Objective coverage of church-state and religious liberty developments, with extensive links to primary sources.
Saturday, February 07, 2009
New York City Considering Converting Some Catholic Schools To Charter Schools
New York City public schools are overcrowded. In Brooklyn, some Catholic schools threaten to close for lack of enrollment. WABC today reports that New York's Mayor Michael Bloomberg and Bishop Nicholas Dimarzio of the Brooklyn diocese are considering a plan to select four Catholic schools in Brooklyn and Queens and convert them to publicly funded charter schools. Religion would be eliminated from the curriculum for the schools that are converted. In order for the plan to be carried out, New York state will need to change its law that now bans the conversion of religious schools to charter schools. Newsday reports that the city will also consider similar conversion arrangements for other private and non-Catholic religiously operated schools in the city.