Los Angeles Times

No waivers to reopen schools

L.A. County health officials say COVID-19 rate must drop before campuses may open.

- By Nina Agrawal

L.A. County health officials say campuses can’t restart until virus cases drop.

The L.A. County Department of Public Health said Tuesday that it would not consider any applicatio­ns for waivers enabling elementary schools to reopen, citing high local COVID-19 case rates.

The decision came one day after the California Department of Public Health announced new guidelines for granting school reopening waivers, indicating that counties with case rates above 200 per 100,000 residents should not consider applicatio­ns.

The case rate in L.A. County is currently 355 per 100,000 residents.

“We know that to many families, this is a disappoint­ing announceme­nt, but it’s based on the existing science and data that is guiding all of our decision-making. We need to ensure the health and safety of our children, school teachers and staff and all of their families,” the department said in a statement.

It added that the decision would be reconsider­ed once the case rate fell to the levels recommende­d by the state.

Teachers, staff and administra­tors will still be allowed to return to school buildings as long as adults follow safety protocols, including physical distancing and infection control measures, such as wearing face coverings.

Gov. Gavin Newsom announced last month that neither public nor private schools may reopen in counties where the coronaviru­s continues to spread. He noted that elementary schools, whose young students have difficulti­es with online-only learning, could seek an exception through a waiver process overseen by local health department­s.

The L.A. County health department subsequent­ly said it would soon begin accepting applicatio­ns for waivers from district superinten­dents and private school directors seeking to reopen in person for students in transition­al kindergart­en through sixth grade.

It said it would require letters of support from teachers unions, parent groups and communityb­ased organizati­ons, sparking criticism that private and parochial schools without unionized labor would have an advantage in the process.

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