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Releases & Statements


FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE March 30, 2007
Contact: John Collins, Press Secretary
(212) 669-4193; (917) 496-4587
Release #: 008-2007

 

Public Advocate Gotbaum Calls for DOE to Invest in Additional High School Seats

 

BROOKLYN – The Department of Education (DOE) will need to create nearly 6,000 more high school seats in Brooklyn to meet four-year graduation goal, Public Advocate Betsy Gotbaum said today during a press conference at James Madison High School. James Madison High School is already operating at 166 percent capacity – nearly 1,700 more students than intended for the school.

Public Advocate Gotbaum called on the DOE to invest in additional high school seats to help reach its graduation goals and curb overcrowding in New York City’s high schools.

Public Advocate Gotbaum said, “By failing to plan now, the Department of Education is planning to fail in the future. The City simply cannot expect children—in Brooklyn or anywhere in the city—to learn if it is going to force them into overcrowded classrooms or make them take classes in trailers. In the greatest city in the world, we have the responsibility to give students the resources and tools they need to succeed.”

Public Advocate Gotbaum released an analysis earlier this month that documented how the City’s plan to build new high schools falls tens of thousands of seats short of the capacity needed to meet the DOE’s graduation goal. Under its current five-year school capital program, the City will need more than 50,000 new high school seats city-wide to meet its 70 percent four-year graduation goal. However, the DOE has budgeted for only 26,000 new high school seats by the 2009-10 school year—barely half of the seated to meet the graduation goal.

According to 2006 – 2007 DOE numbers, Brooklyn schools already face gross over-crowding:

Reg

Dis

High School

Bldg Enroll

Bldg Cap

Bldg % Cap

6

22

Midwood

3,718

2,200

169%

6

22

James Madison

4,232

2,543

166%

7

20

Franklin D. Roosevelt

3,548

2,735

129%

7

20

New Utrecht

2,903

2,087

139%

6

19

Maxwell

1,145

835

137%

6

18

Canarsie

2,700

2,058

131%

7

21

Dewey

3,041

2,492

122%

 

The Public Advocate's analysis also found that to meet its four-year graduation goal, the City will need to create 10,835 new seats in the Bronx and nearly 16,000 new seats in Queens. Currently, the DOE’s plans for new capacity are based on only 51 percent of students in Queens making it from ninth to twelfth grade, 42 percent of students in Brooklyn, 50 percent of students in Manhattan, 64 percent of students in Staten Island, and only 36 percent of students in the Bronx.

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