Signatures 1036 total
Page: « ‹ 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, ... 21 › »
-
51
Name: Beth Bernett on May 13, 2008Comments:Flag
-
52
Name: Erica Baum on May 13, 2008Comments:Flag
-
53
Name: Stephanie Darrisaw on May 13, 2008Comments:Flag
-
54
Name: Mary Amoon-HIckey on May 13, 2008Comments: Please plan accordingly with the interest of the children first and then figure out how to do it. Work to eliminate graft so that any monies are actually spent on realistically improving existing schools or building new ones.Flag
-
55
Name: Karyn on May 13, 2008Comments:Flag
-
56
Name: Michael MacGowan on May 13, 2008Comments:Flag
-
57
Name: Jamie Prince on May 13, 2008Comments:Flag
-
58
Name: Adrienne Saccone on May 13, 2008Comments: please work on this problem. with so many familys staying in nyc the growth of schools is so great and with the added strain of many many huge family sized apartments being build we are at a critical point.Flag
-
59
Name: Pearla Bergfeld on May 13, 2008Comments:Flag
-
60
Name: Michael Saccone on May 13, 2008Comments:Flag
-
61
Name: Marianne Hovivian on May 13, 2008Comments:Flag
-
62
Name: Ted Hovivian on May 13, 2008Comments:Flag
-
63
Name: Anonymous on May 13, 2008Comments:Flag
-
64
Name: Heather Blau on May 13, 2008Comments: Evading the issue of school overcrowding is harmful to our kids and our city. I urge city leaders to mobilize quickly and provide adequate space for our children to learn and grow.Flag
-
65
Name: Claire Terraciano on May 13, 2008Comments:Flag
-
66
Name: Daniel Millstone on May 13, 2008Comments:Flag
-
67
Name: Kiki Panos-Sperazza on May 13, 2008Comments:Flag
-
68
Name: Laura Williams on May 13, 2008Comments:Flag
-
69
Name: Anonymous on May 13, 2008Comments:Flag
-
70
Name: Claire Theobald on May 13, 2008Comments:Flag
-
71
Name: Elizabeth Lesnick on May 13, 2008Comments:Flag
-
72
Name: Jennifer Economou on May 13, 2008Comments:Flag
-
73
Name: Evie Hantzopoulos on May 13, 2008Comments:Flag
-
74
Name: Anonymous on May 13, 2008Comments: please stop:: giving excessive power to incompetent principals; mandating a low level of education to over-average students; testing the students to the exclusion of educating them; ignoring the courts with respect to the billions won by class-size-matters; educating top students with a math curriculum 3 grades below their abilities; harming the G&T programs with endless rule changes that seem only to have the effect of pissing off poor and rich families alike; running the school system.Flag
-
75
Name: Paula Seefeldt on May 13, 2008Comments:Flag
-
76
Name: Susan Danielson on May 13, 2008Comments:Flag
-
77
Name: Marian Trupiano on May 13, 2008Comments:Flag
-
78
Name: Brenda Baker on May 13, 2008Comments:Flag
-
79
Name: Darian Levin on May 13, 2008Comments:Flag
-
80
Name: Anonymous on May 13, 2008Comments:Flag
-
81
Name: Eugene Falik on May 13, 2008Comments: It is long past the time when NYC has enough seats for its school children. Population trends are no secret, nor are construction plans. It should not be as difficult to plan school construction as the Education Department and the School Construction Authority make it out to be -- particularly with the increased state aid available and the city's budget surplus in recent years.Flag
-
82
Name: Eleanor Stier on May 13, 2008Comments:Flag
-
83
Name: Mary Ann Toman on May 13, 2008Comments:Flag
-
84
Name: Bonnie Gitlin on May 13, 2008Comments:Flag
-
85
Name: Anonymous on May 13, 2008Comments:Flag
-
86
Name: Cathy Einhorn on May 13, 2008Comments:Flag
-
87
Name: Fariba Behnegar on May 13, 2008Comments:Flag
-
88
Name: Sandra Stratton-Gonzalez on May 13, 2008Comments:Flag
-
89
Name: Michael Cunningham on May 13, 2008Comments:Flag
-
90
Name: Michael Cunningham on May 13, 2008Comments:Flag
-
91
Name: Wendi Paster on May 13, 2008Comments:Flag
-
92
Name: Tina Shafer on May 13, 2008Comments:Flag
-
93
Name: Bonnie Steinsnyder on May 13, 2008Comments:Flag
-
94
Name: Daphna Nidus on May 13, 2008Comments: It is imperative that the city immediately find a way to accomodate the children who will be moving into all of the condominiums which are currently being built in our neightborhood. Additionally we have a shortage of G&T seats in our district in the upper east side and therefore our smartest students are not being well served at the moment.Flag
-
95
Name: S. Basch on May 13, 2008Comments:Flag
-
96
Name: Elise Benkard on May 13, 2008Comments:Flag
-
97
Name: A Lewison on May 13, 2008Comments: As a parent of two public school students, I am convined that smaller class size is the key to improving the public schools in New York to meet or exceed the private school capabilities. It is imperative to continue in this direction until the numbers drop into an acceptable range.Flag
-
98
Name: Charis Meng on May 13, 2008Comments: We've been forced to give up computer lab and school library in order to create new classrooms for our overcrowded school. We have several new highrisers scheduled for completion this year, zoned for PS183. We need to build more schools and control the building of residences in areas that cannot accomodate more students. Please respond to this crisis.Flag
-
99
Name: Anonymous on May 13, 2008Comments:Flag
-
100
Name: Anonymous on May 13, 2008Comments:Flag