Schools are not Shelters
This week NYC public school kids lost their gyms, as the teachers union promised to begin a "Campaign of Shaming."
Late last week New York City’s Mayor Eric Adams announced the city would be taking over public school gyms to house migrants. We were stunned.
The gyms weren’t in affluent neighborhoods, but low-income and working class neighborhoods like Coney Island and Sunset Park - the very neighborhoods struggling the most to recover from pandemic restrictions.
Public outrage was magnificent and one of the few times in recent history where New York City united to cry out, ‘NO! We’ve had enough. Our kids do matter!’
Here is our op-ed in the NY Post demanding that Mayor Adams abandon his reckless plan. Click through the link above or read it below.
For now, it seems Adams has heard us.
We will continue to monitor the situation and, of course, report back.
Have a great weekend!
-Natalya, Dana and Yasmina
Teachers union goes AWOL in fight to keep migrant shelters out of schools
By Natalya Murakhver and Yasmina Palumbo
May 17, 2023 9:03pm
After three years of school closures, mandates, learning loss and deteriorating mental health, haven’t our city’s children suffered enough?
Not according to City Hall.
Mayor Eric Adams has really outdone himself this time, threatening to kick public-school kids from their gyms and libraries to warehouse newly arrived, unvetted adult migrants, drawn here by his proud proclamations of New York City’s welcoming sanctuary status.
As many as 20 schools stand to lose their gyms, with children forced into city streets for recess and physical activity, weather permitting.
Coney Island, Sunset Park and other targets on the mayor’s list of schools are mainly in vulnerable black and brown communities that suffered disproportionately from school closures and the mandates that followed.
But they clearly haven't paid a big-enough price.
Parents citywide are horrified, but good may yet come of it. The mayor’s reckless decision has united some unlikely allies, with a bipartisan outcry from City Council members. Teamsters Local 237, which represents school-safety agents, filed a complaint with the city’s Office of Labor Relations alleging that safety agents are being “placed in harm’s way” and are “not trained to deal with security issues” associated with migrant shelters.
A notable absence from the public outrage was the teachers union, which should — in theory — rush to support overwhelmed members and students put at risk.
But there was nothing of the sort. While students, families and school administrators rallied Tuesday to stop this insanity, American Federation of Teachers chief Randi Weingarten schmoozed her way around the Writers Guild of America picket line at the Javits Center.
Pressed Wednesday by “Good Day New York” co-host Rosanna Scotto to explain what concrete action the union would take, United Federation of Teachers head Mike Mulgrew spat out, “We are going to start a campaign of shaming.”
The union’s plan to protect children and teachers is that they have no plan.
The excuses from City Hall have also been downright insulting: repeatedly saying there is no other space and schools are a “last resort,” that the Biden administration left them high and dry. While this may be a fair assessment of the White House, there is still no justification for seizing school gyms.
The pandemic taught parents a harsh, much-needed lesson: The well-being of public-school kids is an afterthought.
In the case of migrants housed in school gyms, it feels more like a heartless political stunt to garner federal funds, with low-income students being used as pawns.
New York City is overflowing with vacant office space and storefronts. Just a few months ago the mayor dismantled tents on Randall's Island that were built expressly to house arriving migrants, abruptly closing them due to underuse. Where are these tents now? And why haven’t they been reassembled? There seems to be no will to bring them back or to creatively repurpose adult spaces — and kids’ spaces are low-hanging fruit.
Parent are supposed to just trust that their children are safe in school while unvetted adult asylum seekers are housed in adjacent buildings on school property. Parents are rightly saying no and refusing to send kids. Chancellor David Banks has also falsely reassured parents that schools would not be disrupted, but it’s too late. Public-school kids have been forced into streets for recess, routines disrupted just as life was getting back to normal.
The message to these kids: You come last. Once again.
As this administration pretends to care about the underprivileged, it is once again using children as human shields. Children, who were least at risk, suffered the most restrictive COVID policies, with public schools, playgrounds and libraries closed for many months, even as adult spaces quickly reopened. The result: learning loss, spiraling mental-health issues and growing obesity, now exacerbated by shrinking common spaces and decommissioned gyms.
Post-pandemic public-school attendance is plummeting. Kids have lost interest and engagement from years of having their needs ignored.
Still, ask a struggling kid what his or her favorite class is, and you’re likely to hear “Gym.’
It’s disingenuous to frame the migrant crisis as an either-or situation, pitting children’s rights against migrant rights. A good leader would find a compassionate, creative solution for both groups.
It is not too late. Migrants were set to move from Coney Island’s PS 188 to some location in Manhattan by Wednesday’s end, sources told The Post.
Mayor Adams, please do better. Commit to scrapping this harebrained plan entirely.
It is still difficult believe that the mayor actually executed this policy. I really hope that the rollback continues.
Thank you for speaking up for children. NYC has fallen. It's only a matter of time until one of these tens of thousands of unvetted illegals harms a child. Outright theft from the taxpayer by the mayor, teachers unions, and their future voters.