Zohran Mamdani faces teacher backlash

Zohran Mamdani faces teacher backlash
Source: Newsweek

Many pre-kindergarten teachers are demanding higher wages and plan to hold a rally at City Hall on Thursday, according to Chalkbeat.

Education issues and educator engagement were central to Mamdani's political identity and mayoral campaign.

Education governance was a defining campaign issue. Mamdani ran on dramatically restructuring mayoral control of schools, which was a major departure from two decades of the city's policy.

An audit from two years ago released by the city comptroller found that 90 percent of community-based lead teachers with master's degrees earned less than public school early childhood educators. In the Bronx and Brooklyn, certified teachers can start at $36,000 or less per year.

That frustration is leading pre-K teachers to hold a rally for higher wages at City Hall on Thursday.

"It's just a complete lack of respect," pre-K teacher Rebecca Schneider-Kaplan told Chalkbeat. "I needed two degrees to become an early childhood educator, but I cannot afford to pay back my loans because I don't make enough money."

New York City's early childhood system serves around 160,000 children. This fall, 2,000 new, free spots will be available for 2-year-olds under Mamdani's leadership.

During his campaign, Mamdani called for universal free child care from 6 weeks to 5 years old.

Alongside Governor Kathy Hochul, Mamdani approved a new "2‑Care" program extending free child care to 2‑year‑olds as part of a broader universal child care rollout.

The partnership aims to expand access to pre‑K across the state and support nearly 100,000 additional children.

Within his first days in office, Mamdani and Hochul laid out the first phase of universal child care, dramatically increasing access for children ages 2 to 4.

Even before taking office, Mamdani was assembling a specialized team to execute the $6 billion universal child care initiative.

Alex Beene, a financial literacy instructor for the University of Tennessee at Martin, told Newsweek: "Mayor Mamdani's initial efforts to introduce and expand child care to more families in the city was met with praise from most, as child care remains a barrier for many working families who struggle to find affordable options -- if any options at all -- available. However, some are raising concerns about the city working on child care coverage before providing more financial support for teachers who are wanting better pay and benefits."

Mamdani's mayoral campaign website reads: "After rent, the biggest cost for New York's working families is child care. It's literally driving them out of the city: New Yorkers with children under 6 are leaving at double the rate of all others."

It remains unclear whether Mamdani will respond to the teacher's demands at City Hall on Thursday.

"With educators taking such a key role in the lives of many children, it makes sense their needs would be included in making the city's children a stronger priority," Beene said. "Both issues are key to families in the city, and both have received verbal support from the Mayor. The question will be how he balances the financial needs of both in a way to provide a more streamlined process for parents and educators."