The city Department of Education has once again “disrespected” the Asian-American community, convening a forum at a time that’s nearly impossible for many working parents to attend, according to an irate mom.

Irene Chu, who sits on the Community Education Council in Bay Ridge’s School District 20, is livid that Hydra Mendoza, imported from San Francisco by Chancellor Richard Carranza to serve as a top deputy, is hosting a “Chinese Family Forum” from 10 a.m to 1 p.m. on June 26 — the last day of school — which, adding insult to injury, has an early dismissal.

“It’s just wrong,” Chu said. “When I saw that, I thought, ‘You got to be kidding me.’’

Mendoza started in October 2018 as Carranza’s $220,000-a-year deputy chancellor for “community empowerment, partnerships and communications.”

The family forum, at The Church of Grace to Fujianese in Sunset Park, is co-sponsored by the Mayor’s Office of Immigrant Affairs.

In an opening 10 a.m. session, Mendoza will speak on parents’ rights. At 11 a.m., officials will give information on the high-school admissions process.

Chu said she has to pick up her fifth-grader in Dyker Heights, a 15- to 20-minute drive from the church, at 11 a.m.

“The DOE should and has to know, June 26th is the LAST DAY OF SCHOOL FOR ALL STUDENTS,” she fumed on Facebook. “How could DOE invite parents to this forum on an early dismissal day when we need to pick up our kids?”

Chu, whose district includes Brooklyn’s Chinatown, added, “It’s such an insult and very disrespectful to our community.”

The controversy underscores a growing frustration among NYC Asians that Mayor de Blasio and Carranza have ignored their children to focus on boosting African-American and Hispanic students,

For instance, the mayor and Carranza want to toss the single admission test for eight specialized high schools, including Stuyvesant, Bronx Science, and Brooklyn Tech, which would slash the number of high-scoring Asian kids who get in.

“I just don’t buy into the narrative that any one ethnic group owns admissions to these schools,” Carranza has said on TV.

State Sen. John Liu has called the plan “racist.”

Chu agreed: “The Chinese community is being attacked by this city.”

She raised objections about the June 26 forum to DOE officials, but they didn’t change the date, she said, adding: “If the DOE and the Mayor’s Office really respects our voice and wants a healthy relationship with our community, they need to do a better job.”

DOE spokesman Doug Cohen said the event time was chosen with Asian-American community advocates “to accommodate families who work in the evenings,” and childcare will be provided.

“We’re looking forward to this event, and the other sessions we’re planning over the next several months to hear from the Chinese-American and other immigrant communities,” he said.