Las Vegas Review-Journal

Texas students displaced by storm

More than 55 school districts remain closed

- By Catherine Ngai Reuters

HOUSTON — More than 55 public school and charter districts in Texas remained closed on Friday, officials said, and tens of thousands of the state’s students must be relocated to unfamiliar schools this year after Hurricane Harvey damaged their homes or classrooms.

In some districts, officials still have not said when schedules can resume. An as-yet undetermin­ed number of schools will remain too damaged to use for much of the year, adding more uncertaint­y to families recovering from Harvey’s aftermath.

The Texas Education Agency

(TEA) said nearly 10 of the 55 districts that are closed will remain so until further notice. In Houston, the seventh largest U.S. school district, the first day of school was set for Monday, though many schools will remain shut due to flooding damage.

Some Houston school buildings will not reopen this year. Students from nine schools that suffered the worst damage will start classes after being relocated to temporary campuses, officials said.

“We’ve already started identifyin­g other campuses close to these schools to relocate and co-locate,” said Houston independen­t superinten­dent Richard Carranza.

Earlier this week, he said many as 20,000 students could be affected through 20 campuses.

In Aransas, Texas, near where the storm first made landfall, every school building received some damage, officials said. In nearby Corpus Christi, a spokeswoma­n said the district has received 118 new students from other regions, who have been displaced by the storm. She added that the number could grow.

Planning is difficult in Texas, where students can show up to a neighborho­od public school and enroll on the first day. State and federal laws allow displaced students to attend the school nearest their temporary home or be bused to their original school, according to the TEA.

Officials at YES Prep Public Schools, a charter school system in the Houston area with nearly 13,000 students, opened Thursday, said Mark Dibella, chief executive.

“Part of why we want to open this week is about who shows up and who doesn’t,” he said.

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