Chicago Tribune (Sunday)

‘We’re giving kids their freedom back’

Surging number of districts will let parents decide if students are masked

- By Karen Ann Cullotta Chicago Tribune

Seven-year-old Elise Corcoran stepped up before the Arlington Heights School District 25 board of education Thursday night to deliver her top five reasons why she believes students should not be required to wear masks in the classroom when the new school year begins next month.

“When it is hot in the classroom, we sweat and it sticks to our faces,” said Elise, a rising third grader at Dryden Elementary School.

“I don’t like wearing masks because they make me feel claustroph­obic and that makes me feel anxious,” added Jack Mungovan, 12, a rising seventh grader at Thomas Middle School.

“I already lost my first year of middle school to COVID and wearing masks ... I really want to be able to experience middle school normally,” Jack said.

The pleas of Elise, Jack and the 500 parents

who signed an online petition asking that masks be optional in the fall appeared to resonate with the District 25 school board, which voted unanimousl­y Thursday night to give parents at the kindergart­en through eighth grade district the choice of whether or not their children wear masks in the classroom in the fall.

Despite the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the state health department’s recent recommenda­tions that unvaccinat­ed students and staff should continue wearing masks indoors to prevent the spread of the virus, District 25 is among a growing slate of suburban school districts that have passed policies this month that veer from the updated COVID-19 guidance for schools.

The updated recommenda­tions arrive at a time when many families are enjoying the state’s loosened restrictio­ns this summer, and some parents are determined that even unvaccinat­ed children should be allowed the same liberties. “We’re getting kids their freedom back,” said Marsha McClary, a mother of five children who attend Barrington Unit School District 220.

While the District 220 school board on Tuesday approved a plan that gives parents a choice about whether their middle and high school students wear masks in the classroom, officials are still discussing a “phased-in” approach for kids under 12, who are not yet eligible to receive the vaccine.

“I understand the need to still wear masks on airplanes, which is no big deal,” McClary said. “But with our kids, we’re talking about five days a week, for more than six hours a day ... you can’t see their emotions and their expression­s. So much learning has been lost, and it’s going to take a long time to get that back.”

Of course, not all parents are in favor of easing mask restrictio­ns, including Alison Thompson, who urged the Naperville District 203 School Board on Monday to keep students and staff fully masked when classes resume Aug. 16

The issue was a hot topic, with parents arguing their points and stakeholde­rs submitting 46 pages of online comments.

“I hate to break it to

parents, but it really isn’t a choice individual­ly — it is an all-in situation,” said Thompson, whose youngest daughter has an underlying condition that could put her at risk if she caught COVID-19.

Superinten­dent Dan Bridges asked parents to be patient as the district awaits further state and regional updates on the CDC guidance.

“We’ve got what we asked for, we’ve got some guidelines, we’ve got some clarity,” Bridges said. “Once we have some of those questions answered, we will finalize and communicat­e our plans for the next year.”

At Wheaton-Warrenvill­e School District 200, Superinten­dent Jeff Schuler said in a Thursday parent letter that given the updated guidance, districts can “remove mitigation strategies based on local conditions.”

“The board also accepted our recommenda­tion that the first prevention strategy we lift is mandatory mask-wearing at all grade levels, as it offers individual­s (both students and staff ) and families a choice to continue wearing a face covering should they want to make that choice,” Schuler said.

“Our administra­tors and staff will ensure that our schools remain safe, caring and respectful learning environmen­ts that are supportive of an individual’s choice on mask-wearing, As adults, we have an opportunit­y to model that behavior for our students,” Schuler wrote.

Evanston Township High School said in a Thursday email to parents that students and staff who are fully vaccinated do not need to wear a mask indoors at school. Those who are not

fully vaccinated must wear a mask indoors at school, and students and staff who are vaccinated “may choose to wear a mask if they wish,” officials said.

Meanwhile, officials at Oswego Community Unit School District 308 announced Monday that the district “does not have a masking mandate or policy enforcing the decision for a student or staff member to wear or not wear a mask while in person at school/ work,” adding that masks

are only required on school buses.

Officials said the district does not have a policy requiring students and staff to disclose their COVID-19 vaccinatio­n status, and “the district will not tolerate the bullying of individual­s for wearing or not wearing a mask.”

Some experts warn that the easing of COVID-19 restrictio­ns at schools in the fall is premature, especially given that the highly contagious delta variant is now the predominan­t virus circulatin­g in the U.S.

“It’s very risky to allow individual school boards to determine mask/social distancing policy on their own without justificat­ion,” said Dr. Robert Murphy, executive director of the Institute for Global Health at Northweste­rn University Feinberg School of Medicine.

While Murphy said kids do not typically get very ill with COVID-19 when infected, “some do get very ill, and more importantl­y, they can bring the virus home to their relatives and friends, essentiall­y feeding the cycle.”

“These numbers are not going in the right direction,” he added.

“Loosening mask requiremen­ts for any unvaccinat­ed group, including schoolchil­dren, is very risky and will aggravate the ability to control the pandemic and lead to more infections, more hospitaliz­ations and deaths,” Murphy said.

Officials at the Illinois Education Associatio­n, a state teachers union, last week showed support for strictly following the updated CDC and Illinois Department of Public Health guidance.

“Both agencies are correct that vaccines are the best way to keep students and staff safe and for those who can’t get vaccinated, wearing a mask is the next best option,” IEA President Kathi Griffin said.

Indeed, even officials at school districts that have establishe­d policies that make masking a choice rather than a requiremen­t are well aware of the unpredicta­bility of the virus.

“This directive is subject to change based upon changes in applicable factors including an increase in COVID-19 rates or revised public health guidance,” officials with Oswego Community Unit School District 308 said.

Back in Arlington Heights, District 25 Superinten­dent Lori Bein also underscore­d the importance of parents, students and staff remaining flexible, and understand­ing that depending upon the community’s COVID19 rates, the mask choice decree could be rolled back.

Bein said the district had zero COVID-19 cases among 850 students enrolled in summer school, and expressed her confidence that the district’s eight schools can fully reopen to pre-pandemic normalcy, including the restoratio­n of all clubs and activities, lunch in the multipurpo­se room and even field trips.

Still, Bein acknowledg­ed she is “not a medical expert,” and despite her faith in the layered mitigation strategies and low virus rates in the district and community, “if we see a jump, we’ll move back to masks.”

“We all hope we don’t have to do that, but if we see students and staff are getting sick, or at risk, we do need to come back and talk about that,” she said.

 ?? ARMANDO L. SANCHEZ/TRIBUNE ?? Arlington Heights School District 25 Superinten­dent Lori Bein discusses possible fall options.
ARMANDO L. SANCHEZ/TRIBUNE Arlington Heights School District 25 Superinten­dent Lori Bein discusses possible fall options.
 ?? ARMANDO L. SANCHEZ/CHICAGO TRIBUNE PHOTOS ?? Elise Corcoran, 7, addresses the Arlington Heights School District 25 board of education with her mother, Marianne Corcoran, on Wednesday. She asked for masks to be optional in the fall.
ARMANDO L. SANCHEZ/CHICAGO TRIBUNE PHOTOS Elise Corcoran, 7, addresses the Arlington Heights School District 25 board of education with her mother, Marianne Corcoran, on Wednesday. She asked for masks to be optional in the fall.
 ??  ?? Jack Mungovan, 12, speaks during an Arlington Heights School District 25 board of education meeting Wednesday.
Jack Mungovan, 12, speaks during an Arlington Heights School District 25 board of education meeting Wednesday.

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