Council Member Wong Inquires About Waitlist Movement and SYEP Funding
Council Member Phil Wong asks how quickly the Summer Rising waitlist moves and questions the ratio of city to state funding for the Summer Youth Employment Program.
Okay, thank you, Chair.
Um my question re uh my first question is regards to the attendance for the summer rising.
Um okay, so we have over 150,000 applicants uh was submitted from March third to March 27th.
Uh but my my experience with summarizing is that quite often some kids don't show up and then meanwhile there are other kids in the waiting list, they they're expecting a phone call.
Um, but who then they never get the call.
So my question is who who does the outreach?
DYCD or is the is the school's job?
Because uh uh when I call to school, I get the run around.
So uh thank you for that question.
Um, you know, I think it's important to know that this is a collaborative program model between New York City Public Schools and DYCD and ensuring that there are supports and services for all young people.
Um and also summer is a very different model in itself, right?
It is not a requirement to show up every single day.
We have families that utilize space and weeks and days differently than you would say after school, which is a year-round component.
Um another thing is that the wait list is also factored in with other components such as ensuring that we are prioritizing youth um that are special needs, uh students in temporary housing, you know, families that will be able to have opportunity to have those seats that they probably wouldn't have never used before.
And it is an extremely popular model, so we are gonna see robust wait lists in certain areas.
Um then, you know, from one year to the next.
So every year we do focus on looking at specific locations and sites where we can open up more programs.
And actually this year we actually opened up more programs to kind of lighten the load on wait lists for specific schools.
This past year we opened up 40 new elementary programs, but we know the demand has increased.
But our families in the waiting list are they being contacted and say, okay, we have an opening, please come.
Because uh my impression is that they don't get these phone calls.
I'm I'm glad you asked that question.
And as my colleague was mentioning, like every year we listen to feedback and we make improvements.
We had roughly amount the same amount of applications this year as last year, but we made significantly more offers, thousands more offers.
At this time, in comparison to the same time last year, we also have thousands more of those offers accepted.
So we're we're above in by the thousands, the numbers that we had um last year, and and the wait list is actually gotten smaller because of those efforts.
So as the commissioner said in her testimony, looking at the attendance patterns, as you mentioned, enrollment patterns, we've been able to get more young people pushed into the program than we ever have before, being able to anticipate some of those trends, and I think we'll see changes to the experience you had last summer.