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Assistant principal at Queens high school accused of harassing 13 Asian girls
Assistant principal at Queens high school accused of harassing 13 Asian girls

New York Post

time2 days ago

  • New York Post

Assistant principal at Queens high school accused of harassing 13 Asian girls

An assistant principal who served as the 'sexual harassment prevention' liaison at a top Queens public school was removed after 13 girls accused him of creepy behavior and comments, The Post has learned. Hector L. Diaz — also the 'Respect for All' liaison at Queens High School for the Sciences at York College — commented that girls looked dressed for 'the club,' used racial stereotypes about Asian-Americans, grabbed a girl's arm, and rubbed another's back, according to incidents described for investigators. One of the city Department of Education's elite specialized high schools, QHSS is located on a CUNY campus in Jamaica with 498 students — 81% of them Asian. Advertisement 'His lack of professionalism and inappropriate behavior has impacted my friends, peers and close-knit community of students,' Kiki Zou,17, a QHSS senior told Principal Ana De Jesus in an April 17 email. A student government leader sent the principal a litany of 10 complaints by female classmates over the past school year, with girls saying Diaz made them feel not only uncomfortable, but 'threatened and scared.' 5 Hector Diaz served as the high school's 'Sexual Harassment Prevention' and 'Respect for All' liaisons. Obtained by the New York Post Advertisement Excerpts include: 'Mr. Diaz randomly stopped us and abruptly asked in the hallway if we were going to the club as a joke, seeing how we were dressed. . . . It was just loose comments like those that made it known to us that he crossed professional boundaries and went out of his way to comment on students' looks and mannerisms.' 'Mr. Diaz was recruiting students for color guard. My friend and I were interested in joining but had a conflict of schedule. As we were leaving school, we bumped into Mr. Diaz who said he would be more than happy to train us on the spot. The two of us were led into an empty lecture hall where he observed us through various drills. Throughout the uncomfortable training, he made various inappropriate comments like 'all the Asian Francis girls [referring to Francis Lewis HS] would die to be on drill team.' 'I said hello [to Diaz] as a formal gesture like I do with every teacher and staff member. But he stopped me and began to have a conversation which I didn't mind at all. However, he shifted his hand towards my back and rubbed my back. I didn't consent to any teacher, especially male teachers, touching me like that.' Advertisement 'Mr. Diaz told me if my parents found out that I'm in a relationship, they would deport me . . . I felt really bad how he was being so racist towards me by making that comparison.' 'Mr. Diaz signed me up for a trip without my parents' or my consent. And when he saw me in the hallways he asked me if I was going on the trip. And he tried to lay a hand on me. I remember I was extremely uncomfortable after that day, and every time I walk into the school I have to check to see if he's around. I no longer feel safe on school grounds.' 'I remember clearly said, 'Wow you look so pretty' in a really weird tone and started approaching me, trying to get into a close distance. I had to avoid him by leaving that area of the gym with my friend but he kept chasing after us. . . . He physically grabbed my friend by the arm and started questioning us even though we told him we don't feel comfortable.' 'A few weeks ago I went to the counselor for my schedule. When I was about to leave, he blocked the door frame of the office, leaned in very close and started asking me about my personal life, like my family members, where I live, and even where I go for extracurricular classes. I felt deeply threatened and scared, and extremely uncomfortable.' Advertisement In other alleged incidents, Diaz texted a senior who had not given him her phone number, and told members of a club about their school funding, 'You're lucky I like you girls.' 5 Queens HS for the Sciences at York College, located on the CUNY campus, is one of NYC's specialized high schools. RICHARD HARBUS A student who told De Jesus about the incidents said the principal promised to discuss them with the superintendent, but the student never heard back. The student forwarded classmates' complaints to the Special Commissioner of Investigation for city schools. The SCI has opened nine cases against Diaz since 2023, including seven this year, but did not investigate any, a spokesman said. Instead, SCI referred the complaints to the DOE's own Office of Special Investigations, and one to the DOE's Office of Equal Opportunity and Diversity Management. 5 Assistant principal Hector Diaz accompanied students from QHHS on a trip to Spain last year. Obtained by the New York Post Diaz, 54, holds state certification as a pre-K to Grade 6 elementary teacher, and as a school building leader. Advertisement In 2009, Diaz was named a dean and several years later an interim assistant principal in The Bronx at the Urban Assembly School for Wildlife Conservation, which the DOE shut down after an 18-year-old student fatally stabbed Matthew McCree, 15, during a class in 2017. Diaz then joined a DOE group of assistant principals without permanent jobs, records show. 5 The DOE removed Hector Diaz from QHHS this month in response to complaints by 13 students of harassing comments and behavior. Obtained by the New York Post Diaz 'is no longer part of our community,' QHSS principal De Jesus told families in a June 17 email. 'While I am not at liberty to share information with you, know that I take any issue of concern, small or large, including allegations, very seriously and as an agent of the Department of Education I am required to take specific actions.' Advertisement DOE officials refused to say whether Diaz is still working with students at another school. 5 Hector Diaz, at rear behind a QHHS student holding an award; Principal Ana De Jesus, second from right; with other assistant principals and guidance counselors. Obtained by the New York Post 'This alleged behavior is absolutely unacceptable,' a DOE spokesperson said. 'Any and all forms of harassment have no place in our schools. Thorough investigations are ongoing and appropriate action will be taken upon completion.' Reached by phone, Diaz declined to comment and hung up.

Queens High School for the Sciences at York College is a school without a home
Queens High School for the Sciences at York College is a school without a home

New York Post

time22-04-2025

  • Science
  • New York Post

Queens High School for the Sciences at York College is a school without a home

This article is one of the winning submissions from the New York Post Scholars Contest, presented by Command Education. It's an interesting feeling. The feeling when one's school—a specialized high school—is nothing but the second floor and basement of a building that doesn't even belong to it. When one's school has barely enough money to support its community. And yet that is what 500 students feel when they walk into the Queens High School for the Sciences at York College (QHSS). 500, because that is the most amount of students that could fit. We've endured for 23 years, ever since 2002. And in those 23 years, we've made a name for ourselves. According to US News, in 2024, we were ranked 1st in New York High Schools. We were 25th in National Rankings. There is a 100% graduation rate, well above the state's average. We have done so much, worked so hard, and yet when people come, fascinated, to visit our school, they will find only a tiny school building that belongs not to us, but to the college across from us—York College. They will find that we have to rent this building for hundreds of thousands of dollars each year—a huge percentage of our funding. And even though the school pays so much, we are only given the second floor and a lunchroom with a maximum occupancy of 75 students. 5 Queens High School for the Sciences at York College sophomore Angela Li yearns for a lab to call home at the top public school currently educating students out of two rented floors of a building in Jamaica. Matthew McDermott 5 'We have to rent this building for hundreds of thousands of dollars each year—a huge percentage of our funding,' Li writes. Matthew McDermott They will see, and then they will think that this is not even the bare minimum of what one would expect for a specialized high school of our reputation. But that's just the tip of the iceberg. Middle schools, elementary schools, and plenty of high schools have gyms in their buildings. At QHSS, located in a building that was meant for a small medical program for the college, there is obviously no gym present. Instead, the school's students venture into the roads, rain or shine, and cross two two-way streets of cars and trucks and buses to borrow the college's gym. Not only is this inconvenient and unnecessary for something as basic as physical education, but this can also be dangerous for students because strangers share these sidewalks too and arguably, Jamaica is not exactly considered one of the safest places in New York. And the lack of a gym is not the only area where the school's resources fall short. 5 'They will see, and then they will think that this is not even the bare minimum of what one would expect for a specialized high school of our reputation,' Li says. Matthew McDermott With the rent taking up so much of the school's funding, of course there is not much left to support the students and staff. Chemistry classes, mandatory for ninth graders, take place in classrooms that never have sufficient lab materials for its classes. Half of our labs are conducted by the teacher because there are not enough materials to go around for every pair of students. There was not much use in learning about safety protocols in the lab room because most of the labs dealt with the most basic things—never any advanced chemicals. Most of us have never even seen a bunsen burner before, which would have been a common sight in schools like Bronx Science or Stuyvensant. A gym two blocks away, no supplies for science classes, flickering lights, huge classes due to lack of teachers, an absence of lockers, no auditorium, no school buses, no kitchen—the list could go on and on. There is so much in this school that needs attention, that needs to be fixed, that can't be fixed because no one outside the school knows what is going on. Two classrooms don't even have windows, leaving ventilation at the mercy of doors that are constantly missing door stoppers and fans that blow only so far. Maybe one of the most alarming effects that the funding and physical quality of the school has is the disappointment that its freshmen harbor once they are pulled into the flow of QHSS life. And because they're disappointed, they start to leave. In a school that already has so few students, we can not afford to lose any more. But what can QHSS do? Everything the freshmen feel is justified. We don't have sufficient funding. We don't have as many opportunities for students. We can't afford to give them the high school life they wanted, so they do what they can do: leave. I myself have heard of three people switching schools during the transition from my freshman to sophomore year, but there is no doubt that there were more and will be more as this year comes to a close. But we've survived for 23 years. We've adapted. When we need a place to perform, we rent out the Jamaica Performing Arts Center. When we need indicators for labs, teachers themselves take the time to squeeze purple cabbage juice for their classes. When we go on the streets littered with strangers, we walk in large groups. We use public transportation to get to school. We have school food delivered to us. We've grown used to these ways, but we shouldn't have to. QHSS students shouldn't have to be forced to cram into two floors of a building, walk two blocks for a class, and be deprived of a high school experience while being grateful for the bare minimum. We shouldn't. 5 According to Li, she has 'heard of three people switching schools' over the lack of resources. Matthew McDermott 5 'QHSS students shouldn't have to be forced to cram into two floors of a building, walk two blocks for a class, and be deprived of a high school experience while being grateful for the bare minimum,' Li says. Matthew McDermott And so when the staff heard of a school building being constructed in Hillside, of course they alerted the whole school. Thousands of emails have been sent out by the parent coordinator, '[asking] students to please send [a] letter to [high-ranking officials] in order to gain their attention and advocate for [the] school.' This new building, with its own gym and kitchen and auditorium and lights that don't flicker and a first floor accessible to students, has been the first sliver of hope in a while to leave the terrible conditions behind. It has been the first chance to truly become what we are: a specialized high school with a beautiful, real building to match. The parent coordinator has been sending information about meetings with Queens Borough Presidents, legislative breakfasts, and a lot more opportunities to meet with high-ranking officials and persuade them to let us use this new building, because if we miss this opportunity, there is no telling how many more years we will have to tolerate this for. For all our academic success and achievements, our school has been held back by a lack of funding and proper facilities, leaving us to make do with subpar conditions that prevent us from experiencing the high school life we deserve. We have survived 23 years in these conditions, but we cannot wait another 23 more. If we don't act now, this opportunity for change will slip away. The building is more than just brick and mortar—it is a chance to give future students the school they deserve and were promised. Hope and resilience has gotten us so far, and this building might just be the chance to finally leave our struggles behind. A 10th-grader at Queens High School for the Sciences at York College in Queens, Li hopes to be a physician's assistant.

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