New York Post

Record charter demand

79,000 kids apply

- By SELIM ALGAR

The demand for city charter schools has hit a record high with 79,000 applicatio­ns for the upcoming school year.

That’s up from 73,000 last year and 54,000 in 2011, according to the New York City Charter School Center.

“With the number of applicants hitting another record high, there is no doubt that demand for public charter schools is growing,” said Charter Center CEO James Merriman.

An analysis found that 52,700 applicants ended up on waiting lists — up roughly 5,000 from the prior year.

“Ninety-seven percent of charter schools do not have enough seats to accommodat­e demand,” the report stated. “About nine out of 10 charter schools reported having waitlists that are at least twice the number of available seats.”

There were roughly four applicants per seat in the South Bronx and Harlem, with 30,418 applicatio­ns for 7,819 spots, according to the report.

The Bronx had the highest number of overall applicants with 27,020 submission­s for 6,969 seats and Manhattan was second with 21,280 applicatio­ns for 6,348 slots.

Brooklyn had 22,497 applicants, Queens 7,725 and Staten Island 1,144, according to the report.

“These numbers should send a clear signal to every policy maker in the state that parents want great public-school options,” Merriman said. “We must eliminate the cap on charter schools now.”

Sector backers have ripped state ceilings on charter-school growth and want those boundaries widened to accommodat­e swelling demand.

While major charter operators have been able to boast of robust test scores, the sector has been criticized for diverting funds and resources away from traditiona­l schools.

Some networks — including charter powerhouse Success Academy — have also been taken to task for trimming challengin­g students from their ranks.

But despite unrelentin­g political dramas surroundin­g charter schools, demand has continued to rise over the past several years.

Proponents argue that the intensifyi­ng thirst is driven by parents desperate for alternativ­es to lowperform­ing public schools.

The vast majority of chartersch­ool students are low-income minority kids.

Mayor de Blasio has offered sporadic praise for charter-school practices but has openly prioritize­d traditiona­l public schools, arguing that they still teach roughly 90 percent of the city’s students.

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