Welcome to the de Blasio administration’s version of community policing — where cops sit down with two notorious drug dealers and treat them “like gentlemen” while explaining why they can’t keep peddling narcotics outside a nearby school.

The confab between law-breakers and law enforcers in the South Bronx is being touted by the NYPD as a success story from its new program to “rebuild trust between the police and the community.”

A posting on the official “NYPD News” website tells how Ron Schutte, president of the Catholic All Hallows High School, struggled vainly for years to get rid of the dealers who sold drugs across the street.

When Schutte heard that the 44th Precinct was moving cops out of drug and school patrols as part of the NYPD’s “Neighborhood Policing Plan,” he feared a free-for-all of dangerous criminal activity.

But the two cops who were assigned to the area last month — Jawuan Hubbard and Sean Brown — knew exactly whom to target, because they had worked in the neighborhood for five years as part of a special unit that focused on gangs and drugs.

“So, during their first week as Neighborhood Coordinating Officers, they stopped by the drug dealers’ apartment and spoke to them ‘like gentlemen’ in their living room,” according to the report, written by a Columbia University journalism grad student.

“And when the dealers stopped hanging out near the school, the officers went back to thank them.”

NYPD spokesman Stephen Davis said he didn’t know all the details of the situation, but defended the way the cops worked with the dealers.

“If there was no probable cause to make an arrest at that time, and they were merely informing them of complaints received, that’s perfectly within their rights to handle it in that way,” he said.

Sergeants union president Ed Mullins blasted the new program, which follows last year’s directive for cops to issue summonses instead of arresting people caught with small amounts of pot.

“[NYPD Commissioner Bill] Bratton’s leading by example. He takes marijuana cigarettes from people’s mouths and now employs negotiating with drug dealers over tea and crumpets to not sell drugs in a particular area,” Mullins said. “All we need for police officers now are blinders. Good job, Billy!”