Amazon recently announced that Long Island City in Queens, New York (a part of New York City) will be the site of one of its new headquarters. This will be an expensive “gift” to New York City, which has pledged huge tax breaks and incentives to woo Amazon. It will also create a burden on already strained public services, not only transportation, but public schools.
Leonie Haimson, Executive Director of Class Size Matters, and Sabina Omerhodzic, a Long Island City resident and a member of the Community Education Council in District 30, warn that Long Island City is not ready. The public schools are already overcrowded.
They write:
The plan to provide Amazon up to $3 billion in city and state tax cuts and other subsidies to site one of their new headquarters in Long Island City leaves the children who are living there in the lurch. The booming community is already severely short on school seats, a problem that Amazon’s move to the area will only exacerbate given recent trends, Department of Education projections, and the details of the Amazon deal that have been released.
The only zoned elementary school in Long Island City, PS 78, is already at 135% capacity, and more than 70 children who were zoned to the school were put on the waitlist for kindergarten last spring, while classes for numerous pre-K kids are being housed in trailers.
There are plans for two small elementary schools of about 600 seats each to be created as part of a huge 5,000-housing unit Hunters Point South development, but these schools are likely to be immediately overcrowded the day they open. There are already three sections of kindergarten students attending class in an incubation site at a nearby pre-K center, waiting to attend the first elementary school, which will not be completed until 2021.
An already-planned middle school had been proposed to be built on city-owned land as part of a mixed-use 1,000-unit project, but this area is now to be incorporated into the Amazon development. Contrary to Mayor de Blasio’s claims, the memorandum of understanding with Amazon includes no new school for the neighborhood. Instead, the MOU merely says that the company will pay for this middle school already in the city’s capital plan – but moved to another location, as yet undetermined. As Chalkbeat NY explained, “The company agreed to house a 600-seat intermediate school on or near its Long Island City campus, replacing a school that had already been planned in a residential building nearby.”
From 2006 to 2017, more than 20,000 residential units were built in Long Island City. A study found that 12,533 apartments in 41 separate developments were built in the community between 2010 and 2016 – not just the highest number in New York City, but more than any other neighborhood in the entire nation….
Another part of the deal includes Amazon making payments in lieu of taxes into an infrastructure fund that, starting 11 years after the deal, the New York City Economic Development Corporation (EDC) can spend on nearly any sort of use, “including but not limited to streets, sidewalks, utility relocations, environmental remediation, public open space, transportation, schools and signage,” according to the MOU.
And to add the most grievous insult to injury, the city now plans to give Amazon a large DOE office building, one that community members have been fighting to convert into much-needed schools and a community center instead. A petition, now with more than 1,500 signatures, to the mayor and local elected officials was posted last year by the Long Island City Coalition.
This is not the first time the community’s needs for schools have gone entirely ignored. In 2008, EDC re-zoned city-owned land for the Hunters Point South project without any plan to create a single new school, ignoring the thousand or so children who were likely to inhabit these new apartments. It took a concerted organizing effort of Long Island City parents and elected officials in 2015 for the city to agree to belatedly include two small schools in the plans.
We’ve seen this poor planning repeatedly, wherever new residential developments are springing up. The Amazon deal is but a particularly egregious example of how the city’s policies are driven by the interests of the real estate industry and private corporations while the educational needs of our children are too often overlooked. As many education advocates, parents and community leaders have pointed out, the school planning process in New York City is broken, resulting in more than half a million students crammed into overcrowded schools and classrooms, with the problem likely to get worse as the city’s population continues to grow.
Read the whole thing to learn how poorly the city of New York has planned for the arrival of thousands of people who are employed by Amazon and expect to put their children into public schools.

Eva is probably looking to make a deal to serve the needs of executives’ children. She is probably looking for a site for Success Academy Long Island City. Maybe she can get Bezos to pay for it as a big tax write-off?
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In these new residential areas which were once industrial, etc the DOE seems to willingly cede ground to the charter schools. As it is the DOE perpetually underestimate how much need there is for school seats. They don’t seem interested in making any investments.
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As more and more people are moving into the city, they are going to have to build more schools. The public has to continue to press for more public schools. Maybe the change in the legislature will make it easier to get the needed funds?
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Many ancillary deals were no doubt brokered in smoke filled back rooms to grease the axle of the Amazon deal.
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$3 billion in tax breaks and incentives will end up costing the people of NY City and NY State many times that.
Someone is (someones are) almost certainly getting kickbacks out of this deal. After all, this is NY government we are talking about.
There is a Pulitzer waiting for the journalist who finds out who and names names.
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There’s also a hitman waiting for that same journalist.
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You are probably right.
And if the hit man does not go after them the NY Times undoubtedly will.
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That too.
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I’m convinced the poor planning is intentional as the corporate pirates that want to profit off the privatization of public schools do all they can to turn the surviving public schools into substandard schools so many parents will fall for all the misleading promotions and lies from corporate charter schools to fool those parents into moving their children out of the public schools.
I think this helps explain why someone like Eli Broad created his academy to train public school administrators to become agents of public school destruction.
I think this also helps explain why TFA does the same thing that Eli Broad is doing.
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This is a recurrent pattern: you don’t destroy a public good entirely, but you defund it and otherwise degrade it to the point that people opt for something else (the, lucily, you just happen to be offering — coincidentally, of course)
That way, you can wash your hands of responsibility for the ultimate destruction of the public good and claim that the people chose of their own free will.
It’s actually a very clever approach.
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I agree that it is a clever approach but I hope Lincoln was right.
That “You can fool all the people some of the time, and some of the people all the time, but you cannot fool all the people all the time.”
I think the shift has already started, because of the results from the 2018 midterm elections where Democrats across the country had about 8 million more votes than GOP candidates.
We could also change that quote to: “You can fool all the states some of the time, and some of the states all the time, but you cannot fool all the states all the time.”
The Democrats took SEVEN governor’s mansions from the GOP in 2018.
And “Going into the 2018 midterm, Republicans had complete control of 26 state governments — meaning that their party held both chambers of the state legislature as well as the governorship. (This count includes Nebraska, which has a nonpartisan, unicameral legislature but is effectively run by the Republicans.) The Democrats, on the other hand, had total control of 8 state governments. Meanwhile, 16 state governments were mixed between the two parties, with one side controlling at least the governorship or one chamber of the legislature.
After the midterms, the Democrats have total control of 14 state governments, compared with 23 for the Republicans. The number of state governments with mixed party control fell to 13.”
“There were 8 states where the governorship changed hands, all of which led to a shift in party control of some kind or another. These were mostly shifts to the Democrats, with the exception of Alaska, which moved toward the Republicans. But there were also notable shifts in the control of state legislatures, all of which favored the Democrats. Democrats took control of the state senates of Colorado, Connecticut, New Hampshire, and Maine and the state houses of Minnesota and New Hampshire.”
https://www.aei.org/publication/republicans-remain-in-a-strong-position-in-state-legislatures/
We have two years to wake more people up across the country so they will join the growth of the un-fooled.
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Crystal City (Arlington) VA is not ready for an influx of 25,000 new jobs, and the families/dependents. The area is ramping up, and making some changes, especially in transportation, but the overall level of preparedness is not where it should be.
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The pattern is similar (on a smaller scale) with deals often involving professional sports facilities, massive land grabs for parking, no attention to roadways and traffic, tax breaks at the expense of public schools and so on.
Amazon is functioning as if it is entitled to to whatever it wants.
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