Santa Fe New Mexican

Officials outline digital divide

Superinten­dents bemoan struggles remote learning puts on families, especially in northweste­rn New Mexico

- By James Barron jbarron@sfnewmexic­an.com

Administra­tors from six public school districts helped bolster a recent argument by plaintiffs in the landmark Yazzie/Martinez v. State of Mexico lawsuit that at-risk students are suffering from a lack of technology during the coronaviru­s pandemic amid a massive shift to remote learning.

In an expanded motion filed on Christmas Eve in the state’s First Judicial District Court, attorneys added statements from superinten­dents across northweste­rn New Mexico that showed how the lack of access to computers and internet service has hurt their poorest students since COVID-19 arrived in March.

Superinten­dents from the Cuba Independen­t School District, Grants-Cibola County Schools, Gallup-McKinley County Schools, Zuni Public Schools, Jemez Valley Public Schools and Peñasco Independen­t Schools said a significan­t portion of their students, especially those living in remote Native American communitie­s, have struggled to participat­e in virtual classroom settings.

While each district had unique issues tied to the technology gap, all of the superinten­dents said their districts could not afford the costs of correcting the problems.

Gallup Superinten­dent Mike Hyatt said in the motion his district is geographic­ally the largest in the state, covering 4,857 square miles, and more than 2,000 of the 11,000 students it serves cannot be reached either through Wi-Fi or phone services.

“The COVID-19 pandemic has exacerbate­d an already unfair system in which some districts have broadband Wi-Fi service across the district, and other districts, like Gallup, do not,” Hyatt said in the document.

In their initial motion Dec. 15, the plaintiffs said school districts and charter schools have failed to provide all children with the tools necessary for remote learning.

The state filed a notice Dec. 22 extending the deadline for its response until Jan. 5.

Public Education Department spokeswoma­n Carolyn Graham, when asked to comment on the new developmen­t in the case, referred to Public Education Secretary Ryan Stewart’s statement Dec. 15, in which he defended the agency’s efforts to provide students with tools needed to learn online.

Stewart said the agency has worked with schools, internet service providers and a variety of nonprofit partners to help bridge the digital divide.

“The problem of internet access, so critical for education during this pandemic, is not new to New Mexico and will not be resolved entirely in one year,” Stewart said at the time.

Santa Fe attorney Daniel Yohalem, who represents some of the plaintiffs, agreed the tech divide wasn’t an issue that began with the pandemic.

However, he said, “The judge ordered them two years ago to deal with the lack of equity and technology because that was going to affect kids. That was before the pandemic, when the court was simply saying, ‘Look, if using technology is a part of education today, then kids need to learn how to do that and use it for research and for writing.’ Poor kids don’t have access to that.”

Perhaps the biggest challenge school

districts cited was a lack of internet in students’ homes.

Peñasco Superinten­dent Lisa Hamilton said families there have only one internet provider, and a recent study conducted by Verizon Communicat­ions Inc. indicated only 1 out of 40 families in the area have sufficient cellular data to connect to the internet via a hotspot device.

Hamilton said a Verizon official told her the district would need to spend $100,000 on infrastruc­ture to improve internet access in the community, which the district does not have.

Cuba Superinten­dent Karen Sanchez Griego said about 85 percent of her students do not have broadband access, causing the district to lose communicat­ion with some kids. The district hired several technician­s to upload a week’s worth of school assignment­s onto thumb drives, she said, and then bus drivers attempted to deliver them to students.

The Zuni district is installing equipment on three school buses that could provide up to 20 gigabytes of broadband to serve as mobile sites for families, 70 percent of whom lack internet access, Superinten­dent Daniel Benavidez said.

Zuni also recently purchased hotspots and data plans for a minimum of four months for students and families who do not have sufficient connectivi­ty, Benavidez said, but he called it a temporary solution.

Max Perez, Grants-Cibola County Schools’ superinten­dent, said his district can neither afford to negotiate with local internet providers nor hire additional tech staff to support expanded internet access.

Cuba Superinten­dent Karen Sanchez Griego said about 85 percent of her students do not have broadband access, causing the district to lose communicat­ion with some kids.

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