You are reading

Local schools and libraries to get additional funding via Participatory Budgeting

April 21, 2017 Staff Report

Forest Hills will see three community improvement projects funded through the participatory budgeting process this year, announced Councilwoman Karen Koslowitz.

This year residents of the district cast ballots during the week-long participatory budgeting process to decide how to spend $1 million, choosing to fund three projects focused on school and library upgrades.

The most popular project funded through Participatory Budgeting was upgrades to technology at the local schools. Residents cast 1,617 votes in favor of upgrading technology at PS 139, PS 220, PS 206, PS 99, PS 175, PS 196, JHS 157, JHS 190, and Forest Hills High School, which will cost $315,000.

Residents also voted to spend $200,000 on upgrading technology at local libraries. Throughout the voting process 1,322 people cast their ballots to improve technology at all of the Queens Library branches in District 29, including Rego Park Library, North Forest Park Library, Forest Hills Library, and Richmond Hill Library.

The final project funded through the process was an upgrade to bathroom facilities at local schools. Koslowitz will allocate $400,000 to renovate select bathrooms at PS 196, PS 220, PS 99, PS 206, PS 174, and PS 144.

The projects will all be funded through the city budget, which will be passed in June, and then will enter the planning and design phases before construction can begin.

email the author: news@queenspost.com
No comments yet

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

NY Hall of Science debuts CityWorks, its largest exhibition in over a decade

The New York Hall of Science in Corona opened its largest interactive exhibition in more than a decade on Saturday, May 3. The exhibition explores the often invisible inner workings of the built urban environment.

CityWorks is housed in a 6,000 square foot gallery, and the exhibit was created by a team of NYCSI exhibit developers, researchers, and educators over the past five years. Visitors will have the opportunity to explore the intricate systems and engineering that enable cities to function, including how they break, evolve, and endure.

Twenty people indicted in Queens-based $4.6M vehicle theft ring after three-year probe: DA

Twenty individuals were indicted and variously charged in a wide-ranging scheme to steal cars in Queens, throughout New York City and its suburbs, following a three-year investigation by the Queens District Attorney’s Office, the NYPD, and the New York State Police dubbed “Operation Hellcat,” into the criminal enterprise based in Queens.

Some of the vehicles were stolen from owners’ driveways, some with the keys or key fobs inside. The stolen vehicles were often sold through advertisements on social media platforms such as Facebook and Instagram. The defendants are charged in nine separate indictments for a total of 373 counts, Queens District Attorney Melinda Katz announced on Thursday.