In Ponticelli, after days of protests and tension, the "Eduardo De Filippo" Comprehensive Institute finds a solution thanks to an agreement between the Municipality of Naples and the school principal, allowing the temporary transfer of students to an adjacent building and thus ensuring the resumption of.
Naples – After days of barricades, nighttime occupations, and a final, tense standoff that required police intervention, peace has returned to the Eduardo De Filippo Comprehensive Institute in Ponticelli.
The City of Naples, in agreement with school principal Concetta Stramacchia, has officially announced the solution that will allow regular lessons to resume: the temporary relocation of students to an adjacent building.
The turning point after the protest
The mobilization, carried out with determination by the mothers of the Conocal district, exploded last December 19th following the closure of the complex due to the unusable nature of the toilets.
The situation escalated yesterday morning when the mothers, exasperated by the authorities' silence and concerned by rumors (later denied) of a different use for the new premises, prevented teachers and the principal from entering the school. Only the arrival of the police allowed calm to be restored and decisive dialogue to begin.
The transfer plan
According to the agreement reached, the elementary and middle school classes will be located on the first floor of the adjacent building. This building was recently renovated with funds from the National Recovery and Resilience Plan (NRRP), and the ground floor will soon house a family center.
Preschool children will remain in the De Filippo building, where work will begin immediately to renovate their bathrooms. The ultimate goal remains the overall redevelopment of the historic building, which should be fully operational by the start of the next school year.
The weight of the "hype"
Despite the happy ending, there's a bitter taste in the mouth over the seemingly slow bureaucratic management. The solution adopted, in fact, was the one teachers and parents had long hoped for.
It took all-out protests and media attention to transform a project proposal into a reality. "It didn't take much," residents commented, a touch polemically, but they were satisfied to have guaranteed their children's right to education in a safe and dignified environment.
Salvatore Giordano's death: sentences finalized for Galleria Umberto I collapse
The Court of Cassation has brought an end to the trial into the death of Salvatore Giordano, the 14-year-old boy who died after being hit by collapsing rubble in the Galleria Umberto I in Naples. The judges of the Fourth Section declared the appeals filed by two of the defendants inadmissible, making the convictions final...
Naples – A two-year-and-four-month-old Neapolitan boy who received a heart implant in recent weeks that was later found to be severely damaged has been placed first on the waiting list for his blood type. The search for a new organ is ongoing not only in Italy but also abroad. The…
Naples– A "trip" to the heart of Naples ended with handcuffs. This is the outcome of an operation conducted Wednesday evening by the State Police, which arrested four young men with no criminal record, aged between 18 and 21, all from Aversa. The entire group is charged with…
Source EDITORIAL TEAM






Comments (1)
I read the article and I'm honestly glad things have finally been resolved, but it's incredible how long it took to reach a solution. The mothers were right to protest, because the situation had become unbearable for the children.