City Council Speaker Corey Johnson demanded Thursday that Department of Education boss Richard Carranza take action at a troubled Queens school after a spate of ugly incidents and parent complaints in recent weeks.

“No student should be subjected to harassment or violence at their school,” he said. “I urge the chancellor and DOE to immediately address the issue.”

MS 158 Marie Curie in Bayside became embroiled in controversy after the videotaped beating of a student in the cafeteria earlier this month and a classroom sexual assault in December. Both culprits were eventually arrested after parents called the cops, but were never suspended.

Carranza hastily left a meeting last week over safety issues in the area — which is District 26 — after angry parents demanded to be heard.

“I urge the chancellor and DOE to immediately address this issue – sit down with the parent leaders, sit down with the members of the community and education council,” Johnson said.

A long list of local lawmakers have called for action from the DOE to address safety concerns.

“I stand with them,” Johnson said. “This is appalling. It is terrible. This should have been rectified already. It is a completely unacceptable situation. I totally understand the outrage of the families and parents.”

The DOE has pledged to route more resources to Marie Curie and Superintendent Danielle Giunta met with fuming parents earlier this week.

But DOE critics argue that softened discipline and plunging suspensions have compromised classroom order across the system.

A circular blame game has emerged in the wake of MS 158’s woes, with the UFT and Department of Education chastising school administrators for the classroom disorder and the principals union pointing back at the DOE.