Times-Herald (Vallejo)

State allows vaccinatio­ns for those 16 and up

- By John Woolfolk

Gavin Newsom says half of California­ns eligible for vaccinatio­n have received at least one shot against the coronaviru­s.

Gov. Gavin Newsom visited a Sonoma County elementary school Wednesday to tout progress on school reopening efforts even as California ranks last among all states in the amount of in-person classroom instructio­n its public districts are offering students.

“This is the week we’ve been waiting for, when we see massive scaling of children returning to our schools,” Newsom said during a visit to Sheppard Elementary in Santa Rosa. “Every single day, hundreds of schools are reopening.”

Newsom’s visit marks six weeks since he prioritize­d teachers for vaccines and signed a $6.6 billion bill to spur schools to return kids to classrooms and pay for programs to help recover learning lost from school closures over the past 13 months. The visit was also two weeks after the legislatio­n’s deadline for districts to fully qualify for financial aid by at least partially reopening schools to in-person learning.

The snail’s pace of bringing kids back to school is at odds with the rapid clip at which businesses and other activities are reopening. On Thursday the state will loosen many tight restrictio­ns on indoor and outdoor gatherings. In-person sporting events are already allowed and several amusement parks are welcoming visitors.

While districts throughout the state have recently started returning kids to classrooms, with more planned in weeks to come, those classes are overwhelmi­ngly a “hybrid” mix of in-person learning and online “distance learning” at home, even as many students across the country returned to school full time months ago. And many of those hybrid plans offer just a few hours a week inside the classroom.

Several private organizati­ons tracking school reopening nationally have ranked California dead last in the amount of inperson instructio­n districts offer to students.

“California is behind,” said Dennis Roche, cofounder of Burbio, a community data service in New York that has been auditing 1,200 districts of various sizes across the country on their reopening status since last fall with 72-hour updates. “California is definitely introducin­g more in-person learning, they’re just slower. They’re lighter in terms of the in-person classroom time.”

In Burbio‘s analysis, California, Hawaii, Oregon, Washington and Maryland are the farthest behind in the amount of inperson instructio­n, with the Golden State trailing the bunch.

A similar Return2Lea­rn Tracker sponsored by the American Enterprise Institute, a Washington, D.C., public policy think tank, showed California as of April 5 had the highest percentage of fully remote school districts — 23.3% — and at 17.9%, one of the lowest percentage­s offering full-time in-person instructio­n. It indicated Florida and Iowa schools were all back full time, while Hawaii was entirely hybrid.

Newsom said he expects — “with caveats” — that schools will fully reopen in the fall, and is working with lawmakers to make that possible, as the state would have to extend authorizat­ion for distance learning as an option, if parents choose it.

Megan Bacigalupi, a parent advocate with the group OpenSchool­sCA whose daughters attend school in the Oakland Unified district, said Wednesday the governor’s words rang hollow given that most public schools offer in-person learning for only limited hours and grades. With low rates of infection and the vaccine widely available, there is no reason kids aren’t back in school full time now, she said.

Oakland Unified started returning transition­al kindergart­en through second grade students to campus March 30 in a hybrid format that will extend through sixth grade starting Monday. But because teachers aren’t required to teach in person until April 19 and only 38% opted to teach in-person starting in March, not all those schools opened or fully opened. Bacigalupi said her kids’ school is only teaching in person two afternoons a week for two and a half hours a day.

“The Governor mentioned that the vast majority of schools are open or expected to open soon, yet in many districts ‘open’ means five hours per week of in-person instructio­n or students in classrooms with a teacher still on Zoom,” Bacigalupi said Wednesday.

Some school districts, including Fremont Unified, one of the Bay Area’s largest with more than 35,000 students, have abandoned the idea of returning kids to classrooms this school year and remain in remote learning. The district announced its decision on March 31, the reopening deadline to qualify for the full state aid, saying it was because it couldn’t reach an agreement with its teachers union.

Parent frustratio­n over the state’s slow pace of bringing kids back to campus has helped fuel an effort to recall Newsom, and leading Republican­s vying to replace the Democratic governor have assailed the state’s meager in-person learning. Polls suggest the recall faces long odds in heavily Democratic California.

“Our children deserve better than part-time classroom teaching,” said Kevin Falconer, a former San Diego mayor who’s running for governor.

Laurie Biggers, acting superinten­dent of Roseland School District, which includes Sheppard Elementary, said the district returned transition­al kindergart­en through second grade this week for a hybrid format that includes bringing kids back to campus two days a week for up to four and a half hours of in-person instructio­n each week. She said the district was among the hardest hit by the virus and many parents opted to stay with remote learning, which made reopening challengin­g.

Newsom insisted Wednesday that he wants “all the schools to reopen — I’ve been crystal clear about that since December.” But as he has indicated before, he doesn’t see a mandate as useful, and believes the state must respect the needs of individual districts. He noted that the state’s education system is “decentrali­zed” and that schools like Sheppard Elementary serve a mostly Latino population hard-hit by, and fearful of, the coronaviru­s.

“I don’t have a closed fist on this, I have an open hand, but also an open heart,” Newsom said. “I want to challenge those districts, but I also want to support them… mindful of the challenges they’re facing.”

California, Hawaii, Oregon, Washington and Maryland are the farthest behind in the amount of in-person instructio­n, with the Golden State trailing the bunch.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States