Broken toilets, faulty elevators and leaky ceilings — some city public schools are practically slums, according to an analysis of building inspections the school cleaners union released Tuesday.
The report by the Service Employees International Union Local 32 tallied scores from the city’s annual inspections of about 1,500 public schools to create a list of the worst offenders. Most had at least one outstanding violation.
Local 32 President Hector Figueroa said he was “surprised at the level of neglect and indifference” in many school buildings, as revealed by the city’s own inspections.
“When you have doors that don’t work, the presence of PCBs, windows that don’t shut and toilets in disrepair, you risk the health of our children,” Figueroa said. “You disrupt the daily routines that are necessary for learning.”
The union’s data on decay in public school buildings came from city inspections conducted in 2011 and 2012.
Inspectors who conducted the ongoing school visits checked school facilities for maintenance issues and cleanliness and spoke with staffers about any problems.
0 comments:
Post a Comment