Las Vegas Review-Journal

‘It’s chaos’ as schools confront break’s end, omicron

- By Dana Goldstein

The omicron surge threatens to upend any sense of peace in the nation’s education system.

After a holiday break that saw COVID-19 cases spike unrelentin­gly, a small but growing list of districts — including Newark, N.J.; Atlanta; Milwaukee; and Cleveland — moved temporaril­y to remote learning for more than 450,000 children.

Districtwi­de closures, even those that last for a week or two, are a step backward after months in which classrooms largely remained open, even during a fall surge of the delta variant.

And although politician­s, including Mayor Eric Adams of New York and Gov. Ron Desantis of Florida, vowed to keep schools open, there were growing fears from parents and educators that more districts would soon turn to remote learning — even though in-school transmissi­on of COVID-19 has been limited.

Those decisions could, in turn, radiate through the country, affecting child care, employment and any confidence that the pandemic’s viselike grip was loosening.

“It’s chaos,” said Keri Rodrigues, president of the National Parents Union, which has polled families throughout the pandemic. “The No. 1 thing that parents and families are crying out for is stability.”

Some families were given just a few days or even hours of notice about school closures, leading to the all-too-familiar pandemic scramble to adjust child-care arrangemen­ts and work schedules. Atlanta Public Schools, for instance, announced Saturday that classes would be online for the first week of January, just days after saying that classes would be in person.

Rodrigues’ own sons were home Monday morning after their schools, in Somerville, Mass., announced Saturday a two-hour delayed start to test staff and distribute KN95 masks.

The continued burden on parents nationwide is unacceptab­le, Rodrigues said, given that a winter surge of the virus was predictabl­e and that policymake­rs had months to secure and distribute tests and masks.

“No grace is extended to us,” she said of parents who would have to go out to work, regardless whether their children’s schools were open.

The academic, social and emotional toll of school closures has been enormous, and well-docu

mented. And after a contentiou­s first year of the pandemic, when the debate over opening classrooms was one of the most divisive in American life, politician­s, labor leaders and teachers now overwhelmi­ngly say they want school buildings to remain open.

A vast majority of the nation’s school districts — including most of the largest ones — appear to be operating relatively normally, in large part because of vaccines. (Students in the Clark County School District are to return from their holiday break today, as scheduled.) Still, the closures this week appeared to be concentrat­ed in regions, such as the Northeast and upper Midwest, where Democratic Party policymake­rs and teachers unions have taken a more cautious approach to operating schools throughout the pandemic.

The nation is averaging more than 300,000 new cases a day for the first time in the pandemic, though hospitaliz­ations are growing at a much slower rate. Many principals have reported large numbers of staff members calling in sick, because they are infected with COVID-19 or other illnesses, caring for sick family members or fearful of the conditions within school buildings.

Several of the shuttered districts serve predominan­tly Black, Hispanic and low-income students, raising concerns about the educationa­l gaps that widened during previous phases of the pandemic.

“There is a casualness with which some have approached closing schools that I find deeply concerning, precisely because of the severe harms we’ve seen accumulate over the past year when schools were closed,” said Joseph Allen, a Harvard University professor who studies indoor environmen­tal quality, including in schools.

Still, in New York City, where schools were open, about one-third of the students did not show up, suggesting significan­t parental hesitation.

And there are signs that some unions are becoming more resistant to in-person teaching. Members of the Chicago Teachers Union were preparing to vote Tuesday evening on whether to refuse to report to schools starting today. The union, which has repeatedly clashed with Mayor Lori Lightfoot’s administra­tion, had demanded that every student be tested for the virus before returning from winter break, a step the district did not take.

The district, one of the largest in the country, instead gave tens of thousands of students optional take-home PCR tests before winter break, which parents were supposed to bring to a Fedex drop box.

On Monday, it became clear that the testing effort had largely failed. Of 35,590 tests recorded by the district in the week ending Saturday, 24,843 had invalid results. Among the minority of tests that did produce results, 18% were positive.

A district official said test vendors were looking into the reasons for the inconclusi­ve results.

At a news conference Monday, the union’s vice president, Stacy Davis Gates, expressed her anger at having “to continuous­ly fight for the basic necessitie­s, the basic mitigation­s.”

In Florida, Desantis reiterated Monday that officials would not allow the state’s public schools to close, despite a major spike in coronaviru­s cases.

“You have worse outcomes by closing schools,” said Desantis, a Republican who has increased his national profile by rejecting coronaviru­s lockdowns and mandates for much of the pandemic. “Kids need to be in school.”

Furthermor­e, Desantis said, children “do not need to be doing any crazy mitigation” such as testing or wearing masks, unless their parents want them to. He added: “Just let them be kids.”

In the New York area, there was a growing divide between the city, where nearly all schools opened Monday morning with beefed-up virus testing protocols, and the surroundin­g region, where a growing list of smaller districts shifted to remote learning, generally citing the surging number of COVID-19 cases within the community — not specific instances of in-school spread of the virus.

The school board president in Newark, Dawn Haynes, said in a statement, “The lives of all of our students mean more to me than anything else, especially since three of them are actually mine.”

In New Rochelle, N.Y., the school superinten­dent, Jonathan P. Raymond, wrote in a Dec. 31 letter that a week of remote learning would allow the district to await a shipment of rapid tests from the state, and sign up more students for in-school surveillan­ce testing.

Some schools announcing their decision to temporaril­y close cited the closing of other districts — adding to an uneasy sense of falling dominoes. When the superinten­dent in Mount Vernon, N.Y., announced a two-week period of remote learning, he pointed to the closure of some schools in Maryland, where, on Dec. 17, Prince George’s County became the first major district to announce an extended shift to virtual teaching.

While omicron is more contagious than previous iterations of the virus, early indication­s are that it is also less severe. Allen, from Harvard, said the existing recommenda­tions from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention still allowed schools to operate safely, especially because children were at such low risk of serious complicati­ons from COVID19. Those measures include vaccinatio­n, masking, hand-washing, the use of portable air filters and cracking windows.

On Monday, the Food and Drug Administra­tion authorized Pfizer’s vaccine boosters for 12- to 15-year-olds, but child and teenage vaccinatio­n rates have been disappoint­ing in many places.

The CDC also recommends a strategy called test to stay, in which close contacts of positive virus cases are given frequent rapid tests; only those who test positive must stay home.

But many schools still lack the number of rapid tests they need.

Allen acknowledg­ed that rapid tests were in short supply.

“We’ve been calling for rapid testing for a year and a half,” he said. “I find it stunning that the country has so failed to prioritize kids.”

Still, many parents said that despite the difficulti­es of closures, they trusted their children’s schools to make the right call.

Lorenzo Spencer, whose son is a freshman at Cass Technical High School in Detroit, said he was not surprised by the district’s announceme­nt of a three-day closure — without remote learning — to test its 8,000 employees.

“There’s no playbook for what we’re going through,” Spencer said. “As long as they’re doing what they can do to stay safe, I’m all for it.”

 ?? JULIA RENDLEMAN / THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? At-home COVID-19 testing kits are handed out Sunday at Martin Luther King Jr. Middle School in Richmond, Va. A surge in COVID cases, brought on by the fast-spreading omicron variant, along with labor shortages, has exposed the jerry-built measures that have kept schools open until now. Students’ return from the holiday break, however, is testing those measures.
JULIA RENDLEMAN / THE NEW YORK TIMES At-home COVID-19 testing kits are handed out Sunday at Martin Luther King Jr. Middle School in Richmond, Va. A surge in COVID cases, brought on by the fast-spreading omicron variant, along with labor shortages, has exposed the jerry-built measures that have kept schools open until now. Students’ return from the holiday break, however, is testing those measures.

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