New York Daily News

No positive bug tests at COVID cafeteria school

- BY MICHAEL ELSEN-ROONEY

A Brooklyn school where roughly 150 students and staff crowded into a cafeteria last week for lunch has turned up no positive COVID-19 cases after health officials tested everyone in the building Monday, Education Department officials confirmed.

Staffers at the Connie Lekas school for students with complex disabiliti­es in Sheepshead Bay were furious over last week’s cafeteria gathering, which left adults and mostly maskless students, including some with chronic medical conditions, in close contact while kids ate, according to staff accounts.

After complaints from staff and teachers union officials and coverage from the Daily News, the Education Department sent health officials to the school Monday to perform COVID-19 tests on 36 students and 118 staffers. None came back positive, an Education Department spokesman confirmed.

“We’re very happy,” said United Federation of Teachers representa­tive Ilyana Frias. “It’s going to obviously relieve some anxiety from our families and our staff in the building.”

Frias added that staff members are still reeling from the COVID-19-related death of a dietitian who worked in the building several months ago.

Principal Antoinette Rose, who staffers say issued the cafeteria directive because she wanted to serve students hot lunches, is under investigat­ion by the agency’s special commission­er of investigat­ion for flouting COVID-19 safety protocols, according to the Education Department.

Frias said several high-ranking Education Department officials, including the agency’s chief of special education, showed up at the building Monday. “It was music to all of our ears … that there will be accountabi­lity,” she said.

Lunches are being served in individual classrooms again, Frias said.

Principals union chief Mark Cannizzaro echoed the relief over the test results. “Any public allegation­s made against an educator should be appropriat­ely investigat­ed, but they also must be afforded due process,” he said.

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