Times-Herald (Vallejo)

California’s $2B plan to reopen schools faces critics

- By Jocelyn Gecker

SAN FRANCISCO >> Most of California’s 6 million public school students have not seen the inside of a classroom in 10 months. Gov. Gavin Newsom is hoping his $2 billion plan to resume in-person classes will get schools to reopen quickly.

Newsom’s “Safe Schools For All” plan, officially introduced Friday as part of his 2021 budget, has already faced strong objections from teachers and many of the state’s largest school districts. Critics say the plan’s funding is not sufficient to ensure safety in California classrooms, as COVID-19 case rates and deaths skyrocket, and it risks deepening the inequities that the pandemic has already laid bare.

His plan for schools to start in-person learning by spring allocates $2 billion for coronaviru­s testing, personal protective equipment and increased classroom ventilatio­n that would allow classrooms to reopen safely. It still needs approval from the state Legislatur­e to take effect.

The plan includes a onetime payment of at least $450 per student for school districts that offer in-person instructio­n. It proposes a phased approach that prioritize­s the state’s youngest students and those with special needs, who have struggled the most during months of distance learning. Schools that serve low-income families, English learners and foster children could qualify for additional funding.

California was the first in the country to issue a statewide shutdown order in mid-March, and most of the more than 1,000 school districts have not resumed inperson classes since then.

Newsom said his recommenda­tion was driven by increasing evidence that there are lower risks and increased benefits from in-person instructio­n, particular­ly for the youngest students. It comes amid increased pressure from parents and politician­s to reopen campuses.

To qualify, school districts must submit a COVID-19 safety plan by Feb. 1, with approval from local health authoritie­s, and commit to regular testing, all students and teachers wearing masks and for officials to put their phased-in approach in writing. Schools would reopen classrooms by mid-February for students in transition­al kindergart­en through second grade and children who are homeless, in foster care and without access to computing devices or high-speed internet. Schools would resume in-person classes for third through sixth graders by mid-March. But it says schools will only qualify to reopen in counties where the seven-day average coronaviru­s case rate is at or below 28 per 100,000 residents. That means students in the most highly populated and hardhit counties, such as Los Angeles, Fresno and elsewhere, may have to wait longer to return to in-person learning than students in other areas with lower infection rates.

Earlier this week, the superinten­dents of seven large California school districts wrote a joint letter to Newsom that voiced support for the additional funding but said the plan “does not address the disproport­ionate impact the virus is having on low-income communitie­s of color,” particular­ly in the urban school districts that serve nearly a quarter of California’s 6 million students.

The plan includes a onetime payment of at least $450 per student for school districts that offer in-person instructio­n.

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