza was a  
 real partner in our efforts to  
 open  school  safely,”  Mulgrew  
 said. “Too often he had to fight  
 behind the scenes to keep the  
 needs of students, staff and  
 their families ahead of politics.  
 We wish him well. He will be  
 missed.” 
 Carranza, though, maintains  
 that his departure is for  
 personal reasons. In a letter  
 to  the  school  community,  Carranza  
 wrote he is unsure what  
 is next for him. 
 Wong  is  part  of  a  group  of  
 education advocates who have  
 staunchly opposed Carranza  
 and his policies. Most recently,  
 he’s dismayed by how the city  
 is administering the Gifted and  
 Talented program. 
 “The issue has alienated parents,” 
  Wong said. “Thousands  
 signed up, then were told there  
 would be no test, then were told  
 there would be a lottery. There  
 was no clear direction. The  
 result is parents losing confidence  
 and they leave for charter  
 schools, Catholic schools  
 and even leave the city.” 
 This year, the city reported  
 an unusual decline in enrollment  
 rate  of  about  43,000  students, 
  or 4 percent decrease. But  
 enrollment has been steadily  
 declining for years for varying  
 reasons,  including  declining  
 birthrates  and  an  increase  in  
 charter school enrollment, according  
 to Chalkbeat. 
 Councilman Robert Holden,  
 Carranza’s most vocal critic in  
 the City Council, didn’t mince  
 words following the announcement  
 of his departure. 
 “Chancellor Carranza, the  
 city’s most overpaid non-essential  
 worker, constantly put his  
 own political agenda ahead of  
 our students’ education” Holden  
 said. “His relentless attacks  
 on  academic  standards  and  
 Gifted and Talented opportunities  
 hurt our public school system. 
  His resignation is the best  
 thing  to  happen  to  our  city’s  
 students and teachers in a long  
 time. We need to focus on making  
 sure our hardest working  
 students have the opportunities  
 they earn.” 
 Adriana Aviles, president of  
 Community Education Council  
 26 representing parts of northeast  
 Queens, told QNS she felt  
 Queens “was never part of the  
 conversation” under Carranza. 
  Aviles points to Carranza  
 abruptly  leaving  their  town  
 hall in Bayside last year as the  
 start of the disconnect. 
 In  the  town  hall  last  January  
 in Bayside, parents were  
 not only protesting  to keep  the  
 SHSATs, but also asking for  
 answers about troubles at a local  
 middle school. Aviles said  
 “he never came back” to the  
 district, and families were left  
 “short-sighted in terms of transparency  
 and communication.” 
 Now, Aviles said the community  
 is mostly “excited” to have  
 someone new in the role. 
 Porter has an extensive history  
 with  the  DOE,  from  serving  
 as a teacher and most recently  
 an administrator. She’ll  
 be the first person appointed  
 from  within  DOE  leadership  
 in  recent  history  to  lead  the  
 department. 
 State Senator Joseph P.  
 Addabbo, Jr.  is also optimistic  
 about what new leadership may  
 bring. 
 “I  believe  that  with  every  
 announcement of a new commissioner  
 or chancellor being  
 appointed,  it  brings  a  sense  of  
 optimism  that  the  concerns  of  
 my constituents will be heard,”  
 Addabbo said. “I’m hopeful  
 that  the  new  chancellor  will  
 acknowledge and act upon the  
 voices  of  parents,  students,  
 administrators, teachers and  
 elected officials as we advocate  
 for the best education possible  
 for all our school-aged  
 residents.” 
 Mayor Bill de Blasio holds a media availability on COVID-19 with Schools Chancellor Richard Carranza  
 at City Hall in March 2020.               Photo by Ed Reed/Mayoral Photography Offi ce 
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