NYC Shuts 9 Pre-K Centers Over Safety Concerns

NEW YORK (AP) —

Two days before the start of school, Mayor Bill de Blasio’s administration announced on Tuesday it is shuttering nine pre-kindergarten centers and delaying the start dates at 36 others.

Administration officials said that while the majority of sites have been cleared to open, safety and integrity concerns were behind the decision to revoke contracts at the nine centers, which were to serve 265 students. Those students will be reassigned to other centers.

Officials stressed that the vast majority of the 1,700 sites will open on the first day of school Thursday and are poised to serve an unprecedented expansion from 20,000 to 53,000 students in a single year.

The expansion — the centerpiece of de Blasio’s first year in office — has been closely watched nationally and drew some surprising criticism last week from the city comptroller, who expressed safety concerns about the program.

“Our first rule is that we would only allow sites to open if we can account for health and safety,” said Deputy Mayor Richard Buery, the administration’s Pre-K czar.

“There are, unfortunately, some sites that will not be ready,” Buery said. “If a site doesn’t meet those standards, we can’t allow them to open at all.”

Officials believe most of the 36 sites that won’t be ready to open Thursday should be set to open within the next two weeks. Those centers are to educate about 900 students and the missed days will be made up, Buery said.

“Out of 1,700 sites, there are nine that aren’t opening, that’s less than a half percent,” said First Deputy Mayor Anthony Shorris in an interview. “And it’s something around 2 percent to be delayed a couple of days. That’s pretty good delivery on 53,000 kids and 1,700 sites, to be about 98 percent on the money.”

“If somebody didn’t fail, we probably weren’t checking enough,” Shorris continued.

To ready the massive expansion, the city authorized a team of inspectors, representing health, fire and other departments, to check the sites. Additionally, a team from the Department of Education was tasked with doing a walk-through of every facility, a huge undertaking that is expected to be completed Wednesday.

By law, every Pre-K staffer must clear a background check, though a teacher whose approval is pending is permitted to deal with children if a cleared supervisor is present. Administration officials stressed that every staffer has submitted a background check but, after nearly a week of inquiries, could not say how many have been cleared.

About 600 public school buildings and 1,100 community-based organizations will host Pre-K students. All 45 singled out Tuesday by the de Blasio administration are CBOs.

Comptroller Scott Stringer, normally a reliable de Blasio ally, criticized City Hall last week for being sluggish in sending contracts with Pre-K vendors to his office for review. He said that could prevent some necessary safety checks; the mayor downplayed the delays as a “paperwork issue.”

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