Archbishop Dolan

Saving New York's Catholic Schools

This week, the Archdiocese of New York released its “Pathways to Excellence” strategic plan for Catholic schools. The plan will serve as a roadmap for maintaining and growing Catholic education and Catholic schools in the archdiocese. The Archdiocese outlines its plan to combat declining enrollment by merging or closing several of their schools. (The New York Times reports that 30 of the 216 parish schools are targeted.) As an advocate for strong, viable non-public schools, I welcome the Archbishop Dolan's Strategic Plan for Catholic Schools. It is a clear-eyed assessment of the success of Catholic education in New York and seeks the long-range sustainability of parish schools.  A truly worthy goal if we are to have healthy, high quality educational options available to New York families. 

Last January, Archbishop Dolan wrote to Members of Legislature of the crisis facing Catholic schools, students and their families. He wrote of the dual burden of school taxes and tuition crushing families who have chosen the religious school option. Dolan further stated that the Archdiocese’s efforts to keep Catholic schools affordable have been hampered by the state’s failure to fully reimburse religious and independent schools for the costs incurred complying with state mandates. The state’s failure to fully reimburse the NY Archdiocese, other religious and nonpublic schools is a violation of the Mandated Services Reimbursement statute (Chapter 507 of the Laws of 1974). New York State owes religious and nonpublic schools over $50 million dollars: two years of expenses for complying with the Comprehensive Attendance Policy (CAP); an accounting error by the State Education Department, costing schools an initial $15 million, remains uncorrected; the state’s obligation of 100 percent reimbursement was renounced in the 2008-09 fiscal year, making those cuts permanent rather than temporary; and imposing the MTA payroll tax on these schools while public school districts are reimbursed.  Oddly, this fiscal hostility to the religious and nonpublic schools seems to coincide with the advent of Spitzer-Paterson budget proposals. As Archbishop Dolan rightly noted, “an important public trust has been breached.”



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