NYC Mayor-elect Backs Mayoral School Control in Major Policy Reversal
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If you’ve watched your child navigate a massive school system where your voice seems to disappear into bureaucratic layers, you understand why school governance matters. You’re not alone in feeling that parents should have more say in education decisions. That’s exactly the tension at the heart of New York City’s latest education shake-up, where a new mayor is trying to balance accountability with community involvement.
TL;DR
NYC Mayor-elect Zohran Mamdani reversed his campaign promise to end mayoral control, now asking the legislature to extend it.
Kamar Samuels was named schools chancellor, bringing experience with school integration and literacy improvement.
The decision affects 900,000 students in a $43 billion system where nearly 45% of grades 3-8 students are developing grade-level skills.
Mamdani promises reforms to make parent involvement more meaningful, including restructured community meetings.
The state legislature must vote on mayoral control renewal in June, giving families time to watch how promised reforms develop.
New Mayor Changes Course on School Governance
New York City Mayor-elect Zohran Mamdani announced on December 31, 2025, that he will ask the state legislature to continue mayoral control of the city’s public schools—a complete reversal from his campaign promise to end the governance structure. Mamdani made the announcement while introducing Kamar Samuels as the city’s new schools chancellor, effective January 1, 2026.
During his campaign, Mamdani had called for a “co-governance” model that would give parents, students, and educators more power over education decisions. Instead, he now says he wants to reform mayoral control rather than eliminate it. “I will be asking the legislature for a continuation of mayoral control,” Mamdani said, “and I will also be committed with my incoming schools chancellor to ensure that the mayoral control we preside over is not the same one that New Yorkers see today.”
The governance debate affects how 900,000 students across New York City experience their education every day. Under mayoral control—in place since 2002 when Mayor Michael Bloomberg pushed for its adoption—the mayor selects the schools chancellor and appoints the majority of the Panel for Educational Policy. This structure has given successive mayors sweeping power over a $43 billion school system with 150,000 staff members.
For families navigating learning challenges, the question of who controls education policy directly affects everything from reading programs to how students receive support. When parents advocate for their children’s needs, understanding how to effectively engage with school leadership becomes essential—regardless of who holds ultimate authority.
Author Quote"
I will be asking the legislature for a continuation of mayoral control, and I will also be committed with my incoming schools chancellor to ensure that the mayoral control we preside over is not the same one that New Yorkers see today – Zohran Mamdani, NYC Mayor-elect
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Accountability Versus Community Voice
Mamdani defended his reversal by emphasizing accountability. “New Yorkers need to know where the buck stops with me,” he said. Yet the challenge facing NYC schools is significant: nearly 45% of students in grades 3-8 are still developing grade-level skills on state tests, and approximately 154,000 students experience homelessness. Current Community Education Council elections see less than 2% voter turnout.
New chancellor Kamar Samuels emphasized a commitment to seeing students as individuals. “What matters is not just what we do, it’s how we do it, by listening to educators, by respecting families, by seeing students, not just as data points, but as whole people with enormous potential,” Samuels said. This perspective aligns with research showing that parents who actively advocate for their children’s educational needs see better outcomes regardless of system-level governance.
Key Takeaways:
1
Major policy reversal announced: NYC Mayor-elect Mamdani will seek to extend mayoral control of schools despite campaigning on ending the governance structure.
2
Community involvement promised: New administration pledges to reform parent meetings and make community input tangible rather than ceremonial.
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New chancellor emphasizes potential: Kamar Samuels commits to seeing students as whole people with enormous potential, not just data points.
What This Means for New York Families
The state legislature must renew mayoral control when it expires in June. Mamdani has promised reforms including restructured parent meetings at Community Education Councils to accommodate working families and improved roles for parent coordinators. Whether these changes translate into genuine community input remains to be seen.
Samuels brings experience with school integration and literacy improvement. He previously oversaw NYC Reads, a curriculum that increased reading test scores, and secured over $10 million in grants for integration efforts. For families working to support their children’s learning, the new administration’s actions in the coming months will reveal whether “tangible and actionable” community involvement becomes reality or remains bureaucratic promise.
Author Quote"
What matters is not just what we do, it’s how we do it, by listening to educators, by respecting families, by seeing students, not just as data points, but as whole people with enormous potential – Kamar Samuels, NYC Schools Chancellor-designate
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Every child has enormous potential waiting to be developed, and every parent has the instinct to nurture it. When school governance becomes a barrier rather than a bridge between families and education, children are the ones who pay the price. Systems that treat students as data points rather than developing individuals with unique capabilities fail the very families they’re designed to serve. Whether NYC’s new administration delivers on promises of meaningful parent involvement or perpetuates bureaucratic lip service, one thing remains constant: your role as your child’s first and most powerful advocate. If you’re ready to stop waiting for systems to catch up to your child’s needs, the Learning Success All Access Program offers a free trial that includes a personalized Action Plan—and you keep that plan even if you decide it’s not the right fit.
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