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N E W S NOVEMBER 18 L E H A V R E CO-LOCATIONS APPROVED FOR NINE BORO SCHOOLS BY MAGGIE HAYES Kids, make room. Nine borough school co-locations have been approved and are planned to go into effect by the next school year. For the 2014 to 2015 school year, colocation plans will be executed in Martin Van Buren High School, J.H.S. 226 on Rockaway Boulevard, P.S. 40 in Jamaica, J.H.S. 72 in Jamaica and Long Island City (LIC) High School. A Success Academy Charter School will additionally move in with August Martin High School and Voyages Prep, and another in I.S. 59 Springfi eld Gardens. In the 2015 school year, the Elmhurst Educational Campus will hold five different schools, and the proposed colocation in M.S. 311 will take place in the 2016 school year. The bundle of co-locations was approved at the Panel for Educational Policy’s (PEP) October meeting. “True to form, every single proposal was approved by the spineless puppets appointed by Bloomberg,” said Ken Achiron, a teacher at LIC High School and the school’s United Federation of Teachers (UFT) chapter leader. “Not once did they waiver that the ‘King’ could be wrong.” Even still, the next mayor has the power to reverse the plan, and “there’s a lot of rumbles going on” as to whether that will happen, said Dmytro Fedkowskyj, Nine co-locations, all heavily protested, were approved by the city’s Panel for Educational Policy. the PEP Queens rep appointed by the borough president. The initial co-location plans projected fi ve years ahead and claimed they will keep the school buildings just at full capacity. But Fedkowskyj, who voted 18 LEHAVRE COURIER | NOVEMBER 2013 | WWW.QUEENSCOURIER.COM against the proposals, said “so many things can happen, who’s to say their projections will be right?” A Department of Education spokesperson said “across the city” they THE COURIER/Photo by Melissa Chan have “transformed the landscape with our new school options.” “This will be a new option that will deliver great outcomes for children, and we’re confi dent it will be in very high demand,” said the spokesperson. Vote to raise cigarette age to 21 BY CRISTABELLE TUMOLA They can drive, vote and join the Army, but 18 to 20-year-olds will soon lose the right to purchase cigarettes in the city. The City Council voted October 30 to raise the minimum age for purchasing cigarettes and other tobacco products, as well as e-cigarettes, from 18 to 21. It passed by a 35-10 vote. “…Our city is sending a powerful signal to the tobacco industry and its allies that hooking our kids on nicotine will no longer be a viable business model,” said Councilmember James Gennaro, one of the law’s sponsors. It will now go to Mayor Michael Bloomberg to be signed into law. Bloomberg, who has spearheaded measures such as banning smoking in bars and restaurants, supports the age increase. New York will then become the fi rst major U.S. city to have a minimum smoking age of 21. Although the city has cut the smoking rate over the last decade, the rate among youths has remained consistent at 8.5 percent since 2007, according to the City Council. Eighty percent of the city’s adults who become daily smokers start smoking before reaching the age of 21, according to the City Council. Jim Calvin, president of the New York Association of Convenience Stores, argues that it will still be simple for younger smokers to obtain cigarettes from older friends or family members and black-market sources. The same day, the City Council also passed legislation which attempts to limit access to illegal tobacco products and strengthens enforcement against illegal cigarette dealers. “The City Council is hoping they will all quit smoking the next day. The reality is they won’t,” Calvin said, pointing out the law only changes purchase age not use. While illegal sellers will benefi t, he said, licensed retailers will not only lose sales from tobacco products, but also from products that those buyers tend to purchase at the same time, such as coffee or magazines. A clerk at Hi Life, a pipe and tobacco shop on Union Turnpike, right outside of the St. John’s University campus, expected his establishment and others in the area to lose a lot of business from students. “I believe it will bring a loss--around 10 to 15 percent of business. The other products will still sell,” said an employee at the Continental Smoke Shop in Forest Hills. At Dutt News, also in Forest Hills, however, a clerk predicted little effect since most of its sales come from 22 to 25-year-olds. -With additional reporting by Nikki Djokovich A new law passed by the City Council will change the minimum purchase age of tobacco products and e-cigarettes from 18 to 21.


LH112013
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