Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

How to resume classes?

Opening-day jitters for schools as debates turn emotional amid virus

- By Patrick Whittle and Carolyn Thompson

PORTLAND, Maine — School districts across America are in the midst of making wrenching decisions over how to resume classes in settings radically altered by the coronaviru­s pandemic, with school buses running below capacity, virtual learning, outdoor classrooms and quarantine protocols for infected children the new norm.

Plans for the upcoming school year are taking shape by the day, and vary district to district, state to state. The debates have been highly emotional, with tempers flaring among parents and administra­tors, and have been made all the more vexing by record numbers of COVID-19 cases being reported each day.

In Florida, some school districts want students back in the classroom in early August, even though the virus is surging through communitie­s. On average, Florida has reported more than 7,000 new cases each day recently — more than seven times what it was reporting a month ago.

New Mexico, which has been largely spared major outbreaks, plans a hybrid model of virtual and in-person learning.

Parents in New York have demanded schools reopen in the fall. And in Maine, more outdoor learning is planned. Districts nationwide are coming up with various rules for wearing masks. Some want all students to wear them. Others, such as Marion County, Indiana, plan to limit the requiremen­t to older children.

Each of these decisions tries to balance health concerns with clawing back as much normalcy as

possible. Parents, wrung out after months of juggling full-time work and full-time home schooling, are desperate for help.

Children, isolated from their peers, are yearning for social interactio­n. And everyone, including teachers, is concerned about stepping into the unknown, with so much still uncertain about the virus.

Districts are worried about being able to afford added supplies — including masks and more buses.

And school officials said the resurgence of virus cases underway could shatter reopening plans before they’re even put in place.

“If we see large outbreaks happening across communitie­s, it’s going to be very hard to keep schools open,” said Dr. Ashish Jha, director of the Harvard Global Health Institute, on “Fox News Sunday.” “The good news is we think kids transmit less. They are certainly less likely to get sick, but imagine Arizona right now. If schools were open right now, they would not be able to stay open.”

Aimee Rodriguez Webb, a special education teacher in Cobb County, Georgia, is wrestling with her health concerns while waiting to hear her district’s plans. She also has a 3-year-old.

“I love being in the classroom. And this year I get my own classroom, so I was looking forward to decorating it and all that,” she said. “But then the flip side is I don’t know that I’m mentally ready to step into the unknown like that.”

Schools around the country shut down this year as coronaviru­s cases first began rising. That led to a hodgepodge of distance learning, on-the-fly homeschool­ing and, for some families, a lack of school. Districts are now turning their focus to how to create more structured environmen­ts.

But the debates have been filled with tension.

Near Rochester, New York, parents rallied in favor of fully opening schools, holding signs outside an administra­tion building last week saying: “No normal school? No school taxes!”

Christina Higley, a parent in the Rochester suburb of Webster, started a Facebook group initially to demand answers and have a say in what school would look like, but the discussion­s there sparked a movement for reopening schools.

“There’s a lot of parents that are saying, ‘Open our schools, let us have the decision if we feel comfortabl­e sending the children in to them,’ ” said Higley, whose children just finished kindergart­en, third and fifth grade.

Medical experts have expressed concerns for children’s developmen­t and mental health.

The American Academy of Pediatrics said it “strongly advocates that all policy considerat­ions for the coming school year should start with a goal of having students physically present in school.”

In Cape Elizabeth, Maine, Shael Norris said she’s concerned about children who could face abuse at home and parents who risk losing their jobs to care for their kids.

Norris has two children set to attend high school in the fall and runs a nonprofit that combats sexual assault.

“There are so many equally important risks, and we’re focused entirely on COVID,” she said. “But I get it. It’s scary.”

Maine never saw a major outbreak, and is reporting, on average, a few dozen cases each day. Still, the state’s largest school district of Portland has left all the options on the table.

The district sent a letter to parents that said it plans to use outdoor space when possible — a solution for only a few months a year, given Maine’s weather.

To keep kids a safe distance apart on school buses, districts will need more vehicles — an especially thorny issue for rural districts. New Mexico has issued guidelines that buses should be run at 50% capacity, according to Nancy Martira, a spokeswoma­n for the state Department of Education.

Many districts plan to lean on federal bailout money to pay for extra transporta­tion.

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