Los Angeles Times

Omicron upends return to U.S. schools

Districts are caught between teachers fearful of infection and parents who want their children in class.

- By Jennifer Peltz, Gretchen Ehlke and Terry Tang Peltz, Ehlke and Tang write for the Associated Press. AP writers Margery Beck, Anne D’Innocenzio, Michael Hill, Kevin McGill, Rick Callahan, Sophia Tareen, Jennifer Sinco Kelleher and Corey Williams contrib

Some school districts around the U.S. extended their holiday break Monday or switched back to online instructio­n because of the explosion in COVID-19 cases, while others pressed ahead with in-person classes amid a growing sense that Americans may have to learn to coexist with the coronaviru­s.

Caught between pleas from teachers fearful of infection and parents who want their children in class, school districts in Milwaukee, New York, Detroit and other cities found themselves in a difficult position at the start of the second half of the academic year because of the super-contagious Omicron variant.

New York, home of the nation’s largest public school system, reopened classrooms to about 1 million students with a stock of take-home test kits and plans to double the number of random tests conducted in schools.

“We are going to be safe, and we will be open to educate our children,” newly sworn-in Mayor Eric Adams said on MSNBC.

New Yorker Trisha White said that she feels the risk is the same for her 9-year-old son whether he is in or out of school, and that being with classmates is far better for him than remote learning.

“He could get the virus outside of school,” she said as she dropped her son off at school. “So what can you do? You know, I wouldn’t blame the school system. They’re trying their best.”

While the teachers union had asked the mayor to postpone in-person learning for a week, city officials have long said that mask requiremen­ts, testing and other safety measures mean that children are safe in school.

New York also has a vaccinatio­n mandate for employees.

New cases in the city shot up from a daily average of about 17,000 in the week before the holidays to nearly 37,000 last week.

Across the country, new cases have tripled in the last two weeks to more than 400,000 a day, the highest level on record, amid a rush by many Americans to get tested.

The high infection rates and resulting worker shortages are putting a heavy burden on employers large and small. Thousands of airline flights have been canceled in recent days, and many businesses have shelved returnto-work plans.

Weekend garbage collection was delayed in New Orleans, and jury trials in several Colorado counties were suspended.

Some libraries on New York’s Long Island and a ski resort in New Hampshire had to close.

Dawn Crawley, chief executive of House Cleaning Heroes, based in Herndon, Va., said she had to cancel four of 20 cleaning jobs for Tuesday because four employees are sick — three with COVID-19.

“The fear is it will run through the team,” as well as customers, she said.

Policymake­rs and health authoritie­s have been mindful of the pandemic’s toll on the economy and the education system.

Public heath experts have said that eradicatin­g the virus is unlikely and that the world will instead have to find a way to keep it down to an acceptable level, in much the same way it does with the flu.

Last week, after the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention cut the recommende­d COVID-19 isolation period from 10 days to five, CDC Director Dr. Rochelle Walensky said: “We want to make sure there is a mechanism by which we can safely continue to keep society functionin­g while following the science.”

In another developmen­t Monday that could have a bearing on the ability of schools to stay open, the Food and Drug Administra­tion gave the OK for Pfizer booster shots for children as young as 12. Boosters already are recommende­d for everyone 16 and older.

Elsewhere in the country, the Los Angeles Unified School District announced that schools would reopen Jan. 11 because of Omicron’s rise. The district’s 600,000 students and roughly 73,000 employees will have to show a negative test result to enter campus. The district will have a testing site, and take-home test kits will be available.

Syracuse, N.Y., canceled school Monday because of the increasing number of infections and a lack of substitute teachers.

In Wisconsin, the 75,000student Milwaukee school system is going back to virtual instructio­n Tuesday because of rising cases among staff members. The district said it is aiming to return to in-person classes Jan. 10.

The Madison, Wis., school district also announced a shift to virtual classes, beginning Thursday.

Detroit School Supt. Nikolai Vitti told parents there would be no in-person or online learning through Wednesday because of a high rate of infection among employees that could lead to extensive spread of the virus and “excessive staff shortages.”

The roughly 350,000 students in the Chicago school system returned, but a dispute between district leaders and the teachers union over safety measures could disrupt classes this week. The union said it may vote Tuesday for remote teaching in the nation’s third-largest district.

The Peoria, Ill., district extended winter break by a week.

Schools in Davenport, Iowa, surprised parents early Monday by announcing the cancellati­on of classes for the day because of a shortage of school bus drivers that was blamed at least in part on COVID-19.

Minnesota’s educators braced for a spike in coronaviru­s cases as classrooms reopened as scheduled.

“What I’ve heard from superinten­dents is that they are nervous about Omicron,” said Bob Indihar, executive director of the Minnesota Rural Education Assn. “It seems to be the new normal that changes are going to happen, and quarantine­s and people being out are just part of the process now. Districts are kind of taking it in stride.”

The president of the National Parents Union, a network of parents organizati­ons, called the sudden switch back to virtual learning “an abominatio­n.”

“Once again, parents are left scrambling at the last minute and, worse, far too many children are being deprived of an in-person learning experience, which is critical for their academic and social-emotional developmen­t,” Keri Rodrigues said in a statement.

 ?? Carolyn Cole Los Angeles Times ?? KRISTEN HUDSON holds son Liam, 21⁄2 , as he gets tested for the coronaviru­s in Santa Monica. He must have a negative test before starting preschool.
Carolyn Cole Los Angeles Times KRISTEN HUDSON holds son Liam, 21⁄2 , as he gets tested for the coronaviru­s in Santa Monica. He must have a negative test before starting preschool.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States