Daily Press

N.C. students will head back to the classroom by early April

Most of the state’s 115 local districts have some form of in-person instructio­n

- By Gary D. Robertson

RALEIGH, N.C. — North Carolina lawmakers gave their final approval on Thursday to a directive that will put more K-12 students in classrooms five days a week by telling all districts to offer in-person instructio­n no later than early April.

The measure, which received a unanimous House vote the day after similar Senate support, now heads to Gov. Roy Cooper.

He’s expected to sign it quickly. The Democratic governor and Republican legislator­s negotiated the compromise legislatio­n, which resolved issues that prompted Cooper to veto a previous school-reopening measure nearly two weeks ago.

Nearly all of the state’s 115 local districts already have some in-person instructio­n. But GOP lawmakers were unhappy with the pace at which schools were bringing the state’s nearly 1.5 million students back to class as the COVID-19 pandemic eased and data showed low transmissi­on among young people.

They said students who first began learning online last March were suffering academical­ly and needed to return to class. Parents and local school leaders have lobbied lawmakers to bring back children.

“The General Assembly has made it our No. 1 priority” to get students back in school, Rep. John Torbett, a Gaston County Republican, said before the House’s 119-0 vote. “For many families, there’s still much work to do to return to in-person full time.”

Under the new legislatio­n, a district’s K-5 schools must provide instructio­n to all students without physical social distancing limits, or what is known as

“Plan A.”

This essentiall­y means students will have classroom instructio­n five days a week. School boards are directed to open middle and high schools either using Plan A, or they can keep requiring at least 6 feet of distance between students through “Plan B.”

The “Plan B” policy largely limits in-person classes to a couple of days a week because of building space restrictio­ns.

Until now , state school guidance had allowed K-5 schools to use Plan A or Plan B, and grades 6-12 to follow Plan B.

Schools still must offer virtual-only learning to families who still want it.

Middle and high schools that move to Plan B under the new legislatio­n must notify state health officials and participat­e in a COVID-19 data collection effort with Duke University.

In a legislativ­e concession to Cooper, the governor also can order school buildings closed in an individual district if coronaviru­s cases worsen there.

“I don’t want to and don’t plan to exercise that authority, because I want to get children back in school,” Cooper said Wednesday.

While districts will have 21 days from the bill’s enactment to comply, local education leaders can make changes immediatel­y if they wish.

The directive contrasts with Cooper administra­tion policy that for months opposed allowing older students in class without being 6 feet apart, citing CDC guidance. Faulting the bill, the North Carolina Associatio­n of Educators noted its departure from the CDC’s recommenda­tions. Teachers have been able to receive vaccinatio­ns since last month.

But Cooper said Wednesday his administra­tion’s top health leaders can support allowing middle and high schools to convene under Plan A in a few weeks given the state’s improving COVID-19 case trends.

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