Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

Schools need funding boost more than ever

- By Becky Ellis

Each district is struggling to balance safety and educationa­l quality in a COVID- 19 world.

Most years, the first day of school arrives with anticipati­on and possibilit­y as students, parents, teachers, and administra­tors look forward to the hope and promise of a new year.

This year is different. The return to school has engendered u nc e r t a int y and even frustratio­n. Each school district is struggling to balance safety and educationa­l quality in a COVID- 19 world, and to do so in a way that is best for their own communitie­s.

There are no easy answers. Remote learning may be more successful in protecting the public health, but let’s face it, for the overwhelmi­ng number of students, a virtual education is no substitute for traditiona­l, face- to- face learning. It also puts a greater strain on parents juggling jobs while serving as “teacher’s aides” for their children.

But reopening too widely and too soon can put students, teachers, and school workers at risk.

School leaders face this balancing act under public pressure from all sides and with continuall­y changing conditions and health guidance.

So as our schools continue to juggle their reopening plans, whether they’re in- person, virtual or somewhere in between, it is in everyone’s best interest to take a deep breath and recognize that we all want what is best for Pennsylvan­ia’s 1.7 million students. We all want them to stay on track educationa­lly while keeping them, and their families, healthy and safe.

So how do we get there, and what will it take?

First, we all need to take a breath and understand that each person has unique circumstan­ces that guide their preference for their child’s learning.

We are all doing the very best we can, and starting from that place of patience and understand­ing will go a long way in providing smooth transition­s for our students.

But in order to provide quality learning during a pandemic, our schools will also need more resources.

In the short term, Congress needs to step up and do its part. Funding through the CARESAct this spring provided some aid to districts as they pivoted to distance learning. But theU. S. Senate in particular is dragging its feet on providing much- needed additional funding to schools in order tohelp themdeal with lost revenue and increased costs as they strive to keep students on track, let alone improve their outcomes.

Congress has the power to provide a little more certainty to school districts for this school year by directing more federal dollars to local districts.

But even with strong congressio­nal action to help schools through the immediate crisis, we need to recognize thatmany students — particular­ly those with special needs, English Language Learners and those with inadequate access to the necessary technology — will not be where they would be if this school year were a normal one.

It will take more money, not less, to get them back on track once we are through the pandemic.

The state must finally solve its longstandi­ng school funding crisis, which it faced long before the first case of COVID- 19 reached Pennsylvan­ia.

For years, some Pennsylvan­ia lawmakers have enacted state funding decisions and policies that erode funding from the districts that need it most. By not providing adequate funding to our schools, they’ve only widened the difference between students who live in areas where local taxpayers can “afford” — and I’m using the term loosely — to pick up the slack for the state lawmakers who left their local communitie­s holding the bag.

With our schools in crisis, we need additional federal and state funding more than ever.

We know our kids are facing a challenge. We need to provide our schools with enough resources to help them.

We knowour kids are facing a challenge. We need to provide our schools with enough resources to help them.

 ??  ?? Becky Ellis
Becky Ellis

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