You are reading

Many Students Yet to Receive Devices Needed For Remote Learning: Council Members

Schools Chancellor Richard Carranza (DOE)

April 17, 2020 By Christian Murray

Several Queens council members have penned a letter to Schools Chancellor Richard Carranza to let him know that many low-income parents have not received the equipment their children need for remote learning.

New York City public schools started remote learning on March 23 and many schools were able to provide students from low-income families with the computer devices needed in order to participate. However, according to the council members, many students have yet to receive the computer equipment—almost a month after remote learning began.

The letter–which was co-written by Council Members Francisco Moya, Donovan Richards among others—is calling on the Department of Education to provide data as to how many laptops, computers or tablets have been distributed to students in each school district.

The council members also want to know whether the devices were part of existing school supplies; were purchased by the DOE specifically for remote learning; or were donated.

The council members say that many of their constituents are doubting the DOE’s commitment to serving students from low income areas and they want the data to prove otherwise.

“These complaints are worrisome and have caused constituents to assume the DOE is not servings low-income neighborhoods as swiftly as higher-income neighborhoods,” the April 14 letter reads.

A DOE spokesperson said that the agency has distributed 175,000 school-based devices and is in the process of delivering additional devices to students whose family have asked for one by the end of the month—prioritizing the most vulnerable students.

The DOE is currently distributing more than 135,000 LTE-enabled iPads to students in need and aims to have them all out by the end of the month. It has shipped 105,000 iPads already.

The students who received the iPads first were public school students in shelters as well as those in temporary housing or foster care., according to the DOT. The agency, according to a spokesperson, has also prioritized high school students, students with disabilities, multilingual learners, students in public housing, and students who qualify for free- and reduced-price lunch.

“We’re delivering internet enabled devices to every student who’s requested one by the end of the month in an effort to eliminate the digital divide for students” a DOE spokesperson said in a statement.

“We prioritized our most vulnerable students for distribution and we’ve consistently transparently shared updates on these shipments, including sending communications to all families who requested a device informing them that we’ve received the request and their device is on its way.”

The DOE is asking parents who need a device to go to schools.nyc.gov or call 718-935-5100 and choose option 5 and request one. All devices, the agency says, will be shipped by the end of the month.

email the author: news@queenspost.com

2 Comments

Click for Comments 
John

He’s the absolute worst. Just when you thought he couldn’t get any worse, he bought the ipads at $100 over market and did not purchase with Apple directly. Not to mention he kept schools open and told everyone not to worry. How many dead in DOE at this point? Admin, teachers, etc? He’s got blood on his hands. Thank god his term is up soon.

Reply
Duran

What a sick sick cancer Carranza has been to our city.
I hope to god once this is all over, that he and DiBlasio are held responsible in some way. What will it take? I never could have fathomed two worse people, let alone with the power to impact NY in such negative ways.

10
Reply

Leave a Comment
Reply to this Comment

All comments are subject to moderation before being posted.

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

Recent News

Queens Distance Runners mark 10 years with milestone marathon at Flushing Meadows

Apr. 24, 2025 By Paulina Albarracin

Runners filled the paths of Flushing Meadows-Corona Park on March 30 for the Queens Marathon, joined by the QDR Half Marathon and 10K events. Since its inception, the Queens Marathon has done more than test endurance—it has celebrated the borough’s diverse communities and encouraged participants to support local businesses and organizations. This year marked a special milestone as the flagship event of Queens Distance Runners (QDR) celebrated its 10th anniversary, reaffirming its place as Queens’ premier race experience and igniting excitement across the scenic park grounds.

“We don’t know who we can trust”: Advocates push for New York For All Act to shield immigrants from ICE enforcement

Apr. 24, 2025 By Jimmy Robles

As deportations keep growing in the communities of New York, the fight to protect the immigrant community from immigration enforcement agencies such as ICE is urging. Even residents with no criminal history or legal status in the United States have become at risk of deportation, causing them to live with constant fear of being separated from their families.

Dirt bike thief strikes twice in Queens, targeting sellers in Fresh Meadows and Corona: NYPD

Police from the 107th Precinct in Fresh Meadows are looking for a suspect who set up a meeting with a 24-year-old man at a BP gas station at 73-15 Parson Blvd. at 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday, April 15, to buy the victim’s dirt bike.

The two men rode together for a test drive, and when they returned to the Fresh Meadows gas station, the perpetrator pushed the victim off his dirt bike and rode off in an unknown direction, police said Wednesday. The man who was robbed was not injured during the encounter.