Friday, June 20, 2008

Press Release: Parents Tell Board: Follow EPA Guidelines

Parents and Communities United for Education (PCUE)

Jersey City chapter of Statewide Education Organizing Committee (SEOC)

169-A Martin Luther King Drive

Jersey City, NJ 07305

201-918-2918


For Immediate Release

June 19, 2008




Parents Tell Board: Follow EPA Guidelines

On Thursday, June 19 from 6 to 8pm, parents from Parents and Communities United for Education (PCUE) will assemble at the Board of Education meeting taking place at school #11 on the corner of the Bergen Ave. and Academy Street. Parents will be holding signs and speaking during the public comment period to urge Dr. Epps and the members of the Board of Education to abide by its agreement with the US Environmental Protection Agency to fully inform parents and the community about the testing of water in Jersey City schools.

PCUE is asking the Board to:

  1. Make a commitment to notify all parents by letter/mail when additional test results are ready after schools end on June 25;
  2. Assign someone with the necessary authority whom parents can call with their concerns and ask questions;
  3. Translate information into Spanish for thousands of Spanish speaking parents;
  4. Provide parents with information on health hazards related to lead and how and where they can get assistance and testing if they need to.

Loyda Goldston, a parent with three children in PS # 34 said "We are very pleased to see that our schools are being tested for lead and parents have received notification about the testing schedule and that the test results for some schools have been released. However, we are here to make sure that our school district will notify all parents by mail when additional test results are ready after schools end on June 25. We want our district to translate this information into Spanish for parents who speak very little or no English. As parents we have a right to know when and if our children have been exposed to any health hazards."

Another parent, Marie Mervil, with child in McNair High School, stated that "Our school district, according to the US Environmental Protection Agency, has an obligation to provide parents of children in schools with high levels of lead with information about lead related health hazards and resources where they can seek assistance and testing if they want to."
Parents want a comprehensive "Healthy Schools Program"
Since March of this year, PCUE has begun a Healthy School Campaign to safeguard the safety and well-being of Jersey City school children. Health hazards during this academic year affected thousands of children.

PCUE's campaign has highlighted health hazards in schools and proposed a four-point proposal including:

1. Immediately test drinking water in all schools and keep parents fully informed, 2. Create a standing committee of BOE members and parents that will be exclusively responsible for school health and safety, 3. Create an Indoor Air Quality Team at the district level following EPA guidelines, and 4. Issue semi-annual health and safety report cards for each school to be sent to parents and posted on the District's website.

PCUE is a grassroots organization of parents, grandparents, and concerned members of the community that is a chapter of the Statewide Education Organizing Committee of NJ. PCUE is committed to organizing parents in all Jersey City communities to improve education for our children and create schools that are healthy and safe. For more information on PCUE, parents are invited to call 201-918-2918 or visit the blog at http://pcueforhealthyschools.blogspot.com/


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Contact:

LueElla McFadden-201-780-1933


Loyda Goldston-973-204-4121

Sunday, June 15, 2008

Jersey City Reporter: A lead on lead in schools

A lead on lead in schools

Parents want info ASAP; Board of Ed gives results
THEY WANT ANSWERS – Members of Parents and Communities United for Education, a Jersey City grassroots organization, want lead testing in Jersey City public schools to finish before the end of the school year.

Parents of Jersey City schoolchildren want answers immediately about the lead levels in drinking water in the Jersey City public schools.

Members of Parents and Communities United for Education, a local grassroots organization, have petitioned School Superintendent Dr. Epps and members of the Board of Education in recent weeks to speed up water testing so that it can be done in time to tell parents from all schools about the results before the end of the school year.

They also want the results to be posted on the Jersey City Board of Education Web site (www.jcboe.org).

The testing is being done voluntarily by the Jersey City school system in all 45 of the city's public school buildings due to reports in January about the high level of lead in drinking water found at six schools (Schools 11, 23, 31, 6, 27, and 25).

Local newspaper articles said that some administrators in the school district knew about the lead problem for over a year in those schools, but did not tell parents.



To Read the full story, please click on the link below:
http://www.hudsonreporter.com/site/news.asp?brd=1291&nav_sec=68508