4 JUNE 1, 2017 RIDGEWOOD TIMES WWW.QNS.COM Parents of M.V. charter school plan rallies in attempt to keep school open June 8 St. Pancras Pfeiffer Hall 68-20 Myrtle Avenue, Glendale NOW OPEN EVERY SATURDAY & SUNDAY FLEA FOOD Global FoodVintageArtFHandcrafted ALL-QUEENS BEER GARDEN Now Accepting Vendor Applications Build Your Business With Us! To Apply Call 718.224.5863 or Submit Application Online 5-25 46th Avenue, Long Island City, NY 11101 LICFlea.com BY ANTHONY GIUDICE [email protected] @A_GIUDICEREPORT The parents of Middle Village Preparatory Charter School (MVP) will not let the school go down without a fi ght. Hoping to convince the Diocese of Brooklyn and Queens to drop the lawsuit against Christ the King High School and its board of trustees that would require the secular charter school on its campus to close, parents of MVP students are planning to hold a pair of rallies in June, one outside the diocese’s offi ce in Brooklyn and another outside of the Queens County Court in Jamaica. The fi rst rally is scheduled to take place on Wednesday, June 7, where parents, and students of MVP — with properly fi lled out permission slips — will rally outside of the Diocese of Brooklyn and Queens offi ce at 310 Prospect Park, Brooklyn. Buses will pick up participants at approximately 9 a.m. on the morning of the rally at MVP, located at 68-02 Metropolitan Ave. Buses will also return all participants from the diocese offi ces. More details on the bus information will be made available in the coming days. The second rally is set to bring parents and students to the steps of the Queens County Court located at 88-11 Sutphin Blvd. in Jamaica, on Tuesday, June 13 — the day the court is expected to hear oral arguments regarding the lawsuit. Details about departure time and location will be updated in the days leading up to the rally. Organizers ask that parents who want to bring their children to the event fi ll out the offi cial permission slip to return to the school as an RSVP so an accurate number of participants can be recorded to provide the correct number of T-shirts, posters for ralliers and proper information can be given to the bus companies and the appropriate police departments. “First and foremost, we want them to know we want to open dialogue between the parents of MVP and the diocese,” said Claudia Valdes, a parent organizer with MVP. “Second, we would like to respectfully request the diocese drop the lawsuit so we can keep the school open and we can continue the course of education for over 400 students, otherwise it would adversely aff ect that many students and contribute to the severely overcrowded District 24 school system.” Any participating students are asked to come in their MVP uniform. Any classes missed by students attending the rallies will be excused by teachers. Last week parents created a Twitter page in an attempt to bring awareness of their fi ght to social media. Councilwoman Elizabeth Crowley penned a letter to Bishop James Massa, an auxiliary bishop of the Diocese of Brooklyn, asking that a new deal be inked that would allow MVP to stay open. “On behalf of my constituents I am writing to urge that a new contract be drawn up that will permit Middle Village Prep to remain open,” Crowley wrote. “It is surprising that SUNY, the partnering organization with the charter school, and the board of trustees of Christ the King moved forward on opening the school if obvious legal barriers existed. To close the school at this point is an injustice to the families that are enrolled as well as the parents scheduled to join the school in September.” QNS has reached out to the diocese for a comment on the rallies and is awaiting a reply. Photo by Angela Matua Parents plan to hold two rallies to try and keep Middle Village Prep open come September.
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