Hamodia, NEW YORK - In a dramatic reaction to the call for state intrusion in Monsey yeshivah funding, Aron Wieder announced at a news conference Thursday afternoon that he was resigning his post as the Rockland County Legislature’s Democratic leader.
The resignation, announced before dozens of elected officials and community leaders in the Rockland County legislative chamber, came three days after the New York State Board of Regents unanimously voted to approve a panel’s recommendation that the state appoint a monitor over the East Ramapo school board, with power to override decisions made by the popularly elected board.
Flanked by New York State Assemblyman Dov Hikind and Agudath Israel COO Rabbi Yosef Chaim Golding, Wieder said that his move should not be seen as a protest but as an attempt to remove himself as a distraction in the battle for the school board’s independence.
“A short while ago, I submitted [my resignation] to the president of the legislature,” Wieder said at the press conference.
“The reason I took the drastic step to resign was because some have turned my position as majority leader and strong advocacy to protect the constitutional rights and the civil liberties of the Orthodox Jewish community here in Rockland County a distraction for the work of the county legislature and the Democratic caucus,” Wieder said. “Therefore, I have stepped aside to put those concerns ahead of my own.”
Wieder was referring to county executive Ed Day, a Republican who has been a persistent antagonist of his county’s yeshivah community. Hours before Wieder’s announcement, Day taunted the local Democratic party for allowing Wieder to speak for both them and the East Ramapo school board.
“The Rockland County Democratic Committee either stands with ALL the children of East Ramapo or you do not,” he posted on social media. “… As long as THEIR legislative majority leader is fighting what every clear thinking individual sees must happen, their words are meaningless.”
On Monday, in a report rejected by local yeshivos and national Jewish movements as biased, a panel appointed by the state Education Department issued 19 recommendations for the district, which covers an estimated 24,000 yeshivah students in Monsey, Spring Valley and New Square.
The most significant recommendation calls for the state legislature to authorize a veto-empowered monitor, oversee local elections, and institute an affirmative action requirement for at least one public school parent to serve on the elected school board.
The legislature is due to rearrange leadership seats at the beginning of the new session, which begins in two weeks. But Wieder said that the resignation takes effect immediately.
“I am here today speaking not as majority leader, not as a spokesman of the East Ramapo school district, but as an elected official of the 13th district of the East Ramapo county,” he said.
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