Children Are Being Sent To Pre-K Far From Home, UES Parents Complain

NEW YORK (CBSNewYork) -- Officials and parents rallied Sunday on the Upper East Side, calling on Mayor Bill de Blasio to open up more pre-kindergarten seats in neighborhood schools.

As WCBS 880's Mike Smeltz reported, Irina Goldman was planning on placing her 4-year-old into the City's Pre-K program this upcoming school year. Living at 83rd Street and First Avenue, she was really looking for anything within a 20-minute walk.

But as many parents in the neighborhood are facing, her child was placed in a school six miles away in Lower Manhattan.

"When I found out, honestly, I cried, just out of frustration," Goldman said.

Upper East Side parent Rob Bates was also hoping he could get his son, Michael, a pre-K seat a program somewhere – really anywhere – in the neighborhood. But Michael, 4, was assigned to a program in Union Square – at least a 30-minute subway ride away.

Bates said the trip was a huge burden for their family.

"The subways are very crowded, and it makes us nervous," he said. "You know, you have a fragile little child. You don't want to put him on a crowded subway like that, especially for that length of time."

In all, more than 900 Upper East Side families with 4-year-olds applied for the Pre-K program. A third of them were given seats outside the neighborhood, creating a logistical nightmare for parents.

Goldman said her family has no clue now if they are going to send their child to pre-K at all.

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