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Layoffs have come to New York City’s largest charter school operator.

Success Academy has let 105 staffers go due to the economic impact of the coronavirus outbreak, according to Eva Moskowitz, the network’s CEO.

The layoffs were largely handed out to employees in “non-core” positions plus for 24 teachers let go for poor performance. The reductions combined represent about 4 percent of the network’s 2,700 member workforce — three percent coming from non-core jobs and 1 percent from instructors.

Moskowitz said the none-core layoffs were triggered by a “significant cut” in state aid from Gov. Andrew Cuomo’s $177 billion, coronavirus-wrecked budget that was approved earlier this month.

“It was a reduction of $1,000 per pupil,” Moskowitz said, of funding in the budget.

Moskowitz also cited emergency costs stemming from the public health crises as justification — like expenditures to ship projectors and other supplies to teachers for remote learning.

Of the layoffs, 90 came from school staff and another 25 from central administration.

Moskowitz said she worked to protect teachers and assistant principals in hopes to preserve core learning functions.

“Things could get worse. We can’t deny economic reality and leave kids high and dry,” she said. “We’re trying to do the same instruction with a little bit less. We wanted to protect teaching and learning.”

Success spokesperson Ann Powell added in a statement that the two dozen teachers were “let go for low performance” and that “no salaries were reduced for either instructional or non-instructional staff.”

A Brooklyn Success Academy parent said she was unnerved by the layoffs but had faith in the network’s ability to weather the coronavirus storm.

“They’re not immune from this,” she said. “No one is. DOE are getting hit with crazy cuts as well. If anyone is going to know how to handle this it’s going to be Success Academy. They know what they’re doing. But the longer this goes the more worrisome it’s going to be. There’s no getting around that.”

Success Academy relies heavily on private donations and philanthropies for funding and any extended financial plunge would likely harm their operations.

A Success Academy source acknowledged some unease but said that the network is getting out in front of looming financial strains with the layoffs.

Success Academy enrolls roughly 18,000 students in schools in every borough except Staten Island.

It’s considered an academic oasis for parents in low-income areas with grim public schooling options.

Parents are attracted by their sky-high test scores that often outshine more affluent areas of the city and even suburban districts.

But the polarizing network also attracts controversy for what some consider to be excessive rigidity in curriculum and discipline.

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