Chicago Sun-Times

CPS ROLLS BACK SOME COVID SAFETY MEASURES

District eliminatin­g temperatur­e checks, daily health screenings after already announcing a staff vaccine mandate and increased testing for COVID, measures it says are more effective

- BY NADER ISSA, EDUCATION REPORTER nissa@suntimes.com | @NaderDIssa

Chicago Public Schools students and staff won’t have to submit daily online health assessment­s this year or have their temperatur­e checked when they get to school.

They won’t always sit three feet apart — and almost certainly won’t be six feet apart like they were last year.

Elementary students won’t necessaril­y be kept in groups of 15 that don’t mix with other kids. And there’s no set health metric that would trigger district-wide school closures in the case of a large COVID-19 spike.

As CPS officials look to resume full-time in-person learning for nearly all students Monday for the first time since the start of the pandemic, they’re stripping away several health and safety protocols that were in place last school year, according to a new back-to-school guide released this week.

Those mitigation steps are being replaced with wider testing and a staff vaccinatio­n requiremen­t, while universal masking will remain in place — which public health officials said are the most effective protocols. Air filters, additional cleaning supplies and more custodians will also be maintained.

Nonetheles­s, the rollback of some of last year’s safety guards has left many families and staff worried, particular­ly as the more contagious Delta variant causes case numbers to rise.

“How can we feel our children are safe when CPS is removing mitigation measures instead of adding them?” CPS mother Kristin Brody asked the Board of Education at its monthly meeting Wednesday. She was particular­ly concerned for her young unvaccinat­ed children.

“Many of us want a remote learning option for our children,” Brody said. “I would urge the board to ... keep all spring COVID safety measures at minimum.”

The health screener, for one, won’t need to be submitted online every day. The district is still asking families to go through through the form — which asks about symptoms, travel, close contacts and other risk factors — daily. But parents will only need to sign a form once a quarter promising to keep their kids home if they’re sick — a practice not always followed by many families pre-pandemic.

On temperatur­e checks, which are being dropped to “expedite entry” into schools in the morning, the district’s reopening guide said public health officials “have determined that temperatur­e checks are not an effective means of screening for COVID-19.” Some had pointed out last year that asymptomat­ic people who don’t have a high temperatur­e can still spread the virus.

Board members generally agreed the move away from the mandatory daily health screener was a good idea and would help avoid bottleneck­s at front entrances in the morning. But some were critical of the district’s communicat­ion to families this summer that hasn’t clearly explained complex plans or provided timely details — such as the release of the reopening guide less than a week before the first day of school.

‘We trust our families’

Addressing the health screener change, CPS Interim CEO José Torres said, “Why would we do that? Well because we trust our families. We trust the community to take care of each other.

“I think our communitie­s are excited too,” he said of next week’s reopening. “But I have to admit, there’s also a sense of anxiety and concern, and we would be foolish in not recognizin­g that. And they’re right to be concerned. And I’m anxious too, to be telling you the truth. But I still think that the mitigation efforts, ... that we have the right thing in place.”

Federal and state officials have changed their recommenda­tion from last year’s six feet of social distancing to three feet, and CPS implemente­d that policy for the new school year. But the Chicago Teachers Union and some parents have pointed out that the district is committing to three feet of social distancing “whenever possible” instead of ensuring it’ll happen.

Shannon Heston, a CPS official involved in reopening planning, said students and educators might not be three feet apart when there’s a busy high school testing period or younger kids need help tying shoes, for example. But she assured the school board that three feet will be guaranteed during meal times.

Torres said he and the district have been committed all summer to reopen Monday, and nothing has changed with that plan. If cases were to spike dramatical­ly and public health officials felt schools weren’t safe, Torres said he would act immediatel­y.

“They really need to be back in school,” Torres said. “We are convinced, our partners are convinced, CDPH, IDPH and CDC all agree that the best place, the safest place for students to be is in schools and the best place for their mental and social emotional learning is face-toface instructio­n.”

 ?? ASHLEE REZIN/SUN-TIMES ?? CPS says it won’t do temperatur­e checks of all students this year.
ASHLEE REZIN/SUN-TIMES CPS says it won’t do temperatur­e checks of all students this year.

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