“A charter school finds itself stuck between two controversies.” Gotham Schools 6/10/11
(Update: A spokesperson for the city Administration for Children Services tells Gotham Schools that Strong Place and Bethel Day Care Centers will continue operating until Friday, June 17, in order to give parents more time to find alternative care options.)
A charter school with an uncertain future has found private space for the next school year, hoping to appease the neighborhood opposition where it’s currently co-located.
But in the process, it collided with another citywide controversy: the mayor’s decision to close day care centers.
Brooklyn Prospect Charter School has co-located at Sunset Park High School since it opened two years ago, but that community wants them out. So last week, the school signed a one-year lease this week to move into 238 Hoyt Street in Boerum Hill. A permanent, privately-funded facility scheduled to open in 2012 is being built down the road.
The challenge is that the previous tenants at the rental building were two popular day care centers that have been neighborhood institutions for over 30 years. Bethel Day Care and Strong Place Day Care are two of eight programs ending as a result of Mayor Bloomberg’s budget cuts.
Today, Bethel and Strong Place were among five centers to close their doors for good. Parents, employees and young children from the centers joined Council Member Steve Levin outside of the building to protest the cuts.
“We’re here to stand up against what the city has done. Stand up against what the Brooklyn Prospect Charter School has done,” said Levin, who was joined by State Assembly Member Joan Millman and about 30 others. “These programs, we have fought for year after year, so that your children have a safe place to stay.”
The centers would have closed regardless, but Levin partially blamed Brooklyn Prospect’s pursuit of the $750,000 lease for the inability to restore funding...
If a termination clause is somehow enacted, Brooklyn Prospect would have to turn back to its original option, the contentious co-location at Sunset Park High School.
Sunset Park High School opened in 2009 in a brand new, five-story building with state-of-the-art facilities. It is the culmination of a nearly four-decade fight to build a high school for the neighborhood’s growing population. The financial crisis during the1970s initially stalled their efforts, but the community did not give up its fight.
Brooklyn Prospect opened the same year with one sixth grade class. It was supposed to be temporary, but the co-location was extended each of the last two years this year , leading critics to question whether it would ever leave...
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4 comments:
"A charter school with an uncertain future?" What? Brooklyn Prospect is about as controversial as chicken noodle soup. It's a promising, highly successful new 6-12 IB school that draws from a racially, ethnically, scholastically, and socio-economically diverse pool of mostly public school kids. BPCS is building a new building in Gowanus that won't be ready for another 1+ years and so it needs a temporary space. This is really a ridiculous article.
It certainly is a ridiculous article - as were the articles printed in the daily News on June 10th, June 11th and June 21st that referred to Brooklyn Prospect as a "controversial charter school" but failed to provide any information about what's controversial about it. Is it controversial because all charter schools are controversial? There may be a controversy over space sharing - but that doesn't make the school itself controversial. The Daily News coverage of this issue has been terribly biased.
Clearly the owner of http://charterschoolscandals.blogspot.com has an axe to grind.
Feel free to start your own blog so you can grind your own ax.
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