Katz and city to co-host free opioid OD response training
/A total of 1,444 people died due to unintentional drug overdoses in New York City in 2018.
Read MoreA total of 1,444 people died due to unintentional drug overdoses in New York City in 2018.
Read MoreLearn about how Students for a Democratic Society protested the military and corporate presence on Queens College’s campus.
Read MoreHe had been communicating with the person — actually an investigator posing as a child — online.
Read More“We should be increasing opportunity for our students, not taking it away.”
Read MoreThe city's plan would bring a new jail to each borough except Staten Island for a total cost of $8.7 million.
Read MoreThere are signs to look out for that will let parents know that their child is anxious about returning to school.
Read MoreMembers of Queens yeshivas are worried that increased oversight would compromise the values instilled through their religion-based institutions.
Read MoreThe class’ diversity comes at a time when there is a global call to confront evil and intolerance in many forms, Dean Michael Simon noted.
Read MoreBy Jonathan Sperling
More than two dozen city councilmembers agree that the Department of Education’s schools are “not sufficiently prepared” for a mass shooting incident, according to a letter signed by the pols and addressed to Schools Chancellor Richard Carranza.
Queens Councilmember Adrienne Adams, who formerly served as the education chairperson of Community Board 12 in Southeast Queens, wrote the letter following an audit by State Comptroller Thomas DiNapoli. A total of 27 councilmembers signed onto the plea for preparedness.
DiNapoli’s audit found that the DOE can do more to comply with the Safe Schools Against Violence in Education, or SAVE Act, which lays out a comprehensive policy for school staff and administrators regarding the protection of students.
“It is alarming to know that erroneous, outmoded and untimely safety plan submissions are prevalent in our school system,” the letter reads, before urging the DOE to mandate compliance with the SAVE Act prior to the start of the 2019-2020 school year.
DiNapoli’s audit also found that five “of the 25 sampled schools did not conduct the minimum number of evacuation or lockdown drills and, for the 2016–17 school year, 3 of the 25 schools did not conduct drills within the required time frames,” among other findings.
A bevy of Queens councilmembers, including Councilmembers Donovan Richards, Paul Vallone, Robert Holden, Barry Grodenchik and Peter Koo also signed off on the letter.
The councilmembers encouraged the DOE to follow DiNapoli’s recommendations, which include working with the Education Department to develop a process to submit School Safety Plans to state police, as required under both the law and the state regulations, as well as reviewing procedures for monitoring emergency drills to ensure that all drills required by law are completed within the required time frames.
“I knew that the system was biased but I didn't completely understand how crooked it was.”
Read MoreMarsh Law Firm PLLC and Pfau Cochran Vertetis Amala PLLC say they will represent 550 people who claim they were abused by Catholic Church and Boy Scout leaders.
Read MoreCUNY Law will host a Public Interest Symposium on Sept. 7, bringing together students and legal and social justice advocates for an afternoon of panels and education.
Read MoreA new webtool, named Community District Priorities, allows for community boards to formally submit their annual needs and budget requests to the city.
Read MoreA Corona block party introduced visitors to the “wonderful world” of Queens — and the vibrant sounds of jazz.
Read MoreWith its glittering, cutting edge sounds, the Bob Moog ushered in the beginning of the modern synth — and the start of modern music as we know it.
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