NYC Mayor-Elect Reverses Course, Keeps Control of Schools for Accountability
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If you’ve watched decisions about your child’s education get made by distant administrators who never seem to hear your voice, you understand the frustration parents feel about school governance. You’re not imagining the disconnect between what happens in policy meetings and what your child experiences in the classroom. This is exactly why conversations about who controls public schools matter so much to families seeking the best outcomes for their children.
TL;DR
NYC Mayor-elect Zohran Mamdani reversed his campaign promise to end mayoral control of schools, now supporting its continuation for accountability.
Veteran educator Kamar Samuels was named schools chancellor, bringing experience with school integration and equity initiatives.
The change affects the nation's largest school district, serving nearly 900,000 students with a $43 billion budget.
Mamdani pledged increased community involvement through restructured parent meetings and elevated parent coordinator roles.
State Legislature must renew mayoral control in June 2026, when the new approach will face its first major test.
Mayor-Elect Shifts on Key Education Promise
In a significant reversal from his campaign platform, New York City Mayor-elect Zohran Mamdani announced he will ask state lawmakers to extend mayoral control of the nation’s largest school system. At a December 31st press conference where he also named veteran educator Kamar Samuels as his new schools chancellor, Mamdani explained his change in position.
“For New Yorkers to know where the buck stops, it has to stop with me,” Mamdani stated, emphasizing accountability as his primary motivation. During his campaign, he had promised to “end mayoral control” and implement a “co-governance” model giving parents, teachers, and students more direct power over school decisions.
The incoming administration inherits a massive system serving nearly 900,000 students with a $43 billion budget and approximately 150,000 staff. Nearly 45% of students in grades 3-8 are performing below grade level, and the system serves approximately 154,000 homeless students while facing teacher shortages in hard-to-staff positions.
Mayoral control has been the governance structure since 2002, when then-Mayor Michael Bloomberg pushed state lawmakers to dissolve elected school boards, citing dysfunction and lack of accountability. For parents who want to understand how school governance affects their ability to advocate for their children, research on educational advocacy provides important context about navigating these systems effectively.
Author Quote"
For New Yorkers to know where the buck stops, it has to stop with me
Zohran Mamdani, NYC Mayor-elect
"
New Chancellor Brings Integration Focus
Mamdani’s choice for schools chancellor, Kamar Samuels, brings extensive experience as superintendent in Manhattan’s District 3 and previously Brooklyn’s District 13. Samuels has led controversial school mergers aimed at fostering integration in NYC’s segregated school system and has championed moves away from gifted-and-talented programs toward schoolwide enrichment approaches.
“Equity requires listening to educators, by respecting families, by seeing students as whole people with enormous potential,” Samuels stated. His emphasis on seeing children’s potential aligns with what parent advocacy research demonstrates: when families are treated as partners rather than obstacles, children thrive.
Key Takeaways:
1
Policy reversal explained: NYC Mayor-elect Mamdani reversed his campaign pledge to end mayoral control, citing accountability as his primary reason for keeping the governance structure.
2
Community engagement promised: New administration pledges to restructure parent involvement to be more meaningful, including better meeting times for working families and elevated parent coordinator roles.
3
Large system challenges ahead: With 45% of students performing below grade level and 154,000 homeless students, the new leadership faces significant educational equity challenges.
Community Voice Remains a Priority
Despite maintaining mayoral control, Mamdani pledged to make community involvement “tangible and actionable” rather than merely ceremonial. His plans include restructuring parent council meetings to accommodate working parents, improving parent coordinator roles to function as meaningful organizers rather than administrative staff, and raising awareness of Community Education Councils, which currently experience less than 2% voter turnout.
The State Legislature must renew mayoral control every two or four years, and Mamdani said he will ask lawmakers to extend his authority when it comes up for renewal in June 2026. For parents watching these developments, the key question remains whether increased community engagement will translate to meaningful influence over the decisions that affect their children’s daily educational experience.
Author Quote"
Equity requires listening to educators, by respecting families, by seeing students as whole people with enormous potential
Kamar Samuels, NYC Schools Chancellor
"
Every child deserves to be seen as a person with enormous potential, exactly as the new chancellor described. When parents have genuine pathways to influence their children’s education, outcomes improve. Too often, bureaucratic structures keep family voices at the margins rather than at the center of educational decisions. If you’re ready to become your child’s most effective advocate regardless of who controls your local schools, 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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