NYC to stop paying teachers to do nothing

Hundreds of New York City teachers who are paid full salaries to do nothing while they await disciplinary hearings will be released from the city's "rubber rooms" this fall.

Mayor Michael Bloomberg and the teachers' union announced a deal on Thursday that will reassign most of the teachers to administrative or nonclassroom work while their cases are pending.

Paying teachers full salary and operating the temporary reassignment centers have cost the city tens of millions of dollars a year.

The city says 650 educators, mostly teachers, are in the rubber rooms today. Some have spent years in the centers playing Scrabble, reading or surfing the Internet.

School officials have blamed union rules that make it difficult to fire teachers. Teachers have said they are singled out unfairly.

(Copyright 2010 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.)

Dear reader,

Your voice matters. And we want to hear it.

Will you help shape the future of Minnesota Public Radio by taking our short Listener Survey?

It only takes a few minutes, and your input helps us serve you better—whether it’s news, culture, or the conversations that matter most to Minnesotans.

Volume Button
Volume
Now Listening To Livestream
Headshot of 1A host Jenn White
On Air
1A with Jenn White