In a bid to make it easier for New York City to comply with the state’s class size law, Democratic mayoral front-runner Zohran Mamdani wants to boost the number of teachers in the system by footing the bill for aspiring educators to earn degrees.
Mamdani unveiled a plan on Wednesday to provide students with $12,000 in tuition assistance each year, in exchange for a commitment to stay in the city’s school system for at least three years.
“The teachers we have are doing incredible work, but we need to ensure that we ask them to do a job that is in fact possible,” Mamdani said at press conference in Astoria, Queens with local education committee chairs from the State Senate and City Council and teachers union officials.
“One key part of that is ensuring that they have a limited number of students in their classroom, and the only way we can do that is if we hire the additional teachers necessary.”
If enacted, the program would offer two tracks: One for high school students interested in teaching to earn early college credits, and another for adult students who want to pivot careers through partnerships with CUNY and SUNY. Graduates would be placed in neighborhoods with the highest teacher vacancy and turnover rates.
Mamdani said the program would launch with an initial cohort of 1,000 students, for an annual cost of $12 million, which the Democratic Socialist said he could pay for by reallocating billions away from the Education Department’s “duplicative” contracts and consulting fees.
He said there is “close to $10 billion a year that we are currently spending within our education system on contracts and consulting, much of which is not only not standardized, not only duplicative, but also there are a number of those contracts that seem to have more in common with who the vendors know.”
Participants would also see their certification exam fees waived, and receive mentorship from current teachers and free OMNY cards.
The teachers union-backed class size law caps the number of students between 20 to 25, depending on the grade. The union endorsed Mamdani after his primary win.
Mayor Adams spent most of his term criticizing the law as an unfunded mandate that will force the city to make difficult trade-offs, before changing his tune as a then-mayoral candidate. Both independent candidate Andrew Cuomo and GOP nominee Curtis Sliwa have called for greater state investments — with the former governor calling the mandate, as it stands, “reckless.”
The law must be fully phased in by September 2028, though exemptions are available.