We call upon Mayor de Blasio and Chancellor Farina to pull out of the deal to site the Success Academy charter school at the Mother Cabrini educational complex located in District 6. We urge them to consult with the District 6 parent community and collaboratively determine how to use the Mother Cabrini space for current District 6 students.....Cuomo and NY State legislature order de Blasio to find space for Eva but not for overcrowded public schools. A press conf was held Weds night.
By the way - the UFT was silent over the charter deal - why are they hiding?
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE                       
May 21, 2014
 District Six Public School Parents Advocate for Using the 
Mother Cabrini Space for Current District Six Student Needs  
Press Conference
When: Wednesday, May 21, 2014 @6:30 PM
Where: Isabella Geriatric Center (515 Audubon Avenue at 191st Street)
New York City –
 District 6 public school parents call attention to the inequity and 
injustice of the city paying the rent of a Success Academy charter 
school, to be located in the Mother Cabrini educational complex located 
in District 6, while current District 6 students are educated in 
trailers, substandard school facilities and overcrowded classrooms, and 
while numerous District 6 schools are over overcapacity and/or face 
imminent co-locations that will compromise students’ educations.  The 
Success Academy charter school in question was never approved for 
District 6; rather it was originally approved for District 1 and then 
moved to District 2.  There was no community engagement of any kind with
 the District 6 parent and neighborhood communities regarding locating a
 charter school in our district.  District 6 parents are distraught that
 their children’s needs and their schools’ needs, to improve, expand and
 flourish, continue to be ignored and hampered, while charter schools 
are fully supported in expanding and at great expense to the taxpayer. 
Gale
 Brewer, the Manhattan Borough President, writes, “The siting of a 
Success Academy charter school at the former Mother Cabrini High School 
is taking place with zero transparency and no public input. For years, 
families in the community, CEC members from District 6, and education 
advocates have put in the necessary hours of dialogue to lay the 
groundwork for Mother Cabrini to successfully transition from a Catholic
 school to new and much needed public school in the district. Success 
Academy was never a partner in this effort and to be the recipient of 
this space is nothing short of a hostile takeover. This sort of opaque 
decision-making only breeds resentment and creates divisions. New York 
must do better.” 
Evelyn Roman, public school parent and Parent Association President at District Six’s Mott Hall School says, “The
 Mott Hall School is the highest performing Title I School in District 
6.    Despite this, it has been left to languish in a “temporary” 
building for 27 years.  This building has no cafeteria, using a 
makeshift one instead, no gym, no library, limited outdoor space (that 
is currently in violation of building codes), and tiny classrooms.  The 
current Mott Hall space was never intended for use as a school. Mott 
Hall parents have been advocating for new and adequate space for over a 
dozen years to no avail.  It is painful that well-equipped spaces, such 
as the Mother Cabrini space, have been offered to charter schools, 
funded by special interests, while our Mott Hall children are once again
 ignored and the hundreds of students who each year seek to attend Mott 
Hall are turned away due to lack of space.”
Miriam Aristy-Farer public school parent and President of District 6 Community Education Council (CEC6) notes, “As
 a District 6 parent and CEC6 president, it was troubling to learn about
 Success Academy coming to District 6 and Mother Cabrini via the local 
news, illustrating that there was no public engagement process of any 
kind. As a parent at a co-located District 6 school, given how quickly 
this decision was made after the state budget passed, I found myself 
depressed and asking if we New York City public school parents are 
actually now worse off than before.  This is very different from the 
future we envisioned after the Bloomberg era."
Johanna Garcia, a parent whose children attend PS/IS 187 and the Vice-President of the PTA, says, “Speaking on behalf of the
 PS/IS 187 community, the neighborhood school sitting just a block away 
from Mother Cabrini, we feel especially betrayed and disappointed in the
 utter lack of community input in the decision-making process.  In the 
past seven years, budget cuts to our school alone have exceeded $1.5 
million, resulting in the loss of more than twelve teachers and three 
aides. Our school is bursting at the seams and grossly over capacity. So
 much so that two years ago, our popular universal pre-kindergarten 
program was squeezed out due to overcrowding.  The District 6 community deserves and, frankly, was expecting better from the new Administration.”
Yuderka Valdez, IS 52 parent and school leader says: "Earlier this year over 2,000 JHS 52 parents and District 6 community members signed a petition against the co-location of a Career and Technical Education (CTE) high school in the M052 building, when it was first proposed by the Bloomberg administration, because we knew that such a co-location would irreparably damage our children’s school and education. Now we learn that city will spend tens of millions of dollars to house a charter school in a space that would be perfect for the incoming CTE high school, sparing our school and our students."
Finally, Kari Steeves, District 6 public school parent states, “The parents of Muscota
 New School, one of 3 progressive elementary schools in District 6, see 
many needs in our district that will go unaddressed and unfunded, 
because public money will be directed toward charter space, not public 
school space. Most urgently for our children, we have identified the 
need for a progressive middle school in the district to allow students 
to continue their education within the progressive model. We have 
expressed this need to our elected parent representatives on the CEC and
 the District Superintendent.  Rather than supporting this need and 
others identified by our fellow D6 parents, the city will now pay rent 
for and renovate space for a Success Academy charter school at the 
beautiful Mother Cabrini campus, even though there has been no movement 
within the D6 community to bring a Success Academy charter into the 
district. Parents at Muscota call on the state to repeal the amendment 
to the 2014 budget that guarantees publicly funded space to charter 
schools, which makes clear that the state neither trusts nor cares what 
local parents want for their children.”
We
 District Six parents, elected parent leaders, public education 
advocates, and the elected representatives who support us urge our state
 representatives to introduce legislation to undo this disastrous 
policy, which forces the city to house or pay rent for charter schools. 
We call upon Mayor de Blasio and Chancellor Farina to pull out of the 
deal to site the Success Academy charter school at the Mother Cabrini 
educational complex located in District 6.  We urge them to consult with
 the District 6 parent community and collaboratively determine how to 
use the Mother Cabrini space for current District 6 students. We note 
that the District 6 Community Education Council recently passed a 
resolution in opposition to the state budget provisions, urging our 
state elected leaders to rescind them and calling on the Mayor to work 
with the community to address the urgent needs of District 6 students, 
in particular the use of the Mother Cabrini space. All are welcome to 
join us on Wednesday May 21, 2014, at 6:30 PM
 at the Isabella Geriatric Center (515 Audubon Avenue) to hear from 
District 6 public school families affected and support our District 6 
public school parents, students, schools, families and communities.
                                 #############################
Victoria (Tory) Frye
vicnyc@me.com
vicnyc@me.com
 
 

