San Diego Union-Tribune

New York’s mayor says he will reopen public elementary schools.

Testing to be ramped up, hybrid learning model to be reduced

- BY ELIZA SHAPIRO Shapiro writes for The New York Times.

NEW YORK

Mayor Bill de Blasio announced Sunday that he would reopen public elementary schools, abruptly shifting policy in the face of widespread criticism that officials were placing more of a priority on economic activities like indoor dining than the well-being of New York City’s children.

De Blasio said middle and high schools would remain closed but also signaled that he would overhaul how the city manages the system during the pandemic, which has forced millions of children in the United States out of schools and is perceived to have done significan­t damage to their education and mental health.

The mayor said the city would abandon a 3 percent test positivity threshold that it had adopted for closing the school system, the largest in the country, with 1.1 million children. And he said the system would aim to give many parents the option of sending their children to school five days a week, which would effectivel­y end the hybrid learning system for some city schools.

Students can return only if they have already signed up for in-person learning, meaning just about 190,000 children in the grades and schools the city is reopening next week would be eligible. About 335,000 students total have chosen in-person classes.

Children in prekinderg­arten and elementary school can return starting Dec. 7. De Blasio also announced that students with the most complex disabiliti­es can return Dec. 10.

“Whatever happens ahead, we want this to be the plan going forward,” de Blasio said at a news conference. “We know what we didn’t know over the summer. We know what works from actual experience.”

De Blasio is reopening elementary schools even though the city’s seven-day average test positivity rate Sunday had climbed to 3.9 percent — well above the former threshold that led him to close the system Nov. 18 as a second wave of the outbreak threatened the city.

Gov. Andrew Cuomo, who has often clashed with de Blasio over the response to the pandemic and has final authority over how schools operate during the crisis, said Sunday that he supported the mayor’s plan.

Starting in the summer, de Blasio sought to make New York the first big city in the country to fully reopen its public school system. After a series of logistical and political problems forced the mayor to twice delay the start of in-person classes, the city welcomed hundreds of thousands of children back into classrooms about two months ago.

Reopening, despite its many issues, was a major milestone in the city’s long path to recovery — and the closing of the schools less than eight weeks later was a blow.

Still, the number of cases in the school system itself remained very low, so de Blasio’s decision became a flash point in a broader debate throughout the country and the world over what should be closed during the pandemic. Officials have wrestled with whether to keep classrooms

open while forcing indoor dining rooms and bars, which are far more likely to spread the virus, to shut.

Cuomo, not the mayor, controls regulation­s regarding indoor dining, bars and gyms. But after the city schools closed, both Cuomo and de Blasio had come under intense criticism from some parents, who expressed deep concern about how their children were faring during remote learning.

In fact, the timing of de Blasio’s announceme­nt raised new questions about why he decided to close schools at all just about 12 days ago.

Managing the city’s sprawling public school system has been one of the most daunting tasks facing the mayor and his team during the pandemic. But the seemingly haphazard changes to the reopening plan have been frustratin­g for parents and educators. The mayor himself acknowledg­ed as much Sunday when asked whether he had any regrets about closing schools again.

“I felt pained. I didn’t want to do that to kids or parents,” he said.

After several tumultuous weeks, de Blasio’s announceme­nt was generally well-received Sunday. The teachers union, the United Federation of Teachers, which has often clashed with City Hall over its effort to reopen the system, said it supported the new

plan, as long as rigorous virus testing was in place.

The new blueprint represents the city’s second shot at reopening, after the first attempt was plagued by problems and the trigger that de Blasio set for closing schools — a positive rate of 3 percent on all virus tests conducted in the city — was roundly assailed as too low by parents, politician­s and public health experts.

Now, instead of using such a metric, the city will increase testing in schools and close those that have multiple confirmed virus cases. The system will also, for now, adopt a model that has become more common across the country and world, offering classroom instructio­n only to young children and students with disabiliti­es.

When elementary schools reopen, the city will significan­tly increase random testing. Rather than testing a sampling of students and staff in each building once a month, the city will test weekly.

Nothing else about New York City’s safety plan will change; 6 feet of social distance will be mandated. But the city will reduce its use of hybrid learning — under which children physically attended school a few days a week and learned remotely the rest of the time — for many schools.

 ?? JOHN MINCHILLO AP FILE ?? New York Mayor Bill de Blasio (center right) greets students as they arrive for in-person classes in September in the Manhattan borough of New York.
JOHN MINCHILLO AP FILE New York Mayor Bill de Blasio (center right) greets students as they arrive for in-person classes in September in the Manhattan borough of New York.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States