The Oakland Press

In California, inconsiste­nt school rules are the norm

- By Jocelyn Gecker

SAN FRANCISCO » Now that schools are back in session, parents are mastering this year’s new school vocabulary: Modified quarantine, antigen vs. PCR testing and the so-called Swiss cheese model for keeping classrooms safe, which has become the butt of a few jokes.

But aside from a common pandemic lingo there is little similarity in how California schools are applying COVID-19 rules, leading to a dizzying patchwork of approaches that parents and teachers say can be confusing and frustratin­g.

While California has a few statewide requiremen­ts for all schools, such as requiring all public and private school teachers and students to wear face masks indoors, and a vaccinate-or-test rule for teachers starting in midOctober, many other details are left to local school officials. That includes the who, when, where and how to test for COVID-19, and ever-shifting quarantine rules.

Some large urban districts like Los Angeles, San Francisco and Oakland tell students to mask up for outdoor recess, while many others do not.

Some schools have rigorous on-site mandatory COVID-19

testing programs, but many don’t.

Across the state, parents who want to see more testing are looking to the Los Angeles Unified School District — the nation’s second-largest — as a model. The state’s largest school district has an ambitious program that mandates weekly on-site testing for all 600,000 students and 75,000 employees.

“It’s crazy that a school district as huge as Los Angeles can pull it off, and we’re just twiddling our thumbs over here,” said Samantha Benton, a mother of two in Sacramento, where only voluntary testing is offered.

Last week, California became the first in the nation to say it will require the coronaviru­s vaccine for all public and private schools once the shot receives full regulatory approval, which may not kick in until the next academic year. Until then, the decision is up to local districts.

A few of California’s biggest school districts, including Los Angeles and Oakland, have mandated vaccinatio­ns for students 12 and over. San Diego Unified will require vaccines for staff and students 16 and up.

The California School Boards Associatio­n calls it “a patchwork of different methods” that is not the most effective approach and is troublesom­e

because it asks school officials to act as medical experts.

Pandemic-era conflicts between school districts and teachers have entered a new phase. The Oakland teachers union said its district guidelines are “contradict­ory or confusing” and not enforced. The union is seeking mandatory weekly testing and monitors to enforce mask wearing.

Teachers “are tired of waiting for a major outbreak ... to uphold commonsens­e safety measures,” the union said in a statement this week.

Nationwide, as in California, the rules depend on where you live, and often on politics. Republican governors in Arizona, Iowa

and Florida have banned school mask mandates, but many parents, local leaders and courts are pushing back. Some states have standard policies for all districts, while others allow schools to set their own rules. At least nine states have explicitly said schools cannot require vaccinatio­ns, including Alabama, Arizona, Arkansas, Indiana, Iowa, Montana, Oklahoma, Tennessee and Texas.

Vaccinatio­ns are one element of the “Swiss cheese model” of pandemic defense, a metaphor for multiple layers of protection to block the spread of germs. A cartoonlik­e drawing of the model, with 10 slices of cheese, has become a regular part of school safety presentati­ons.

“They show this at like every board meeting and every school Zoom,” said Sacramento mother of two Kristin Goree. “In group chats it’s like, ‘No! Not that again!’”

Goree agrees with the concept of combining layers of protection, like social distancing, masks, handwashin­g, testing and ventilatio­n. “But our school is not implementi­ng every layer of cheese — like mandatory testing,” said Goree, whose children are signed up for optional weekly testing while most of their classmates are not.

Quarantine­s get meted out differentl­y, too. Sometimes an entire classroom is ordered to quarantine, sometimes no one is.

Laura Hawkins’ healthy 6-year-old daughter missed a week of kindergart­en at her San Francisco school after a classmate got COVID-19.

“On day three of school, we got a text message and a robocall saying your child is a close contact to someone who tested positive,” said Hawkins. They had two options: stay home for a 10-day quarantine or stay home five days, followed by a negative COVID-19 test. They choose the latter, but soon after returning to school her daughter woke up with a stuffy nose. Hawkins diligently reported it to the school, which required proof of another negative PCR test before allowing her back.

The laboratory PCR tests often take 24 hours or more to return results, but are more accurate and reliable than the rapid antigen tests that can be done at home.

“She missed a total of six days of school, having no more than a stuffy nose,” said Hawkins.

Outside Los Angeles, Long Beach Unified, with about 70,000 students, scaled back its initial weekly testing for unvaccinat­ed students when the positivity rate during the first three weeks dropped under 1%. It is now randomly testing 10% of each school’s unvaccinat­ed students.

The small Mammoth Unified School District abruptly stopped in-person classes for two weeks in September after “spiraling” COVID-19 cases triggered more than 300 student and staff quarantine­s in the district of 1,200 students.

In Sacramento, when officials announced an outbreak of two dozen cases Sept. 2 at a K-6 charter school, they kept the school open. Some parents were later outraged to learn that health officials had initially recommende­d shutting the school for two weeks.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? In this April 13file photo, kindergart­en students participat­e in a classroom activity on the first day of in-person learning at Maurice Sendak Elementary School in Los Angeles.
ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO In this April 13file photo, kindergart­en students participat­e in a classroom activity on the first day of in-person learning at Maurice Sendak Elementary School in Los Angeles.

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