NYC NOW - Midday News: Federal Agents Search Columbia Dorms, City Investigates Bird Flu in Cats, Five Years Since NYC Schools Shut Down for COVID, and Civics Week Highlights Student Voices
Episode Date: March 14, 2025Federal agents from the Department of Homeland Security searched two Columbia University student residences Thursday night but did not make any arrests or seize any items. Meanwhile, the New York City... health department is investigating two unrelated cases of house cats contracting bird flu. Also, we look back five years ago when schools across New York City shut down due to COVID-19. First Deputy Chancellor Dan Weisberg reflects on how the pandemic reshaped education. Plus, New York City Public Schools are celebrating Civics Week, encouraging students to use their voices for change, including speeches from young advocates like 7-year-old Rafael Serras of P.S. 41 in Bayside, Queens.
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Welcome to NYC Now.
Your source for local news in and around New York City from WNYC.
It's Friday, March 14th.
Here's the midday news from Michael Hill.
Columbia University says federal agents from the Department of Homeland Security
searched two student residences last night but did not make any arrest or take anything.
Interim President Katrina Armstrong says the agents served the university with two federal judge
signed search warrants so the university had to let them enter its property. It's not yet clear
whether the action was related to last weekend's arrest of a Columbia graduate and Palestinian activist
Mahmoud Khalil. His lawyer says he's a U.S. permanent resident and has never been charged with
the crime. DHS and Columbia did not immediately respond to request for comment. Bird flu isn't
just for poultry. The New York City Health Department says it's investigating how two unrelated
house cats caught the virus which has been spreading across the country since 2022.
Health officials are advising New Yorkers to avoid feeding their pets raw food or raw milk
and to keep them from roaming outdoors.
There was no immediate word on the condition of the cats.
Humans are at low risk of contracting the virus.
49 and partly sunny right now.
Mostly cloudy today than sunny and high in the mid-50s.
And then tomorrow morning drizzle, fog,
and a slim chance of afternoon showers at 58.
Close. There's more after the break.
Five years ago this week, the largest school district in America closed its doors to students.
Cases of the new COVID-19 virus were beginning to soar, and New York City Public Schools made
the call to send students home. Within weeks, kids were learning remotely from kitchen tables, beds,
and living rooms, marking the start of a new era for education in the five boroughs.
Dan Weisberg, his first deputy chancellor at the New York City Department of Education.
He joins us now to reflect on that time and how it changed education in New York City.
Deputy Chancellor Weisberg, you arrived at the Department of Education in early 2022.
Describe what that was like at that time for us.
We were right in the middle of the Omicron surge, and there was a tremendous fear and disruption and trauma for our kids and families.
there was a lot of talk about closing schools and sending kids home again. We made the decision
with the mayor and the chancellor to keep our school doors open, to do so safely. But it was
really important, Michael, to keep our doors open. However many kids showed up every day, they needed
to be there, sometimes for a meal, sometimes to see their friends, sometimes to get mental health
support. So we were able to, in that very, very difficult time to keep our doors open every day
through Omicron, through snowstorms and everything else. What was the determination to say we must
open the schools and we must have in class from instruction? We learned a couple of really
important things. One is that sending kids home is going to be hugely disruptive to their
education to their learning, also in many cases to their social development and even to their mental
health. Two, in addition to the really important work of making sure our kids are learning and
growing and successful, what we provide in public schools is a really important public service.
In other words, mom and dad have to go to work. So those were the things that were top of mind to
us in making sure we kept the doors open. And thankfully, we did not see much in a way.
of outbreaks, COVID outbreaks in schools.
But we did see is the vast majority of our 900 plus thousand kids showing up every day and learning.
Now, Deputy Chancellor, chronic absenteeism, and you alluded to this, became an issue during
that first school year back in the classroom.
City Data Show 40% of students were chronically absent during the 2021-2020 school year.
And even now, it's still up from pre-pandemic levels.
What contributed to this?
And is there a way forward?
A student is chronically absent when he or she misses 10% or more of the school year.
Why is that important?
Research shows if a child misses 10% or more, their learning is really going to be badly and negatively affected.
So this is something we track carefully.
But here's the thing.
We can't just have the goal of getting attendance back to where it was before the pandemic.
It wasn't good, frankly, before the pandemic.
about a quarter of our kids, we're chronically absent in 2019.
That's not good.
Now it's even higher.
You're 100% right.
It shot up to over 40% during the pandemic, which is certainly crisis levels.
It's come down to the lower 30% now, but that's not good enough.
And so we're working really hard to diagnose what it is that's keeping parents in some cases
from dropping their kids off at school, the young kids every day, and our older kids,
from getting to school every single day.
So it's a big challenge right now.
What's the most persistent impact you think on students that you think was caused by the pandemic?
Now, how is the district still working to solve it?
I mean, listen, our number one job, you know, what parents rightly expect from us is if you enroll
your child in New York City public schools, they're going to learn.
They're going to learn reading, writing, math, science, social studies.
and we've got to do that well, the pandemic really disrupted learning.
So we had a lot of catch-up to do.
We have to give our educators and staff and the schools a huge, huge round of applause
because through their hard work, our kids really have recovered to some extent to pre-pandemic
levels in terms of their learning.
But again, here's the issue, Michael.
Here's the big issue.
We were not doing our jobs well as an education.
system before the pandemic. Why can you say that? Because most of our kids were not at grade level,
even before the pandemic. Now, a greater percentage are not at grade level now. But the big issue we have
to confront is we are just not very good as an education system. And it's true here in New York,
when kids are behind at catching them up. And kids are behind for a whole host of reasons.
We have to get really, really good. And it's extremely hard. If it was easy, it would already be
happening at helping our teachers, giving them the right playbook to catch kids up. And we're engaged
of that here in New York City in some really important ways, but there's a long way to go. And we've
got to keep it up until we can really say, regardless of what strengths and aspirations and challenges
your child has, if you enroll him or her in New York City public schools, they're going to graduate
ready for the next level. Deputy Chancellor, I have to ask you this. A lot of districts, a lot of
parts of society have been battle tested because of the COVID-19 pandemic. If it were to happen again
this month, next month, would the New York City public school system, would it shut down or would
it stay open? I mean, obviously, it's really fact-specific. But if we were to have a, you know,
novel virus, God forbid, like COVID again, that was really dangerous. And the public health
experts were telling us it was too dangerous to open schools at all, we would be prepared.
And it's something, Michael, the behind the scenes, our folks from our IT department, our folks
from our schools division work on and prep for. We make sure that there is a device for each
of our students should they need to learn at home virtually so we can provide devices to each of
our students. We make sure that teachers know what platform to go on and what content to use
if they're teaching virtually. And this is true if it's a short-term emergency or even if it was
a longer-term emergency. So certainly, we will be better prepared than we were when this
shock came to us. But it might go a bit smoother, but it obviously would be something we
hope never, ever happens again.
Dead Weisberg is first Deputy Chancellor at the New York City Department of Education.
Deputy Chancellor, thank you so much for joining us on this, and please come back and speak with us again.
I'd be happy to do it. Thank you, Michael. It was a pleasure to be with you.
This week, New York City Public Schools are marking Civics Week.
All week long, students are focusing on the theme, Democracy Begins Here, with projects that encourage them to use their voices to advocate for changes in their communities.
Students were invited to submit soapbox speeches on the issues they care about.
We're playing a few of them on air, including this one from 7-year-old Raphael Seris, a PS-41 in Bayside Queens.
Did you know that being active helps lower the risk of childhood obesity?
That's good, right?
Hi, my name is Raphael Seras, and I will be talking about why kids should have longer.
recess. I think having longer recess can help keep kids healthy. Did you know through play at recess
children learn valuable communication skills, including negotiation? Did you also know that 81%
of teachers say that kids' behavior changes positively after recess?
As you can see, research doesn't only help students, but it also benefits teachers.
This is why I think students need longer research now.
That was second grader Raphael Siris from PS-41 in Bayside Queens.
I wonder if Raphael thinks that we should have longer breaks at work, too.
Thanks for listening.
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