USA TODAY International Edition

What would force schools to close?

No plans yet for halting classes once underway

- Elinor Aspegren

Even as they recommende­d working to reopen schools in- person, the nation’s science academies warned, “It is likely that someone in the school community will contract COVID- 19.”

Largely missing from the reopening protocols at states and schools around the nation are concrete plans for what administra­tors will do when coronaviru­s infections enter a school.

The prospect of reopening school in the fall is looking less likely in much of the nation. Confirmed COVID- 19 cases in the USA have skyrockete­d past 3.7 million, and more than half of states have paused or scaled back efforts to reopen their economies.

A growing number of school districts have decided to start the fall semester online. California’s districts with high cases or transmissi­on must begin the academic year with distance learning, the state’s governor announced Friday. In other states, districts pushed back their start dates.

Many schools still plan to hold inperson classes. They’re releasing plans that include implementi­ng social distancing, closing school buildings to visitors and, in some cases, splitting students into groups that attend school on some days and study from home on others.

How a school would handle multiple coronaviru­s cases across the building, and how many infected students or teachers would raise alarms, are details often left up to parents to guess. Typical plans include only references to “caseby- case” decisions.

USA TODAY Network reporters reviewed 35 schools’ reopening plans. Most plans didn’t include specifics on decisions that would lead to closing school buildings and putting learning online for all students.

Instead, most schools echoed some of the basic recommenda­tions from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention: deep- cleaning the area where an infected person spent time, quarantini­ng the person, and leaving it up to consultati­on with state or local health officials to make decisions about school closures.

The CDC recommends dismissing school for at least two to five days after an infected person is in the building, but most school plans don’t reference closing whole buildings.

The vague plans go against advice from the National Academies of Sciences, Engineerin­g and Medicine, which said clear thresholds should be establishe­d before the school year begins about the conditions that would force schools to close again.

One exception is California, where Gov. Gavin Newsom issued guidance Friday that schools must remain remote until their county has been off the state’s “watch list” for 14 days. He laid out in detail when classrooms and schools would have to close if there is an outbreak.

A classroom would have to close and the students and teacher would quarantine for 14 days if any of them tested positive for the virus. If the school reports multiple cases, or 5% of students and staff test positive within this 14- day period, the entire school should revert to distance learning.

In Miami- Dade County, Florida, the fourth- largest school district in the USA, guidelines allow for the closing of schools but don’t outline the plan for if that happens, nor what would prompt schools to close.

That’s despite the state’s record COVID- 19 cases this month. The state has surpassed 315,000 confirmed cases. Neverthele­ss, Florida last week ordered all schools to reopen in person, five days a week.

In Volusia County, Florida, the district designated a schools- specific team of epidemiolo­gists and contact tracers to track and manage the spread of coronaviru­s, Patricia Boswell, administra­tor of the county’s health department, said in a meeting Wednesday.

In Indianapol­is, the public schools’ plan notes, “The district must be able to quickly implement e- learning for 100% of students if rolling closures occur,” although positive COVID- 19 tests will be handled on a “case- by- case basis.”

The School District of Philadelph­ia, the largest in Pennsylvan­ia, takes a similar approach.

“If we have high rates of community spread and we believe the school system is contributi­ng to that, in some important way, that would be our criteria to shut down the entire system,” Philadelph­ia Health Commission­er Thomas Farley told news channel WPVI- TV.

In Memphis, Tennessee, Shelby

County Schools outline a more comprehens­ive plan. It doesn’t indicate a case threshold for closing but says, “Depending on the extent of positive cases within a school, a school may need to close for up to two weeks and then stagger student attendance upon restarting.”

USA TODAY’s findings matched the conclusion­s of the Center for Reinventin­g Public Education, a nonprofit group in Washington state that’s been reviewing plans.

Few, if any, state- level plans for reopening schools address what schools should do if a student or teacher tests positive for COVID- 19, said Bree Dusseault at the Center for Reinventin­g Public Education.

Of the few plans that do address COVID- 19 infections among students or teachers, plans range from shutting down the school for 24 to 48 hours for deep cleaning, then resuming classes, to sending all kids home for remote learning for two to four weeks, Dusseault said.

Contributi­ng: Erin Richards, USA TODAY; Cassidy Alexander, Daytona Beach News- Journal; Arika Herron, The Indianapol­is Star; Rebecca Plevin, Palm Springs Desert Sun

 ?? LM OTERO/ AP FILE ?? Aiden Trabucco, right, raises his hand to answer a question during a summer STEM camp at Wylie High School in Wylie, Texas, on Tuesday. Many schools have not decided when they will close if students or staff get infected.
LM OTERO/ AP FILE Aiden Trabucco, right, raises his hand to answer a question during a summer STEM camp at Wylie High School in Wylie, Texas, on Tuesday. Many schools have not decided when they will close if students or staff get infected.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States