Just a few weeks after Mayor Bloomberg warned that 14,000 city DOE workers, including teachers, might be laid off, Education Secretary Arne Duncan announced - at a Brooklyn charter school - that federal funds would be allocated to states in time to avert such layoffs across the country.

"We need to invest this money quickly, thoughtfully and transparently to protect kids, create jobs and drive reforms,"said Duncan. UFT/AFT President Randi Weingarten, principals' union President Ernest Logan, Chancellor Joel Klein, and Mayor Bloomberg stood nearby, nodding throughout his remarks.

duncan-two.jpg

Out of the $100 billion in emergency funding being granted to American schools, New York City schools can expect about $1.9 billion, Duncan said. The City anticipates that approximately $300 million of those funds will be to expand Title 1 funding, $100 million will expand Individuals with Disabilities Act (IDEA) funding, and more than $25 million will be earmarked for educational technology. "This stimulus package saves a generation of kids," Weingarten said.

The total amount of money being granted by the federal government, broken down by state, is now available online.

"This in once-in-a-lifetime money," Duncan said. He emphasized that while the majority of funding will likely be used to plug budget short-falls and save teaching jobs, some will also be used for innovation, including $5 billion reserved for grants supporting achievement-gap-closing initiatives at the state or local level.

"We have to keep moving forward," the Education Secretary stressed. "We can't take a step back."

The Secretary also said that he will work to establish common standards across the nation, and he voiced his support for standardized tests as a means of measuring progress. (No direct mention was made of No Child Left Behind [NCLB] President Bush's signature education policy, which comes up for review, and possible revision, this year.) Mayor Bloomberg then jumped in to heartily agree on the testing point in particular, saying that it was "outrageous" to argue against testing.

duncan-laughs.jpgThe optimistic mood amongst the ed bigwigs outlasted the press conference, when most of the photographers and crews had left. Someone from the school asked Weingarten to take a picture of her sometimes-nemesis/sometimes-friend Klein with a group of students. "Say 'weekend'!" said Weingarten, alluding to the fact that unlike most city children, the charter school students didn't get a vacation this week. A few minutes later, Chancellor Klein was behind the camera as several teachers posed with Duncan. "We should get a picture of our Chancellor taking this picture!" one teacher said. Staffers for Duncan, Klein, and Weingarten stood by, looking slightly bemused.

But on her way out the door, it was back to business for Weingarten. "I would like to talk to your teachers," she said to someone from Explore Charter School, which, like many charter schools, is not part of the teachers union.

In keeping with the positive, polite and largely uncritical spirit of the day, the educator nodded and smiled - congenial but noncommittal - and went back to work.