New York Daily News

Viv takes on school cyberbulli­es

- BY BEN CHAPMAN

FACED WITH an explosion of cyberbully­ing in city public schools, City Council Speaker Melissa Mark-Viverito is holding meetings with educators and families to tackle the disturbing issue.

State Education Department stats published in January show incidents of online bullying in city schools jumped more than 350% in two years, rising from 178 in 2014 to 804 last year. Critics believe students are suffering and schools could do more.

To raise awareness, the City Council will host one town hall meeting in each of the five boroughs, starting with a session Mark-Viverito will hold in Council chambers Thursday night.

The goal is to help parents aid kids who are being Mark-Viverito said.

“In the era of the internet, bullies everywhere have taken their efforts to the digital level,” Mark-Viverito added. “Cyberbully­ing has spiraled into an epidemic, and it must be stopped.”

Mark-Viverito will be joined bullied, at the Thursday meeting by Jane Clementi, whose son Tyler killed himself in 2010 after being cyberbulli­ed at Rutgers University.

Clementi formed a charity called the Tyler Clementi Foundation, which will co-sponsor the series with the San Francisco nonprofit Common Sense Media and AT&T. A short film on cyberbully­ing that features city students will be screened at each event.

City Deputy Schools Chancellor Elizabeth Rose will also attend the kickoff meeting, along with reps from the city schools’ Office of Safety and Youth Developmen­t and officials from other agencies.

An online survey AT&T conducted of 1,000 city teens and parents found nearly half of teens who responded had been bullied online.

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