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 PLAYGROUND PETITION 
 Parent hopes to keep new schoolyard at Little Neck’s P.S. 221 open during summer and weekends 
 Officials and students break ground on the new playground at P.S. 221 in Little Neck.     
 Photo by Jenna Bagcal/QNS 
 BY JENNA BAGCAL 
 A parent of a student at a  
 Little  Neck  public  school  is  
 leading  the  charge  in keeping  
 the school’s playground open  
 to the public. 
 The  schoolyard  at  P.S.  221  
 officially opened less than five  
 months after the groundbreaking  
 ceremony. 
 Despite the joyous occasion,  
 Adriana Aviles started a petition  
 against the Department  
 of Education, which she said  
 broke a promise to keep the  
 playground  open  during  the  
 summer and weekends. 
 Aviles started the petition  
 after presenting her concerns  
 at the Oct. 7 Community Board  
 11  meeting.  The  petition  has  
 garnered 204 signatures since  
 Aviles started it on Oct. 12. 
 According to Aviles, the  
 DOE promised that the public  
 could access the playground  
 during  “off  hours”  under  
 former Mayor Bloomberg’s  
 PlaNYC Schoolyards to Playgrounds  
 initiative. The $111  
 million investment would apply  
 to 290 school playgrounds  
 citywide as part of Bloomberg’s  
 goal of “having every New  
 Yorker live within a 10-minute  
 walk of a park or playground.” 
 But according to a spokesperson  
 for the Trust for Public  
 Land, which works to upgrade  
 school playgrounds, the DOE  
 lacks funding to pay staff  
 members that would supervise  
 the space when school is not in  
 session. 
 “When the park opens this  
 Monday, it will be open to the  
 public  after  school  from  2:35  
 to  dusk  on  weekdays.  School  
 custodians are needed to open  
 and close the yards during ‘offhours.’ 
  These staff members  
 are paid by the Department  
 of Education, so The Trust for  
 Public Land is currently working  
 with city officials to secure  
 additional funding to keep the  
 park  open  during  non-school  
 hours,” said the spokesperson. 
 “This new playground  
 will be a wonderful asset to  
 the students and families of  
 PS 221, and we’re having conversations  
 with members of  
 the school community to understand  
 their concerns. This  
 playground  is  not  part  of  the  
 Schoolyards  to  Playgrounds  
 program,” added DOE spokesperson  
 Isabelle Boundy. 
 Aviles said that the head of  
 the custodians at P.S. 221 received  
 a phone call confirming  
 that there was no money allotted  
 to keep the schoolyard open  
 during after school hours. She  
 approached  the  school’s  principal, 
   who  said  that  the  playground  
 would  only  be  open  
 until 5:30 p.m. when the after  
 school program lets out. 
 “She said nothing else about  
 weekends or holidays, so that’s  
 what we’re fighting for now,”  
 Aviles said. “I worked for the  
 city for over 20 years, so I know  
 the city makes promises which  
 they don’t keep.” 
 The playground is set to officially  
 open  on Monday,  Oct.  
 21, and Aviles said she plans to  
 deliver the petition to Queens  
 Borough President Melinda  
 Katz. For now, she continues  
 to  collect  signatures  with  the  
 help of her local Girl Scout  
 Troop 4025. Members of the  
 troop,  including  her  daughter  
 Anastasia Aviles, are P.S.  
 221 graduates. 
 Troop members collected  
 more  than  100  signatures and  
 shared  that  they  were  upset  
 they would not be able to enjoy  
 their alma mater’s schoolyard,  
 which includes new trees, a  
 turf field, a running track, play  
 equipment and game tables. 
 Aviles said that other local  
 schools  like  P.S.  98  have  playgrounds  
 that are part of the  
 Schoolyards  to  Playgrounds  
 program and said that P.S. 221  
 should be included. 
 She added that the public  
 playgrounds available to the  
 community  near  P.S.  221  are  
 just “cement spaces.” 
 “There’s  nothing  really  
 worth it for the neighborhood  
 and the community to say,  
 ‘This is a beautiful park where  
 we could sit and enjoy and read  
 in the gazebo and enjoy some  
 family time or some friendship  
 time,'” Aviles said. 
 Vol. 28 No. 43  52 total pages 
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