Los Angeles Times

Trump’s bluster on schools

Reopening classes will require a lot of help that the president doesn’t want to give local districts.

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President Trump wants to have it both ways: He is pressuring U.S. public schools to reopen, citing nations such as Germany, Denmark and France that have led the way, while insisting that our schools don’t need the kind of money that those countries have spent on safely reopening.

Trump seems to think he can ignore the serious surges of COVID-19 in many states and return the schools to nearly pre-pandemic normal just by wishing it. Do it fast, do it on the cheap — or else.

He’s also ignoring the nation’s own experts, but what’s new about that? Although the administra­tion’s top infectious disease official, Anthony Fauci, supports school reopening, he says the decisions need to be left to local officials who should take into account the infection rates in their areas. Meanwhile, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has set out guidelines on how to reopen schools as safely as possible, calling for such things as separating students, which means reducing class sizes; running school buses with a fraction of the passengers; providing more school supplies so kids don’t share them; and requiring masks.

Trump’s magical thinking finds the CDC’s guidance unnecessar­ily expensive, so the White House has directed the agency to make it less tough — potentiall­y damaging the agency’s credibilit­y. He’s also threatened to withhold funds from states that don’t reopen schools. He praises countries such as Denmark while ignoring the fact that the average class there held only 20 students pre-pandemic, and have been split into much smaller groups for reopening. And he fails to mention that countries with successful­ly reopened schools have infection rates lower than ours.

That’s not to say schools might not be able to reopen, at least partly, in areas where infection levels are lower and staying that way. Though online schooling will almost certainly improve in the fall, attending an actual campus is much better for most students. This is especially true of elementary school children, who have more trouble learning via computer and who can pay better attention in a personal setting. Socializat­ion is also particular­ly important for younger children, who can miss developmen­tal milestones without it.

These very young students also appear less likely to catch or pass on the disease. Starting with this young cohort is one reasonable way to go — if strict and, yes, expensive safety steps are taken.

But even then, remote learning alternativ­es will continue to be needed because some children live with family members at risk of severe complicati­ons from COVID-19. Those alternativ­es cost more money.

If Trump wants as many schools as possible to reopen, he should start by showering them with COVID test kits, fever scanners, nurses, child-sized masks, cleaning and school supplies, plexiglass separation­s, laptops and broadband for students. Anything short of that would just be more empty bluster.

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