NYC schools chief Aviles-Ramos, with union and parent support, makes a case for Mamdani to keep her on
Published in News & Features
New York City Public Schools Chancellor Melissa Aviles-Ramos made the case Friday for Zohran Mamdani to keep her at the helm of the nation’s largest school district, just days after the mayor-elect signaled she was still under consideration for the post.
“If given an opportunity, I would love to stay on,” Aviles-Ramos told the Daily News in an exclusive interview.
“I think there’s a lot of work left to do. I have a unique perspective, having served in almost every role that there is to have in this great big system, and experiencing it in real time as a mom of a sixth grader.”
Mamdani is also considering Meisha Porter, a former chancellor under Bill de Blasio, who’s been actively urging Mamdani’s transition team to appoint her to the post, sources said. Other names that have been floated are Kamar Samuels, a local Harlem superintendent, and Alex Marrero, a Denver superintendent, as well as several others who still appear to be in the running.
“The Mayor-elect is casting a wide and extensive search for all personnel appointments and when we have announcements to make, we will make them,” said Mamdani spokeswoman Monica Klein.
In her interview with the News, Aviles-Ramos touched on several areas where she and Mamdani share common ground, including protecting the rights of migrant students, improving parental involvement and addressing the issue of homelessness among NYC public school students.
“We’re aligned on those issues, and if given the opportunity, I look forward to executing a plan — both the enhancement of ones that exist and perhaps creating new ones that further our shared agenda,” she said.
Were he to select Aviles-Ramos, Mamdani would be the first New York City mayor with authority over the school system to at least temporarily keep his predecessor’s chancellor in place — a move that could be befitting of an incoming mayor who campaigned on ending mayoral control of public schools. Some advocates have pushed for Mamdani to retain Aviles-Ramos for the start of the term, before transitioning to a model that involves more community input.
“Keeping New York City Schools Chancellor Melissa Aviles-Ramos in place is one of the best decisions he can make as a mayor,” said NeQuan McClean, who’s part of a parent-led effort to keep her. “It shows he’s really serious about doing this differently with mayoral control — because it’s never been done before.”
The mayor-elect confirmed earlier this week he’s been in touch with Aviles-Ramos, who was thrust into the role last year amid a federal probe into members of Mayor Adams’ inner circle.
“I’ve met with Chancellor Ramos,” Mamdani said Tuesday on NY1’s Inside City Hall. “I appreciate the work that she’s done and, like everyone within the Adams administration, I’ll assess her and everyone else on the basis of the work they’ve done, not on that fact of who appointed them.”
Mamdani’s schools transition committee held its first meeting on Tuesday, he said during the interview.
In many ways, Mamdani and Aviles-Ramos would make a more likely pairing than he is expected to with other Adams officials he has appointed or considered, including NYPD Commissioner Jessica Tisch, with whom he’s had disagreements on approaches to public safety.
Before she was chancellor, Aviles-Ramos made her name in education circles as the district’s point person during the migrant crisis; Mamdani has indicated that protecting immigrant families from President Trump’s deportation agenda will be a priority of his administration.
More recently, the schools chief expanded an initiative this year to address student homelessness, which Mamdani plans to invest in even further. She’s also well-liked by many volunteer parents who sit on local school boards and citywide panels, who Mamdani has indicated he would give more of a voice in any changes to school governance.
Mamdani’s selection of a chancellor is further complicated by his promise to end mayoral control. The mayor-elect has not shared plans or a timeline for that policy goal, raising questions of if he will cede his authority to select a chancellor in the near or long-term.
Aviles-Ramos’s predecessor, David Banks, made headlines when he said he had “no interest” in the gig if mayoral control lapsed. Asked if that’s a change she would be comfortable with, the chancellor voiced support for the current system — but left the door open to changes.
“We’ve done a lot of really great things under mayoral control. In fact, the support for asylum-seeking families was successful because we are one large district,” Aviles-Ramos said.
“If the existing infrastructure needs to be better, then how do we make that happen? But we have accomplished a lot under mayoral control, and should he decide to keep that, we would be able to continue much more.”
Porter, the former de Blasio chancellor, was reportedly a finalist to be chief executive of Chicago’s public schools as the system transitions away from mayoral control, though the status of that search process is currently unclear. De Blasio is known to have been a sounding board for Mamdani throughout the 2025 mayoral race, and many top officials from his administration are now in line to join the mayor-elect’s City Hall, including soon-to-be First Deputy Mayor Dean Fuleihan.
Aviles-Ramos has benefited from a powerful surrogate of her own in United Federation of Teachers President Michael Mulgrew, who sits on Mamdani’s education transition committee and endorsed the mayor-elect in the general election. Mulgrew and Aviles-Ramos worked closely on changes to citywide curricular requirements and class size reduction plans.
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