DOWNTOWN EXPRESS, MAY 1, 2013

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VoluMe 25, nuMber 24

May 1-May 14, 2013

lIu cracKs down on seaPort P. 17

Is seaPort museum BeInG told to walK the PlanK? By t e re se l o e b K r e u z e r t Community Board 1’s Seaport Committee meeting on April 16, Jerry Gallagher, general manager of the South Street Seaport Museum, said that the museum only has enough money to carry it through the end of June. He also accused The Howard Hughes Corporation, which has a 60-year lease on much of the South Street Seaport property, of deliberately trying to put the museum out of business. The Museum of the City of New York has been managing the Seaport Museum since 2011. Its 18-month contract expired on

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FamIlIes leFt waItInG For school sPace By Ka i t lyn M e a d e a n d J o sH r o G e r s hen the school waitlists were tallied in April, 148 kids were left without a seat Downtown — and now parents and community leaders are searching for an alternative to the Department of Education’s knee-jerk reaction to send students to seats outside their neighborhood. At Community Board 1’s full board meeting on April 23, about a dozen families gathered to testify on the waitlist issue and to ask for support from the board. “I felt that there was support from the board,” said Ariana Massouh, who started a change.org

Photo by Jennifer Weisbord

P.S. 150 students chanted “save our school” Saturday at the Tribeca Film Festival’s family fair, which was near their entrance. The Dept. of Education has proposed moving the school to Chelsea.

P.S. 150 parents fight effort to evict school from Tribeca

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B y JOSH ROGERS pril 7 was a happy day for Bettina Teodoro. It was the Downtown Little League’s opening day, but more importantly, it was the day she read the letter accepting her 5-yearold son to her first choice elementary school, P.S. 150 in Tribeca. “We were so excited we had a six-year plan,” she said. Like many parents, she was attracted to the small community of active parents at P.S. 150. The school has just one class per grade.

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Not only did Teodoro think Henry had a secure spot, she knew that her 3-year-old daughter, as the sibling of a P.S. 150 student, would be almost guaranteed a spot in the pre-K program in a year. She made sure to do two things the next day. She enrolled Henry in P.S. 150, and then did something for someone she probably didn’t know: she gave up her spot in P.S. 89 in Battery Park City. “We were told [holding both seats] wasn’t the right thing to do — we thought we’d save some agony for a family waiting for a spot,” she said.

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But last week her plans and many others were thrown for a loop. Principal Jenny Bonnet wrote an email to parents about a proposal to move miles away to Chelsea for the 2014-15 school year. Teodoro went back to P.S. 89 and now is 34th on the waiting list. The new school would be on the site of the former Foundling Hospital at 17th St. and Sixth Ave. Continued on page 3


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