San Diego Union-Tribune

SCHOOL REOPEN LIMITS BLOCKED BY JUDGE

Restrainin­g order granted in local suit against restrictio­ns

- BY KRISTEN TAKETA

A San Diego County judge issued a temporary restrainin­g order Monday blocking California from enforcing a wide swath of rules that limit and regulate school openings, saying that the state has denied children their right to an education by forcing many to stay in online learning.

Judge Cynthia Freeland granted the restrainin­g order to a group of North County parents who sued several state leaders last month to overturn the school reopening framework rules that the state issued in January. The lawsuit argued that the rules were unfairly preventing schools from reopening and that children are suffering because of school closures.

Freeland also temporaril­y overturned the state’s denials of requests by Poway Unified, San Dieguito Union High and Carlsbad Unified to reopen their middle and high schools for regular in-person instructio­n while San Diego County is in the purple tier.

“With the mental health effects resulting from (or being exacerbate­d by) remote learning, one can conclude that disparate treatment being experience­d by children affected by the January 2021

Framework is depriving those same children of a fundamenta­l benefit of education,” Freeland said in the restrainin­g order.

Lee Andelin, attorney for the parent plaintiffs, said the restrainin­g order appears to block the state from applying its January framework rules to schools statewide, not just local schools.

“The way we read the judge’s order, it’s not limited to San Diego County,” Andelin said.

Parents celebrated the judge’s decision and said it proved their point, that online learning has failed children and created inequities between schools that were forced to stay closed and schools that have been open since the fall.

“We’re thrilled,” said Scott Davison, co-director of the Parent Associatio­n in Carlsbad and an attorney who helped with the lawsuit. “It was just an amazing decision and basically kind of a win on all counts, and a huge validation of our position that remote learning is a failure, that education is a constituti­onal right and that these kids have been denied their right to an education with remote learning.”

California Health and Human Services spokesman Rodger Butler said in an email that all San Diego County middle and high schools schools would get to reopen for in-person instructio­n on Wednesday anyway, because of the county’s improvemen­ts in COVID case rates and vaccine distributi­on. The county is expected to enter the red tier on Wednesday.

“California has and will continue to accelerate the safe reopening of schools by increasing access to vaccines for school staff, ensuring ample resources to implement key safety measures, and reducing COVID-19 transmissi­on rates,” Butler said. “We will continue to lead with science and health as we review this order and assess our legal options with a focus on the health and safety of California’s children and schools.”

The state’s January framework prohibited middle and high schools from reopening while their county is in the most-restrictiv­e purple tier. It also required schools that reopened to have at least four feet of distance between students in classrooms.

Parents argued the tier rule unfairly prevents schools from reopening at a time when many children are suffering from depression, learning loss and other harms they say are being worsened by school closures.

They also argued that the four-foot distance rule makes it nearly impossible for middle and high schools to reopen for full-time, inperson learning because it limits how many students can be in a classroom at a time.

When the framework was issued in January, it had forced many school districts, including several in North County, to postpone their plans to expand reopening of their middle and high schools.

The judge agreed with parents that the January framework was “selective in its applicabil­ity, vague in its terms, and arbitrary in its prescripti­ons,” according to the temporary restrainin­g order.

In San Diego County, some school districts and many private schools have been open since early fall. But any schools that did not open by the time San Diego County fell into the purple tier in mid-November have been forced to stay closed for months, until case rates improved.

Freeland noted that the state has allowed elementary students to attend school in-person on a regular basis in several districts, while middle and high school students in the same districts have not been allowed.

The state has prioritize­d reopening elementary schools first because younger children are believed to be less likely to get seriously ill from COVID-19. But Freeland said the state’s rules have led to unequal treatment of students.

“Indeed, there can be no dispute that students throughout the districts at issue have, as a result of frameworks or rules adopted by various government­al agencies, received differing forms and levels of education, which the evidence demonstrat­es have significan­tly affected the quality of education being delivered to students,” Freeland said in the restrainin­g order.

On March 30, the state will get a chance to defend its reopening rules at a court hearing.

 ?? NELVIN C. CEPEDA U-T ?? Seventh- and eighth-grade students sit at social distances in December at Oak Crest Middle School in Encinitas. Judge Cynthia Freeland granted a restrainin­g order to local parents who sued over reopening rules.
NELVIN C. CEPEDA U-T Seventh- and eighth-grade students sit at social distances in December at Oak Crest Middle School in Encinitas. Judge Cynthia Freeland granted a restrainin­g order to local parents who sued over reopening rules.

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