Please send a letter
 now to Chancellor Carranza to rescind the decision to close PS 25 and 
allow the school to grow by putting a PreKch and a 3K class in the 
school for next year.
    
As described earlier on this blog,
 and in several news articles, Judge Katherine Levine of the Kings 
County Supreme Court blocked the DOE from closing PS 25 Eubie Blake, and
 on May 24 extended the temporary restraining order to allow this Bed 
Stuy public school to remain open at least another year.   
  
The DOE had proposed closing the 
school, ostensibly because it was “under-enrolled.” And yet by the their
 own admission, it was the fourth best elementary school in the entire 
city, according to the “impact” rating on the DOE performance dashboard, which former Chancellor Carmen Farina had boasted was the “most advanced tool of its kind.”
 While the school is above average on performance on raw test scores and
 attendance, its impact is stellar if one takes into account the 
socioeconomic background and need level of the students. 
 
  
We now have a transcript
 of the PS 25 court hearing, in which the issue of class size repeatedly
 came up. The school has very small classes of 10 to 18 students, and 
none of the other schools that DOE allowed PS 25 parents to apply to 
have classes that small.  Among the questions Judge Levine asked was, “Would you concede that maybe one of the reason this school is doing so well is because it has small class sizes?”  Response from the city’s attorney, Caroline Kruk: “I can’t speak to that.”     
When asked what the downside would 
be if the school remain open for another year, Kruk replied that 3,000 
students from all the schools DOE had proposed closing could not be 
re-assigned to different schools, which Judge Levine said was “ridiculous.” Only those students who currently attended PS 25 and whose parents wanted to remain there would be affected.
  
Judge Levine went on to ask, “The
 worst that happens if I keep the stay on [to keep the school open] is 
that the kids will have the benefit of this school for another year.  Now what are you going to tell me, financially, it helps the DOE if I close it?  What is the argument other than the fact that you think this school should be closed?  Forget about 3,000, we’re talking about 100.  What is the downside?”
  
Kruk had no real answer to that pivotal question.  “It’s simply …a low demand, there’s low attendance and …there is a lack of resources, you know, information – “
  
Judge Levine:  “No.  I’m
 not hearing – do you have anything in your papers that say this school 
really stinks and there is no resources for this school so four kids are
 suffering?  What resources are lacking?  They are learning and they are doing well.” 
  
Ms. Kruk: “Okay, understood, and your Honor, I would stress even if the equities don’t weigh in the Department of Education’s favor—"
  
Judge Levine: “They don’t.”
  
The
 Judge then asked if the DOE would agree to promise that if the school 
closed, its students would be able to attend a better school than PS 25.
  
Ms.Kruk: ”… because
 of the ranking of the school, it has a high ranking, its simply 
unrealistic to supply all the students with better schools.”
  
  
Because the city could not explain 
what damage would be done by keeping the school open for another year, 
and that the DOE could not agree that they would attend a better school 
(indeed there are only three in the entire city, and none were offered 
to the parents) the Judge ordered that the school stay open at least 
another year.  Over that time, 
she would carefully untangle the complicated legal issues involved, 
including whether a vote of the Community Education Council was required
 to close a zoned school.   
Since any changes in zoning lines have to be approved by the local CEC, according to NY Education law 2590-E,
 this was one of the plaintiffs strongest arguments as no CEC vote has 
yet occurred. The city’s attorney unconvincingly argued in response that
 the zoning lines “haven’t been amended.  They are currently in existence, there is just no school within it.” 
  
In the end, what was evident from 
the city’s arguments that apart from the illegality of closing a zoned 
school without the approval of the CEC, they really have no reason to 
close PS 25, at least no reason that they were willing to make public at
 this time.
  
Soon thereafter, however, Eva Moskowitz went on the warpath.  On June 11, she sent out a press advisory, announcing she would hold a rally in front of City Hall the next day, to protest that the DOE was denying space to “Success Academy Lafayette Middle School”, a school,  which by the way, did not yet exist.   
  
She claimed that the Mayor was waging “bureaucratic trench warfare against Success — the latest episode of a long-running political vendetta,”
 by denying middle school seats to the fourth graders about to graduate 
from the Success Cobble Hill elementary school, and that the city had 
reneged on a promise to her that they would be able to attend a new 
middle school in the PS 25 building:
  
 “70
 kids are set to begin fifth grade at the school, located in Bed-Stuy, 
Brooklyn, in just 10 weeks. In a complete about-face, City Hall is now 
threatening to prevent the school from opening — and leave the building with 900 empty seats — due to a bureaucratic paperwork issue.”
  
I had known that a Success elementary school, Success Bed Stuy 3, had already moved into the PS 25 building in the fall of 2016.  PS
 25 was originally a K-8 school, but several DOE’s decisions had 
contributed to its enrollment shrinking over time. As of 2004-2005 
school year, PS 25 had 773 students throughout grades K-8. In the fall 
of 2006, the upper grades of PS 25 were separated from the elementary 
school, creating the Upper School at PS 25 (IS 534), leaving PS 25 to 
serve only grades K-5. Then in 2016, IS 534 was moved half a mile away 
and merged with PS 308 Clara Cardwell, a far less successful school with an impact rating of .30, the same year that Success Bed Stuy 3 moved into the building.  
  
I had heard murmurings about a 
Success middle school, as Eva Moskowitz had been insistent that DOE had 
to provide her with more middle school seats, but I hadn’t paid this 
issue much attention as the DOE had had said that it had no plans for 
the space that PS 25 would vacate.  The only mention oat f this issue in the EIS proposing PS 25’s closure, dated January 5, 2018, was that: “Pursuant to Chancellor’s Regulation A-190, the NYCDOE may issue an EIS for the future use of space in K025, if applicable.”  
Chancellor’s regulation A-190 in accordance with NY education law Section 2590-h
 requires that any change in the utilization of a public school building
 must follow a certain legal process, including the posting of an EIS at
 least six months ahead of the next school year, followed by public 
hearings and a vote of the Panel for Educational Policy.
At the 
the Success rally in front of  City Hall on July 12, Eva Moskowitz excoriated the mayor: “T
he
 de Blasio administration throwing kids out onto the street? Does this 
sound familiar? But this might be a new low for the mayor. Can you 
imagine how the mayor would react if this was his own kids?”
The day of the rally, she put out 
a press release,  claiming that the school was being  “evicted” and that the de Blasio administration was “
employing
 a bureaucratic paperwork loophole to block the school from opening. …. 
Officials could fix this problem with the stroke of a pen, yet they’ve 
refused to do so for purely political reasons.”
Note
 that word “evicted”, though these students had never been in the 
building in the first place.  The press release went on to argue:
“
How did it
 come to this? Earlier this year, the city Department of Education 
agreed to let Success open four additional middle schools across the 
city, including Success Academy Lafayette in Bed-Stuy, Brooklyn. SA 
Lafayette was a stopgap solution because the city claimed to need more 
time to find a location in District 15 for Cobble Hill and Williamsburg 
families, who have been waiting for a permanent middle school location 
for nearly four years. Out of necessity, Success proposed converting an 
existing elementary school (SA Bed-Stuy 3) into a middle school and 
transferring the elementary school students to two nearby Success 
schools. The city agreed to this plan. [emphasis mine].”
However whether adding a middle school into the building or converting 
Success Bed Stuy 3 into middle school and moving its current students 
elsewhere, would entail a change in school utilization, and legally 
require the process described above.  An EIS would have had to be posted
 no later than March 5, given the six-month mandate outlined in state 
law and Chancellor’s regs.  This never occurred, and it would be too 
late to occur now, at the end of the school year.
Eva tried to dispute that an EIS would be necessary, but then conceded, 
“However, even if DOE were correct that an EIS were now required, there is a simple and easy solution.”  She proposed that the chancellor skip the required six-month process, by latching on to an exception in the law:
“In the 
event that the chancellor determines that …. significant change in 
school utilization is immediately necessary for the preservation of 
student health, safety or general welfare, the chancellor may 
temporarily…. adopt a significant change in the school’s utilization on 
an emergency basis.   —Education Law §2590-h(2-a) (f)”.
Yet this section in the law is supposed to be contemplated only in the 
cases of actual emergencies, like hurricanes or other disasters 
rendering school buildings uninhabitable, so that entire classes of 
students would have to attend school in other buildings; it would surely
 be illegal to cite this exception to allow charter schools to move into
 buildings at the last minute, with no such rationale.
The day before, Deputy Chancellor Elizabeth Rose had responded to Eva Moskowitz’s press advisory, with 
a letter, released to the press, that laid out alternatives for space that could be provided to her middle school class of 70 students.
These alternatives included a list of facilities that Success already 
occupies in Brooklyn, or would next fall that are all within .7 and 3.7 
miles of PS 25, totaling more than three thousand available seats, 
arrayed in four DOE-owned buildings and two stand-alone buildings.
 
 
  
Because three of these buildings would only house Success students, 
including one in a DOE-owned building, Rose added the following notation
 in the right-most column of the chart: “No EIS for this building”– 
suggesting that no public process or vote would have to occur to change 
the building’s utilization, itself a rather questionable interpretation 
of the law.  There is no 
exception in the law that allows changes in school utilization to evade 
the required public process, even in the case of DOE-owned buildings 
that only contain charter schools.   
Yet Rose also admitted that there had indeed been an unpublicized 
agreement with Eva that her middle school could be inserted into the PS 
25 building, that is, before the court ordered that PS 25 should remain 
open:
The
 Panel for Educational Policy unanimously voted to approve the closure 
of P.S. 25 at a public meeting on February 28, 2018. Success Academy 
requested additional rooms in K025 for the 2018-‐2019 school year to 
serve fifth grade students from Success Academy Cobble Hill. The DOE 
agreed to this request, for one year only, under the assumption that 
Success Academy Bed-‐Stuy 3 would be the only other school operating in
 K025 during the 2018-‐2019 school year….
First, Rose’s statement that the vote to close PS 25 was unanimous is false.  As the PEP 
minutes of the February 28 meeting confirm,
 the vote was 8-5, as is usual with controversial proposals, with every 
mayoral appointee voting yes, and every borough appointee voting no.
 Second,
 the idea that this would be only a “temporary” arrangement, and that 
Eva would agree to move the middle school out of the PS 25 building 
after one year is risible; especially as she is already claiming 
eviction when her school was never in the building in the first place.
Rose went on to argue that this insertion would have been lawful, but it was the litigation over PS 25 that now made it illegal:
“The
 lawsuit contesting the closure of P.S. 25 commenced shortly after the 
vote. As part of the litigation, DOE has been stayed from closing P.S. 
25, which has the effect of staying the siting of any other school 
there. In addition, Success Academy notified families—though not the 
DOE—that it would close Bed-‐Stuy
 3 at the end of this school year, leaving no PEP approved Success 
Academy school in the building. Unfortunately, in light of this 
litigation and related developments, Success Academy Cobble Hill fifth 
graders cannot legally use building K025 next year.”
Yet whether or not PS 25 had closed, it would have been violation of 
both Chancellor’s regulations and Education Law 2590h to alter the 
utilization of the PS 25 building by moving a Success middle school in, 
without an EIS and a separate vote of the PEP.
Instead, the DOE could have proposed the Success middle school should be
 inserted into the building, and posted an EIS by March 5, or even 
earlier in December, when the proposal to close PS 25 was first 
released.  Why they didn’t do 
this, and insisted they had no additional plans for the building until 
now is hard to understand– unless Rose thought by doing so would provoke
 even more community opposition and suspicion that the real reason the 
DOE wanted to close the school was to enable Eva Moskowitz to further 
expand her empire.
This would not have been the first time the DOE cleared out an entire public-school building for Eva.  Check out the “East Flatbush” building with 1000 empty seats listed in the chart above, K864/K869 in District 22. 
 In December, one month before the proposal to close PS 25 was announced, the DOE proposed to move 
P.S. 361, an early childhood school,  out of its building, and move it into P.S. 269, despite the fact that the EIS predicted that this move would overcrowd PS 269 building up to 102%.  The
 school would also likely lose its science room, its space for ESL 
services, and more. All this, despite the fact that PS 269 is already a 
struggling “priority” school according to the state, and as a Community 
school, receives “wraparound” services from DOE.  The entire building K864/K869 
will be given over to Success for its new East Flatbush middle school next fall.  
Following her rally at City Hall, Eva has continued her campaign to insert her building into PS 25.  She has 
written Chancellor Carranza, claimed that the DOE “ took away our school building”, and demanded that he meet with “
the
 Committee to Save SA Lafayette Middle School, a group comprised of 
parents and educators whose children were evicted by City Hall from 
Success Academy Lafayette Middle School in Building K025.” 
Note that word evicted, once again; though there was never a Success 
Academy Lafayette Middle School, it was never sited in Building K025, 
and once PS 25’s closure was halted by the court, the only school that 
was supposed to be evicted would be Success Bed Stuy 3, which Eva 
planned to move out to make way for her middle school.   
The press release claimed, once again unconvincingly, that “Officials 
could fix this problem with the stroke of a pen, yet they’ve refused to 
do so for purely political reasons.” She added:
Many of the parents in the 
Committee have children who attend or have graduated from Success 
Academy Cobble Hill, a diverse elementary school that has suffered the 
impacts of the DOE’s inaction….…Success
 Academy Cobble Hill has a student body that is “33% Hispanic, 27% 
black, 10% Asian, 24% white, and 6% multiracial… about half receive free
 or reduced price lunch.” 
So let us take a look at the stats of Success Academy Cobble Hill elementary school, as neatly laid out in the 
DOE performance dashboard: 
 In every respect, the need level of Success Cobble Hill students  less
 than PS 25’s -- and less, for that matter than the students at Bed Stuy
 3, that Eva had planned to move to make way for her new middle school   
At 12 percent, the percentage of Cobble Hill’s disabled students is only about half of the citywide average.  It has a lower economic need index than average and far fewer English language learners.  Its impact rating is high at .89 – but not as high as PS 25’s at .93. 
Moreover, the 
demographic snapshot for Success Cobble Hill elementary school suggests a significant rate of attrition at the school.  In 2013, there were 105 1
st graders, with that number falling to only 68 fifth graders this year. 
Compare the 
student composition of PS 25: last year 85 percent of students were economically disadvantaged, and this year 99 percent are in poverty, according to the 
DOE’s demographic snapshot. In every respect they are needier than the city average.
And while
 its total enrollment is small, PS 25 does not appear to be losing 
significant numbers of students over time, unlike SA Cobble Hill.
There is little information 
on the dashboard for students at Success Bed Stuy 3, whom Eva was prepared to move out the building, or “evict”,  to make way for her more “diverse” middle school.
Yet the DOE demographic snapshot also shows that the poverty level of 
Bed Stuy 3 has dramatically increased from 52.4% to 74.3% this year.  Perhaps
 that’s why Eva is so eager to displace its students, to provide room 
for the more advantaged (though yes, diverse) Success Academy Cobble 
Hill students. 
In any case, Eva continues to 
regularly send out press releases and is currently engaged in a petition campaign, urging the Mayor and the chancellor to give into her demands.  Reporters
 continue to run stories about her claims, though none of them have 
pointed out the absurdity of her repeated use of the term “evicted”, 
even as she is content to entertain the prospect that other students, 
including the students of PS 25 and the students of Success Bed Stuy 3, 
should be moved elsewhere to make space for her middle school.  And no reporters have yet challenged the questionable legality of her prior if secret agreement with DOE.  
When PS 25 parents learned of 
the judge’s decision, they were thrilled, and its teachers were 
ecstatic. A little boy who attends the school later told me that while 
he had cried when he heard that the school was closing, he was so happy 
when he heard it would stay open for another year. Please send a letter
 to Chancellor Carranza to rescind the DOE’s decision to close PS 25 and
 allow the school to grow by putting a PreK and a 3K class in the school
 for next year.