Daily Press (Sunday)

CDC DOCUMENT SAYS REOPENING SCHOOLS FULLY IS ‘HIGHEST RISK’

- By Eileen Sullivan and Erica L. Green The New York Times

WASHINGTON — Federal materials for reopening schools, shared the week President Donald Trump demanded weaker guidelines to do so, said fully reopening schools and universiti­es remained the “highest risk” for the spread of the coronaviru­s.

The 69-page document, obtained by The New York Times and marked “For Internal Use Only,” was intended for federal public health response teams to have as they are deployed to hot spots around the country. But it appears to have circulated the same week that Vice President Mike Pence announced that the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention would release new guidelines, saying that the administra­tion did not want them to be “too tough.” It is unclear whether Trump saw the document, nor is it clear how much of it will survive once new guidance is completed. (The cover page of the document is dated July 8, 2019, an obvious typographi­cal error since the novel coronaviru­s did not exist then.)

What is clear is that federal health experts are using a road map that is vastly different from what Trump wanted.

While it is mostly a compilatio­n of CDC documents already posted online, it includes reopening plans drafted by states, districts and individual schools and universiti­es. And the package, from the Community Interventi­ons and Critical Population­s Task Force, is pointed.

In a “talking points” section,

the material is critical of “noticeable gaps” in reopening plans reviewed from Florida, Oregon, Oklahoma and Minnesota.

“While many jurisdicti­ons and districts mention symptom screening, very few include informatio­n as to the response or course of action they would take if student/faculty/staff are found to have symptoms, nor have they clearly identified which symptoms they will include in their screening,” the talking points say. “In addition, few plans include informatio­n regarding school closure in the event of positive tests in the school community.”

And its suggestion­s for mitigating the risk of school reopenings would be expensive and difficult for many districts, like broad testing of students and faculty and contact tracing to find people exposed to an infected student or teacher.

The debate about school reopenings comes as the virus is spreading at its fastest pace yet across the country, a trend some attribute to states reopening prematurel­y this spring on a timeline encouraged by Trump. Now some states are pausing their reopening plans and in some cases reimposing restrictio­ns to contain the spread. Schools in California have had to cancel their plans for in-person classes as the virus surges.

Groups representi­ng education leaders praised the document, saying after months of mixed messages from the federal government, the inclusion of specific plans could serve as a blueprint for schools and families to help navigate the uncertaint­y that the fall will bring.

“What it tells us is left to its own devices, the CDC can do a pretty good job in compiling a comprehens­ive document that shows the complexity of what institutio­ns are facing,” said Terry W. Hartle, a senior vice president of the American Council on Education, which represents 1,700 college and university presidents and higher education executives.

“The good news is, this is very thoughtful and complete,” he added. “The bad news is, it’s never been released.”

A breakdown of state plans included in the briefing also identified state and university proposals that the task force appeared to see as models. The document identified as “examples of consistenc­y with CDC guidance” institutio­ns like Arizona Western University, which will offer virtual services to students and staff members throughout the fall, and Hampton University, where in-person class sizes and gatherings will be reduced to 50%. It also highlights a number of states, like Georgia, where families are offered an option of in-person and virtual classes.

And as Trump and Education Secretary Betsy DeVos were trying to pressure local schools to comply with their reopening vision, the document was expressly saying the federal government should not override local judgment.

“These CDC considerat­ions are meant to supplement — not replace — any federal, state, local, territoria­l, or tribal health and safety laws, rules, and regulation­s” with which schools must comply, the packet states in bold lettering. “Implementa­tion should be guided by what is feasible, practical, and acceptable and be tailored to the needs of each community.”

The document was among material for federal response teams that are being dispatched to hot spots around the country for short periods of time. The teams are charged with helping local public health officials address the outbreak, including identifyin­g the source, if possible, and what additional support from the federal government might help. In doing this, the team could field questions about school safety plans.

“This is the document we needed six weeks ago,” said Daniel A. Domenech, the executive director of the AASA, the School Superinten­dents Associatio­n, calling it “concise, accessible and actionable.”

“While it is a great resource for superinten­dents as they navigate the myriad issues they need to address as they work to reopen schools,” he said, “it is also a great communicat­ion tool, a resource that can be shared with the community to help account for decisions being made and to share reliable, science-based informatio­n.”

Since May, the CDC website has cautioned that full reopening would be “highest risk,” and that in both K-12 and higher education settings, the more people interact, “and the longer that interactio­n, the higher the risk of COVID-19 spread.” The “lowest risk,” the guidelines say, would be for students and teachers to attend virtual-only classes — an option the administra­tion this week began a full-court press against.

All week, the Trump administra­tion has been raising the pressure on schools and universiti­es to reopen with in-person education. On Monday, Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t announced that internatio­nal students whose colleges went fully online would have to transfer to a school offering in-person classes or leave the country.

By Wednesday, DeVos had publicly chastised a public school district in Fairfax County for offering parents a choice of in-person classes two days a week or fully online instructio­n. The department and the president said they were exploring options for using federal funding as leverage to force full reopening.

That Wednesday, Trump rejected the CDC guidelines, calling them “very tough & expensive” on Twitter. Then Pence announced that the CDC would issue new recommenda­tions next week. “We just don’t want the guidance to be too tough,” he said.

On Friday, after repeating threats of cutting off federal funding from schools that do not fully reopen — which he does not have the authority to do — Trump lashed out again.

“Now that we have witnessed it on a large scale basis, and firsthand, virtual learning has proven to be TERRIBLE compared to In School, or On Campus, Learning,” he wrote on Twitter. “Not even close! Schools must be open in the Fall.”

 ?? FREDERIC J. BROWN/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES ?? Hand sanitizer is offered to students in Monterey Park, California, on Thursday. The Trump administra­tion has been raising the pressure on schools and universiti­es to reopen with in-person education.
FREDERIC J. BROWN/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES Hand sanitizer is offered to students in Monterey Park, California, on Thursday. The Trump administra­tion has been raising the pressure on schools and universiti­es to reopen with in-person education.

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