An NYPD school safety agent at a Queens elementary school has been admitted to a hospital with coronavirus symptoms, The Post has learned.
The female agent, assigned to PS 306 on 89th Avenue in Woodhaven, reported her husband tested positive for the virus on March 4, sources said.
But she continued working for two days. Her last day at the school was March 6, said Miranda Barbot, a spokeswoman for the city Department of Education.
One staffer told The Post the agent worked both day at night on March 5 for parent/teacher conferences, and on March 6 when the school had incident with a child requiring NYPD, FDNY and EMS to respond.
Teachers worried that the agent exposed kids, parents, staff and first responders to the coronavirus.
After developing symptoms, the agent was admitted to a Queens hospital Saturday afternoon and was being tested for the pandemic virus. Her condition was not immediately known.
The DOE said Saturday it was in the process of cleaning the school.
The head of the School Safety Agent’s union called on Mayor Bill de Blasio to close the school system.
“They are vulnerable, and they are at risk,” union President Greg Floyd told The Post. “As is everyone who works in city schools. We can’t afford to wait any longer. The longer we wait the worse this is going to get.”
Floyd claims agents have not been provided with masks, gloves or hand sanitizer.




