Editorial 
 Lack of leadership fails the homeless 
 Mayor Bill de Blasio’s policies on homelessness  
 have been an embarrassing failure. 
 The population of homeless New Yorkers  
 has only grown in his seven years at City  
 Hall. Proudly-announced programs such  
 as the “Turn the Tide on Homelessness”  
 initiative have seemingly gone nowhere. 
 The  city  continues  to  pile  homeless  
 families  into  hotels,  and  that  continues  
 to provoke fi ghts with communities that  
 don’t want shelters in their neighborhood.  
 The backlash on the Upper West Side over  
 hotels-turned-homeless shelters there was  
 loud enough for de Blasio to cave earlier  
 this month,  abandoning  the  policy  and  
 moving some of the residents out. 
 Then  de  Blasio  turned  around  and  
 stopped the transfers of homeless families  
 with children, which was a prudent decision  
 given the start of the school year. The last  
 thing kids need, especially during the COVID 
 19 era, is another disruption of routine. 
 Yet all the waffl ing demonstrates just  
 how badly de Blasio has mismanaged the  
 crisis of homelessness in New York City —  
 not just in deed, but in word. 
 NIMBY-minded  New  Yorkers  seized  
 the narrative almost every time the city  
 established either a temporary or permanent  
 homeless  shelter  in  a  community.  
 The  Department  of  Homeless  Services  
 regularly employed an obtuse strategy of  
 moving individuals in fi rst and then telling  
 community leaders and City Council  
 representatives of their plans. 
 The  shelter  opponents  seized  on  the  
 secrecy like a lion running to fresh meat.  
 They blasted de Blasio and his colleagues in  
 government for failing the homeless — then  
 threw into their narrative all the fears about  
 public safety, most of which were built of  
 stereotypes. 
 De Blasio had no chance of winning this  
 battle — which makes his unforced errors  
 look even worse than they appear. 
 City government has an obligation to  
 house  the homeless  and fi nd shelter  for  
 every New Yorker who needs it. That City  
 Hall hasn’t come up with better ways to  
 address it other than creating large-scale  
 shelters only aggravates the crisis at hand.  
 But more than that, de Blasio’s failure to  
 proactively rally the city behind the need to  
 end homelessness proved to needlessly fuel  
 tensions and fail thousands of New Yorkers  
 in need by putting them in the eye of the  
 storm. 
 We don’t expect that to change in 15  
 months, so the next mayor will need to step  
 up in ways that de Blasio cannot. 
 Op-ed 
 In-person learning  
 can’t be replaced 
 BY MONET ELZEY AND 
 LUDE BONNET 
 It’s been 179 days since New York City  
 schools  closed due  to  the pandemic.  
 Some of those days have felt like weeks,  
 while others have passed with the blink of  
 an eye. But as parents, one thing has remained  
 constant: our devotion to the health  
 and well-being of our children. 
 The shift to remote learning in March  
 was an incredible feat by teachers, students,  
 and families. Countless hours have been  
 poured into keeping our children on track  
 over the past six months, and the resiliency  
 of our communities has been a beautiful  
 thing to witness. We made it through some  
 of the toughest days in our City’s history,  
 during the height of a crisis no one could  
 have ever prepared for.  
 Today, we’ve made it through the worst  
 of  that  crisis—and we’re uniquely positioned  
 as the only major school district in  
 the country able to safely send our children  
 back to school in the fall. Our children,  
 their  education,  and  their  futures  can’t  
 afford to wait. 
 Being  in school  is an experience  that  
 can’t be replaced. And that’s why we are  
 so hopeful we can make blended learning  
 work. It’s a chance to get our children back  
 to their classrooms, where they learn best  
 with one another. 
 As of now, the majority of students will  
 begin the school year in a blended learning  
 model, where they will be learning inperson  
 in their own school buildings part  
 of the week and learning remotely during  
 PHOTO VIA GETTY IMAGES 
 the remaining days. Our schools play such  
 a critical role in our communities, and  
 hundreds of thousands of New York City  
 parents are ready to safely get their kids  
 back to their classrooms. 
 Are we nervous? Of course, we’re parents. 
  We lie awake at night thinking about  
 our kids, especially our youngest children.  
 How can we help them understand that  
 they can’t hug their friends? Will they remember  
 to wear their masks all the time?  
 None of it will be easy. Our young ones are  
 dealing with the change, confusion, and  
 even  trauma  the pandemic  has brought  
 into their lives. The social and emotional  
 support of educators, friends, parents, and  
 loved ones is needed more than ever for all  
 developing young minds. We are so grateful  
 for the wrap-around care that is already being  
 planned out in our school communities. 
 Planning  for  the  school year  is never  
 easy, but this fall has required far more  
 preparation  than ever. We’ve  seen fi rsthand  
 the work our teachers, principals, and  
 even our Mayor and Chancellor have put in  
 to keep our schools and classrooms safe.  
 A later start to school is allowing educators  
 and families more time to thoroughly  
 prepare for the start of a school year like no  
 other, and mandatory testing will help keep  
 our communities safe and healthy. 
 As parents, we’re reassured. But above  
 all, we’re hopeful. We believe we can make  
 this work, and that we can give our kids the  
 kind of learning experience they can only  
 get in a classroom.  
 Monet  Elzey  and  Lude  Bonnet  are  
 parents of New York City school children 
 Publisher of The Villager, Villager Express, Chelsea Now, 
 Downtown Express and Manhattan Express 
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