New York Post

GYM- NAUSEA OVER VOTING

Early balloting to disrupt schoolkids

- By GEORGETT ROBERTS and SELIM ALGAR

Thousands of New York City students will be barred from their schools’ gyms and cafeterias for days due to early voting — and education officials are telling angry parents to just get over it.

“It’s a gigantic disruption,” said parent Erica Rand Silverman, whose child attends PS 116 in Murray Hill. “The students will not have access to the gym, no [physical education], no cafeteria and no schoolyard for recess.”

The inconvenie­nce will hit 33 public schools around the city and will last a week. Kids unable to access school cafeterias will eat in their classrooms.

On top of the disruption, parents are also upset at a letter from the Department of Education branding the inconvenie­nce as a learning experience.

In the letter from the office of Chief Operating Officer Ursulina Ramirez, the DOE says: “When schools serve as an election site, they model civic engagement for our students.”

Silverman called the letter’s dismissive tone “unbelievab­le.”

“It is a civics lesson,” she said. “It’s a lesson that sometimes you have to fight to have your voice heard when the government is not acting with your interests in mind. This is either an egregious oversight or it was intentiona­l with the hopes that no one would notice or care.”

In addition to schools, early voting will take place at other facilities including churches, YMCAs, and community centers.

Statewide, only one non-city school will serve as an early voting location.

Silverman, who backs early voting but not using schools for a whole week, said administra­tors were only notified of the plan earlier this month and that more than 80 parents volunteere­d to help out.

Along with other parents, Silverman successful­ly lobbied the DOE to limit entry to the school’s rear to facilitate the situation.

Some parents at PS 175 in Harlem

— where, like at PS 116, the school gym will be out of use next week — said they hadn’t been notified of the incursion as of Thursday.

Jasmine Releford, 31, said she had no clue that her 6th-grade son would be deprived of PE next week. “I think it’s going to be chaotic,” she said. “Kids do have a lot of energy, they need their gym. I don’t like it. It’s going to disrupt their learning environmen­t.”

A teacher who spoke to The Post said she had only been apprised this past Tuesday, and said she was bracing for disruption.

Parent Angela Sime said she learned about the arrangemen­t at PS 175 on Wednesday. “It’s like having all strangers and random people in your house,” she said.

Sime’s daughter, Kimberly, 11, was incensed by the gym revocation. “They are going to leave us in the classroom,” she said. I love gym, I hate giving it up for a whole week.”

The Board of Elections ultimately had final say over early voting election sites, and Silverman noted that no schools in Queens were selected. The agency did not immediatel­y comment.

A DOE spokespers­on said Thursday that additional personnel including NYPD officers would be dispatched to selected schools.

“We’ve heard concerns loud and clear, and we’re taking action to keep our kids safe and minimize disruption to the school day,” Miranda Barbot said. “Parents should rest assured there will be at least two additional safety agents on site, and a hot meal served every day.”

 ??  ?? WE’RE IN POLL IMPOSITION: “It’s like having random people in your house,” says mom Angela Sime, whose daughter Kimberly attends PS 175 in Harlem.
WE’RE IN POLL IMPOSITION: “It’s like having random people in your house,” says mom Angela Sime, whose daughter Kimberly attends PS 175 in Harlem.

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