Baltimore Sun Sunday

Union politics hurts Maryland students

- By Andrea G. Bottner

The Maryland State Education Associatio­n (MSEA) is following many other teachers unions fighting to keep teachers, and therefore students, out of schools. Cheryl Bost, the president of the MSEA, has consistent­ly put forward obstacles to schools offering in-person learning. But this position, shared by many Maryland education officials, isn’t founded in public health or the welfare of students. It’s a political position.

Before school began Maryland Gov. Larry Hogan and state health officials said school districts were allowed to reopen if there were fewer than five cases of COVID-19 per 100,000 residents in their jurisdicti­on and if the test positivity rate was below 5%. Governor Hogan said all 24 Maryland school districts had met the new state bench marks and should begin reopening school facilities.

“As a result of our improved health metrics, every single county school system in the state of Maryland is now fully authorized to begin safely reopening,” the governor said. “Nearly everyone agrees that there is no substitute for in-person instructio­n.”

This positive news should have been celebrated, but it wasn’t. Ms. Bost and education officials had consistent­ly stressed that science must be followed so that children and teachers remained safe. However, when the science was followed and health metrics were observed, it became clear they were ignoring the cold hard facts. They were playing politics. Ms. Bost wasted no time accusing Governor Hogan of “throwing school communitie­s under the bus.” She urged people to consult health and safety officials before making school reopening decisions. Isn’t that exactly what

Governor Hogan had done?

She called the governor’s announceme­nt an “ambush” and “a recipe for chaos, confusion, distrust and deepening the inequities that too many of our students face.” An ambush is a surprise attack. Governor Hogan’s announceme­nt shouldn’t have been a surprise, and it wasn’t an attack, unless Ms. Bost views herself as an adversary of the governor.

Ms. Bost’s public positionin­g is predictabl­e. This is the same educator who accused President Trump and U.S. Secretary of Education Betsy DeVos of “a lot of rhetoric” when the administra­tion highlighte­d medical recommenda­tions made by the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP), which called for the safe reopening of schools and stressed the importance of in-person classes. Medical profession­als know being in school reduces a child’s risk of abuse, drug addiction and suicide.

Schools offer a refuge for children who live in dangerous, dysfunctio­nal homes. Schools offer regular meals to children who don’t get them at home. The school environmen­t provides so much more for so many kids than simply a place to learn. The concerns raised by the AAP are not rhetorical; they are deadly serious.

At every opportunit­y, Ms. Bost and the MSEA push back on a return to in-person learning and in recent days, against live instructio­n as well. Maryland State Superinten­dent of Schools Karen Salmon wanted to require that every school district have an average of 3.5 hours of synchronou­s learning per day, five days a week by the end of September.

Ms. Bost immediatel­y wrote a letter to the Maryland State Department of Education, claiming that such a requiremen­t would upset student and family schedules — as if student and family schedules haven’t already been turned upside down due to the pandemic. When did a complete school day turn into a possible 3.5 hours?

Ultimately, the three-and-a-half hour requiremen­t was approved, but school districts have until December to meet this standard. What does this mean for students from now until December? Can they count on one hour, two hours, or three hours, of live instructio­n? Frankly, they can’t count on anything, other than teachers unions doing whatever they can to keep kids physically out of school.

There are tens of thousands of students in Maryland who attend private and parochial schools. Private school education is a privilege only available to those who can afford it. Many of these students have already returned to campus and some sort of in-person learning. As the MSEA continues to advocate keeping kids out of school, it only widens the gap between those who can take advantage of a private school and those who cannot. This will continue to adversely impact those students who are already disadvanta­ged.

The MSEA needs to do some more homework on what is best for students. Keeping schools closed will only widen education gaps and deny students the opportunit­ies to develop socially and emotionall­y among their peers. Closed schools keep vulnerable children at risk and unfairly impacts less advantaged communitie­s. The political nature of the decision to keep schools closed is obvious. Parents, families and voters should take notice the MSEA has put politics above people.

Andrea G. Bottner (abottner@iwf.org) is senior adviser to Independen­t Women’s Forum who grew up in Annapolis and now lives in Montgomery County with her husband and son.

 ?? BRIAN WITTE/AP ?? Karen Salmon, Maryland’s state superinten­dent of schools, speaks at a news conference in Annapolis on Aug. 27.
BRIAN WITTE/AP Karen Salmon, Maryland’s state superinten­dent of schools, speaks at a news conference in Annapolis on Aug. 27.

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