USA TODAY International Edition

After Trump tweets, CDC changing guidelines

Back to class: Pressure to return clashes with concerns over health, staffing

- Maureen Groppe

WASHINGTON – The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention is revising its guidance on reopening schools after President Donald Trump tweeted his disagreeme­nt with them, Vice President Mike Pence said Wednesday.

“The president said today we just don’t want the guidance to be too tough,” Pence said at a news conference at the U. S. Department of Education. “That’s the reason why, next week, CDC is going to be issuing a new set of tools, five different documents

that will be giving even more clarity on the guidance going forward.”

Trump tweeted Wednesday that he disagrees with the CDC’s “very tough & expensive guidelines for opening schools” as the pandemic continues.

“They are asking schools to do very impractica­l things,” Trump tweeted. “I will be meeting with them!!!”

He also threatened to withhold funding from schools that don’t populate their classrooms this fall.

Asked about that threat, Pence said the administra­tion wants to include “incentives for states to go forward” in the next federal stimulus package.

“And as we work with Congress on the next round of state support, we’re going to be looking for ways to give states a strong incentive and encouragem­ent to get kids back to school,” said Pence, the head of the White House Coronaviru­s Task Force.

Most education funding comes from the state and local levels, but the federal government provides billions to schools through grants for low- income schools and special education programs.

On Tuesday, the president and first lady Melania Trump staged a White House event designed to push local school districts to reopen in the fall. The event provided a forum for teachers, administra­tors, students and parents to discuss “best practices” for safely reopening schools around the country.

At Wednesday’s news conference at the Education Department, CDC Director Robert Redfield said he wanted “to make it very clear” that the guidelines are intended to help schools reopen and are not “to be used as a rationale to keep schools closed.”

Pence said that was the sentiment behind Trump’s tweet about the guidelines. In Pence’s home state of Indiana, the Republican state superinten­dent of education expressed her displeasur­e Wednesday morning with the threatenin­g message coming from the White House.

Jennifer McCormick tweeted that while schools and health department­s are working on re- entry plans, schools “cannot & should not be bullied from DC into ignoring safety concerns.”

The CDC’s “readiness assessment” to monitor “recommende­d practices” includes a multi- page checklist schools can follow. It covers such items as coming up with procedures for regular cleaning, for daily health checks of staff and students, for limiting contact throughout the school day and for responding if someone does become infected.

The CDC says implementa­tion “should be guided by what is feasible, practical, acceptable, and tailored to the needs and context of each community.”

 ?? CHIP SOMODEVILL­A/ GETTY IMAGES ?? The first lady and the president meet with teachers and administra­tors Tuesday about how to safely reopen schools.
CHIP SOMODEVILL­A/ GETTY IMAGES The first lady and the president meet with teachers and administra­tors Tuesday about how to safely reopen schools.

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