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Court rules NY Schools stay open

Dana Chivvis

Dana Chivvis, Contributor

COURT RULES NEW YORK CAN’T CLOSE 19 SCHOOLS, by Dana Chivvis

NEW YORK – A state appellate court has ruled that New York City cannot close 19 schools it had deemed as “failing” in December. In its decision, the court agreed with a lower court ruling that the city had failed to provide adequate information to the public about the impacts of the closings on students and communities, as mandated by law.

In its ruling Thursday, the court said the city provided “nothing more than boilerplate information about seat availability” and that it abused its power “by limiting the information they provided to the obvious: that students at phased-out schools would be accommodated at other schools to be determined.” — “What it means is that there is a whole bunch of kids that at least for one year will get a terrible education that they’ll probably never recover from,” New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg said Thursday at a news conference.

Iyanta Simon wipes away a tear during graduation

Iyanta Simon, 18, wipes away a tear as seniors from MCA attend graduation

Technically, the decision means that schools like the Metropolitan Corporate Academy, the subject of an AOL News series on school closings published last month, will graduate classes for at least the next four years. Still, MCA’s current incoming freshman class has only eight students enrolled, and the court’s decision does not preclude the city from closing the schools next year. Many of the 19 schools that were slated for closure face the same hurdle: Few eighth-graders applied to them last year because they assumed the schools would be closed.

The ruling is a major victory for the United Federation of Teachers, the city’s public school teachers union, and a check on what some believe is Bloomberg’s unfettered mayoral control of the city’s public school system. “No one is above the law, and every court that has looked at this issue has ruled decisively that the Department of Education violated the law when it tried to close these schools,” UFT President Michael Mulgrew said in a statement.

Dana Chivvis is a contributing writer to AOLNews.com.

For more coverage of New York’s school closings, click the arrow.

This entry was posted on Sunday, July 4th, 2010 at 8:52 am and is filed under Education. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

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