New York Post

They Always Screw Up

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As we warned last week, public school reopenings were hit with predictabl­e chaos, involving school buses and COVID-related closures. NY1 reported the case of Mia Perciballi, a 7-year-old special-needs Staten Island student eager to start her first day who got dropped off at her old school. Her mom only knew because she had put a GPS tracker on her daughter. No one at the Department of Education could explain the mix-up.

Gothamist reported several other schoolbus snafus: Parents at a Crown Heights elementary school learned last-minute that routes were canceled due to a driver shortage. Another Brooklyn child also got dropped at his old school — left there for hours while his folks franticall­y tried to locate him. A bus for kids at a Maspeth charter didn’t show until an hour after dismissal.

Such snafus forced some families to give up on their child attending the first day of school.

Mayor de Blasio pleaded ignorance in the face of multiple videos and photos of overcrowde­d schools and classrooms with no social distancing, telling reporters his aides haven’t shown him the images. His excuse: “The first few days of school, it takes time to sort things out, unquestion­ably.”

In other words: We always screw up at first. That’s pathetic when the city spends $1.25 billion on transporta­tion services for about 150,000 students.

Before opening day, Department of Education and City Hall flacks assured The Post that the city didn’t face a driver shortage. Oops. Nor has the DOE rolled out its longpromis­ed bus-tracking app.

“Parents are worried enough about the Delta variant; they shouldn’t have worry about where their children are” aboard a city school bus, says Manhattan Councilman Ben Kallos, who wrote the law mandating the GPS-tracking system and says the tech for the app is sitting on a shelf at DOE HQ.

Meanwhile, state Comptrolle­r Tom DiNapoli says the mayor is leaving a ticking DOE fiscal time bomb for his successor: New initiative­s launched with federal aid will impose costs of $1 billion a year by 2025, as the grants run out. In short, the city’s postCOVID school spending — nearly $43,000 per student — is utterly unsustaina­ble.

Meanwhile, the system still can’t even manage to start the school year without major bus screwups. And that’s before getting to all the failures in the classroom. The next mayor will need to clean house at DOE.

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