NYC again delays most in-person learning
Shortage of supplies, staff leads to further class postponement
New York City’s ambitious attempt to be among the first big cities to bring students back into classrooms closed by the coronavirus suffered another setback Thursday, as the mayor announced he was delaying the start of in-person instruction for most students due to a shortage of staff and supplies.
Mayor Bill de Blasio announced a new timeline that will keep most elementary school students out of physical classrooms until at least Sept. 29. Middle and high school students will learn remotely through at least Oct. 1.
“We are doing this to make sure all of the standards we set can be achieved,” de Blasio said.
The latest delay came just days before students across the nation’s largest school district were set to resume in-person instruction Monday. Now, only pre-kindergarten students and some other special education students will be going back into physical classrooms next week.
The mayor announced the decision to delay alongside union leaders, who had sounded alarms in recent days that schools weren’t ready to reopen.
United Federation of Teachers President Michael Mulgrew said it wouldn’t have been safe to open all the school sites next week.
“If we are going to do this, we must make sure that we get this right,” he said. “We want our school systems up, running and safe and we want to keep it up running and safe, because that’s what the families, the children of this city deserve.”
The city’s reopening plan, which has now been delayed twice since it was announced in July, is for the majority of the more than 1 million public school students to be in the classroom one to three days a week and learning remotely the rest of the time. Public school students began an on
line orientation Wednesday with full-time instruction beginning Monday.
Reaction to the latest delay was a mixture of frustration, concern and relief.
The announcement exasperated parents like Dori Kleinman, who said the hiatus from in-person learning is affecting the development of her fourthand eighth-grade children.
“Ifitwereuptome,
I’d send them five days a week,” she said. “I feel like we’ve got to rip the Bandaid off here.”
Daniel Leviatin, a fourth-grade teacher and school librarian at Public School 59 in the Bronx, questioned what an additional eight days would change.
“It’s not good enough because they’re still just kicking the can down the road,” he said, adding that he believed reopening dates should be determined by school or neighborhood, not dictated citywide.
New York City schools shut down in March when the pandemic hit and students went to entirely online instruction. School officials distributed more than 300,000 tablets and laptops so that children who lacked such devices could connect to their virtual classrooms, but gaps persisted and online attendance was low. It was partly because of the difficulty in reaching all of the city’s children remotely that de Blasio has insisted on opening schools in person this fall even as other big city school districts across the nation started the school year with online-only instruction.