Los Angeles Times

Biden says let science guide school reopening

- ASSOCIATED PRESS

WASHINGTON — Joe Biden on Friday unveiled a plan to reopen schools in the era of the coronaviru­s, seeking to establish federal safety guidelines that he says will be based on science and not on political pressure for the country to arbitraril­y put the pandemic behind it.

The presumptiv­e Democratic presidenti­al nominee’s proposal ultimately leaves final decisions up to state and local officials.

“Everyone wants our schools to reopen. The question is how to make it safe, how to make it stick,” Biden said in a video he recorded with his wife, Jill, a former teacher. “Forcing educators and students back into a classroom in areas where the infection rate is going up or remaining very high is just plain dangerous.”

Biden’s guidelines to resume classes come as the White House argues that most parents are anxious to see schools resume in-person classes in the fall. President Trump says the decision to avoid doing so in some areas is more motivated by politics than by real fears about the pandemic.

“They think it’s going to be good for them politicall­y, so they keep the schools closed,” Trump said at a White House discussion on school plans last week. “No way. We’re very much going to put pressure on governors and everybody else to open the schools.”

The COVID-19 outbreak has killed more than 139,000 people in the U.S., according to Johns Hopkins University, and the number of confirmed cases is rising in most states.

Trump has threatened to hold back federal funding if schools don’t bring their students back in the fall, and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention is working on new guidance for how to do so. Trump had complained that the agency’s school opening guidelines were too “tough” and costly.

“To be very clear, we don’t want CDC guidance to be a reason why people don’t reopen their schools,” Vice President Mike Pence said this week. When the president “says open, he means open in full, kids being able to attend each and every day in their school. The science should not stand in the way of this,” White House Press Secretary Kayleigh McEnany said Thursday. She added, “The science is on our side here, and we encourage for localities and states to just simply follow the science, open our schools.”

Biden countered that any plans for the new school year have to start by reducing the number of coronaviru­s cases in communitie­s around the country: “That’s step one.”

Although state and local officials would have the final say, Biden plans to enlist federal agencies including the CDC to establish “basic, objective criteria” for reopening schools. Those include districts securing necessary funding to reconfigur­e classrooms to better allow for social distancing, reducing class sizes, procuring protective equipment and devising plans to accommodat­e at-risk teachers and students.

Biden promised, if elected, to send to Congress an emergency funding package to help schools prepare for reopening, which could cost as much as $30 billion.

The former vice president also suggested schools shouldn’t be forced to reopen until the creation of federal guidelines “free from political influence.”

He said they should detail how low a community’s infection rate needs to be before resuming in-person instructio­n, when schools might close again if virus infection cases rise, what safe maximum class sizes are and who should return to the classroom first if not everyone can be accommodat­ed.

The Trump administra­tion’s “chaotic and politicize­d response has left school districts to improvise a thousand hard decisions on their own,” Biden’s campaign wrote in its five-page “road map” to reopening. “Schools need clear, consistent, effective national guidelines, not mixed messages and political ultimatums.”

 ?? Patrick Semansky Associated Press ?? JOE BIDEN says sending teachers and students “into a classroom in areas where the infection rate is going up or remaining very high is just plain dangerous.”
Patrick Semansky Associated Press JOE BIDEN says sending teachers and students “into a classroom in areas where the infection rate is going up or remaining very high is just plain dangerous.”

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