You are reading

Three Queens Public Schools Closed for Ventilation Issues

P.S. 110 The Tiffany School, located at 43-18 97th Pl. in Corona (Google Maps)

Sept. 8, 2020 By Allie Griffin

Three Queens public schools have been closed for ventilation issues and will remain closed until the systems are made safe for children and teachers, Mayor Bill de Blasio and Schools Chancellor Richard Carranza announced Tuesday.

The schools are among 21 schools spread throughout 10 buildings citywide that were shuttered for poor ventilation, which experts say could cause COVID-19 to spread more easily.

Queens schools shuttered for repairs include P.S. 222Q Fire Fighter Christopher A. Santora School in Jackson Heights; P.S. 110 The Tiffany School in Corona; and The Riverview School’s Corona campus.

The buildings closed after a team of engineers inspected more than 64,000 classrooms at 1,485 school buildings across the city from Aug. 25 through Sept. 1 for ventilation issues. The mayor said 96 percent of the classrooms passed inspection.

The inspectors found that 10 buildings were unsafe and were in need of widespread repairs.

For example, none of the classroom windows in the Q315 school building — which P.S. 110 and The Riverview School share — can be opened, according to the inspection report from Aug. 27.

The city has also decommissioned specific classrooms with poor ventilation inside school buildings that are already open. Citywide, nearly 3,000 classrooms have no working ventilation system, according to the inspection results.

Health experts say a room is safe for students and teachers when air can flow in and out, so that airborne coronavirus particles can be removed from the room with fresh air. This flow can be achieved by a HVAC system, windows, or exhaust fans.

The 10 closed school buildings have numerous classrooms where the air flow is poor, putting teachers and students at greater risk.

Teachers and administrators at the 10 buildings began working from home today as a result, while staff at every other school in the city returned to work in person today.

Carranza said the city is prioritizing the 10 buildings and is working to make the repairs on “an aggressive timeline,” before Sept. 21, when children return to in-person classes.

“Now that there are 10 buildings that we’ve identified as needing repairs across the board, we’re prioritizing these buildings to get all systems up to par by the 21st of September,” he said. “Meanwhile staff at those buildings will be temporarily working from home.”

De Blasio added that there’s “obviously” time to complete the improvements before the first day of in-person learning in less than two weeks.

Both de Blasio and Carranza said that if any classroom is unsafe, it will not be used.

“If any classroom is not ready, it will not be used,” de Blasio said. “It would only be used when it’s ready, but thank god the overwhelming majority of classrooms are ready right now.”

P.S. 222Q, located at 86-15 37th Ave. in Jackson Heights (Google Maps)

email the author: news@queenspost.com
No comments yet

Leave a Comment
Reply to this Comment

All comments are subject to moderation before being posted.

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

Recent News

Dozens of restaurant and small business owners urge Sen. Ramos to support the $8B Metropolitan Park proposal at Citi Field

Around fifty restaurant and small business owners from Corona, Jackson Heights, and East Elmhurst signed a letter asking state Senator Jessica Ramos to support the $8 billion Metropolitan Park proposal from New York Mets owner Steve Cohen and Hard Rock International to build a casino and entertainment complex on the parking lot adjacent to Citi Field.

Jessica Rico, the owner of Mojitos Restaurant & Bar in Jackson Heights, hand-delivered the letter to a Ramos staffer while the Senator was in Albany on April 19.

Crunching the Queens crime numbers: grand larcenies down across borough, rapes halved in the north, robberies decrease in the south

Apr. 17, 2024 By Ethan Marshall

The number of grand larcenies across Queens was down during the 28-day period from March 18 to April 14, compared to the same period of time last year, according to the latest crime stats released by the NYPD Monday. At the same time, rapes and robberies decreased significantly in northern and southern Queens, respectively.