The New York City Department of Education released a list of schools across the five boroughs Tuesday evening that have had at least one confirmed case of COVID-19 among teachers and staff.
The list encompasses the past week, from Sept. 8 (when staff first started reporting back to schools) until Sept. 14.
Here is the full list of schools that have had confirmed COVID cases, broken down by borough:
Brooklyn:
13K011 P.S. 011 Purvis J. Behan
14K478 The High School for Enterprise, Business and Technology
15K001 P.S. 001 The Bergen
15K088 J.H.S. 088 Peter Rouget
16K267 M.S. 267 Math, Science & Technology
16K243 P.S. 243 The Weeksville School
17K161 P.S. 161 The Crown
19K214 P.S. Michael Friedsam
19K149 P.S. 149 Danny Kaye
19K618 Academy of Innovative Technology
19K662 Liberty Avenue Middle School
21K177 P.S. 177 The Marlboro
21K228 I.S. 228 David A. Boody
22K139 P.S. 139 Alexine A. Fenty
22K361 P.S. 361 East Flatbush Early Childhood School
21K281 I.S. 281 Joseph B. Cavallaro
21K097 P.S. 97 The Highlawn
22K514 Frederick Douglass Academy VII HS
32K377 P.S. 377 Alejandrina B. De Gautier
32K549 The Brooklyn School for Social Justice
KCFA SCO Family of Services
Bronx:
07X154 P.S. 154 Jonathan D. Hyatt
08X130 P.S. 130 Abram Stevens Hewitt
08X530 Longwood Preparatory Academy
09X070 P.S. 070 Max Shoenfeld
10X056 P.S. 056 Norwood Heights
12X214 P.S. 214
12X536 P.S. 536
75X811 The Academy for Career and Living Skill
75x010 75x010@817
75X186 P186X Walter J. Damrosch School
79X695 Passages Academy Bronx
XALZ Mid-Bronx CCRP Early Childhood Center, Inc.
XAVS Bedrock Preschool (NYCEEC)
Manhattan:
02M158 P.S. 158 Bayard Taylor
02M267 East Side Elementary School, PS 267
02M545 High School for Dual Language and Asian Studies
04M372 Esperanza Preparatory Academy
05M161 P.S. 161 Pedro Albizu Campos
06M278 Paula Hedbavny School
Queens:
27Q197 P.S. 197 The Ocean School
28Q055 P.S. 055 The Maure Magnet School of Communication Arts, Technology and Multimedia
28Q349 P.S. 349 The Queens School for Leadership and Excellence
30Q084 PS 84 Steinway
26Q430 Francis Lewis High School
27Q090 P.S. 090 Horace Mann
30Q230 I.S. 230
30Q111 P.S. 111 Jacob Blackwell
75Q075 75Q@276 Robert E. Peary School
75Q009 P.S. 009 Walter Reed School
Staten Island:
31R078 P.S. 78
31R058 Space Shuttle Columbia School
31R440 New Dorp High School
31R455 Tottenville HS
31R062 The Kathleen Grimm School for Leadership and Sustainability
31R013 P.S. 13 ML Lindemeyer
The list also comes as one school, PS 139 in Ditmas Park, had to be shut down for at least 24 hours after a second COVID case was confirmed among educational staff in a four-day span. That is the same school where teachers staged a protest on Monday, placing desks outside the building.
Mayor Bill de Blasio said on Tuesday that despite the ongoing pandemic, everything remains on course for the nation's largest shool district to open come Monday with in-person and remote learning. The mayor did admit that it is possible the city will have to find more teachers by then — while the principals union said they're short thousands of educators.
"We will compare notes, if there are still some gaps we will take another step," said de Blasio.
The city is still scrambling to make fixes at other schools throughout the city. At P.S. 209 in the Bronx, teachers stayed outside on Tuesday because the ventilation system isn't working.
"There has been no solution yet, so we decided today to start working outside in hopes this will be fixed before our students come on Monday," said teacher Alyson Bamford.
However, there is no fix coming for another school deemed to not be ready for students. The Martin Luther King Junior Educational Complex on the Upper West Side, a huge school with 6,000 students, won't be opening come Monday.
The students at the Maxine Greene High School for Imaginative Inquiry, the High School for Law, Advocacy and Community Justice, and Manhattan/Hunter Science High School can opt either to learn remotely or go to an alternate site downtown at the Borough of Manhattan Community College — a location that would add likely around a half hour both ways for students commuting from places like the Bronx.
Other schools that are part of the complex — including Grades 9-12 of the Special Music School, the Urban Assembly School for Media Studies, and the High School of Arts and Technology — will use Success Academy space in other DOE buildings.
"We've been clear from the beginning that if a building or classroom was not safe, we would not use it. While the vast majority of our classrooms and nearly all of our buildings will be ready to serve children and staff on September 21, we have found alternative space for the schools located on the Martin Luther King, Jr. campus," the city's DOE said in a statement. "All schools will be accommodated and we have found suitable, safe and convenient options for these school communities to help start their year strong."
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