Chicago Sun-Times

Excitement at one school as another unpredicta­ble year for CPS gets underway

COVID’s impact, bus scheduling weigh on district, but excitement surrounds Hancock College Prep

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

Chicago Public Schools students will return Monday to the fullest classrooms they’ve seen in more than 17 months, but the COVID-19 pandemic is set to make its mark on a third consecutiv­e school year that’ll start with a mixture of anticipati­on and anxiety for most families and educators.

The fall semester seems poised to be unpredicta­ble, with no restrictio­ns on in-person learning — and an extremely limited online option — while the coronaviru­s sees a resurgence through the highly contagious Delta variant and most school-aged children remain unvaccinat­ed.

CPS is welcoming kids back before Labor Day for the first time in nearly a decade. Then, thousands of families opted to enjoy the summer for another week, leading to woeful attendance numbers until after the holiday. Now, amid a pandemic that has caused thousands to disengage and lose touch with their schools, many parents are worried about safety and considerin­g whether to pull their kids from CPS to homeschool.

“I don’t want to think about the worst-case scenario,” Mayor Lori Lightfoot said Friday when asked what CPS would do if thousands of the district’s 340,000 students don’t show up this week. Only about 25% of students returned for in-person learning last spring while the rest opted to stay remote, but this year CPS is only offering an online option to a few hundred kids who have underlying medical conditions.

“I’m obviously very familiar with the prior history,” Lightfoot said. “We’re in an unusual time, but we’ve got to reach our young people and their parents and guardians and make sure that they understand school is starting — to address and allay any concerns that they have but get them back in school.”

The mayor’s comments came during a news conference at Hancock College Prep, where excitement may overshadow concerns at the start of the year.

Ever since CPS turned Hancock into one of the district’s 11 prestigiou­s selective enrollment high schools in 2015, students at the Southwest Side school have pushed for a building that matched their elite designatio­n — and the types of facilities enjoyed by their counterpar­ts on the North Side.

On Monday, Hancock students will walk into a brand new school without the leaky ceilings and cramped hallways of old.

“Students on the Southwest Side of Chicago deserve the same educationa­l opportunit­ies we see throughout the North Side of the city,” Ald. Marty Quinn (13th) said at a ribbon-cutting event Friday for the new building.

CPS interim CEO José Torres joked to a couple dozen teachers watching the news conference in the new Hancock gymnasium

that they had a lot of boxes to unpack and could use students’ help Monday.

“The students and teachers here deserve a modern, state-of-the-art learning environmen­t to match their efforts,” Torres said.

Interim chief education officer Maurice Swinney said he, as a former principal, could only imagine how excited educators and students would be for their new building, since “Hancock has truly been a strong pillar in Chicago’s Southwest community.”

Elsewhere, transporta­tion is already causing anxiety for some families.

The start of any school year is usually fraught with bus problems as drivers figure out new routes and families adjust to different schedules. But this year, a shortage of bus drivers is affecting districts nationwide — and parents are frustrated that they received very little notice ahead of this week’s return.

CPS spokeswoma­n Emily Bolton said the district already had a shortage before last week and planned accordingl­y, but then 73 drivers resigned Friday, with a total of 10% quitting since the start of last week. The district now has 770 drivers — about 500 fewer than what’s needed, she said.

“As a result, the district went from being able to provide all eligible students a bus route to being unable to accommodat­e transporta­tion for approximat­ely 2,100 students within a matter of days,” Bolton wrote in an email. About 990 of those students are in special education.

CPS said it plans to combine routes to try to make up for the driver shortage, which could lead to longer rides, earlier pick-up times and delays in getting home after school. Special education students will be prioritize­d for solutions, but they may see changes to their transporta­tion schedules, Bolton said.

The district said it would send robocalls and emails over the weekend to families affected by the changes and offer them $1,000 upfront and $500 monthly for a travel reimbursem­ent until the problems are fixed. Many parents posted their frustratio­ns to social media over the weekend as they scrambled to find alternate ways to get their kids to school Monday.

“We are saddened and extremely frustrated by this situation,” Bolton said, “and we express our sincerest apologies to the impacted families for the inconvenie­nce this has caused — especially with such short notice.”

“WE’RE IN AN UNUSUAL TIME, BUT WE’VE GOT TO REACH OUR YOUNG PEOPLE AND THEIR PARENTS AND GUARDIANS AND MAKE SURE THAT THEY UNDERSTAND SCHOOL IS STARTING — TO ADDRESS AND ALLAY ANY CONCERNS THAT THEY HAVE BUT GET THEM BACK IN SCHOOL.”

MAYOR LORI LIGHTFOOT

 ?? PAT NABONG/SUN-TIMES ?? Hancock College Prep
PAT NABONG/SUN-TIMES Hancock College Prep
 ?? PAT NABONG/SUN-TIMES ?? CPS interim CEO José Torres on Friday took part in the ribbon-cutting for the new Hancock College Prep high school on the Southwest Side.
PAT NABONG/SUN-TIMES CPS interim CEO José Torres on Friday took part in the ribbon-cutting for the new Hancock College Prep high school on the Southwest Side.
 ?? PAT NABONG/SUN-TIMES FILE PHOTO ?? Students walk down the hall at Nicholas Senn High School in the Edgewater neighborho­od on April 23. Chicago Public Schools students will return to schools Monday.
PAT NABONG/SUN-TIMES FILE PHOTO Students walk down the hall at Nicholas Senn High School in the Edgewater neighborho­od on April 23. Chicago Public Schools students will return to schools Monday.

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