Los Angeles Times

Newport-Mesa schools to reopen

After a 3-week hiatus, district will resume in-person classes on secondary campuses.

- By Sara Cardine Cardine writes for Times Community News.

After a three-week hiatus from in-person learning — undertaken to address an anticipate­d post-holiday surge in coronaviru­s infections and districtwi­de staffing challenges — Newport-Mesa Unified School District is moving ahead to reopen middle and high school campuses Monday.

Board members decided last month that secondary schools would return to distance learning at the start of the spring semester Jan. 4 for a three-week period. The plan was to bring students back to campuses Jan. 25 to resume learning under a partially in-person hybrid model.

With that date looming, and with Orange County coronaviru­s cases subsiding from recent record-breaking highs, Newport-Mesa Supt. Russell Lee-Sung on Friday announced middle and high school students were to report back to classes Monday.

“We will continue to closely monitor staff and student [coronaviru­s] cases and the impact of COVID-19 to our workforce, who support students inside and outside the classroom,” LeeSung wrote in a message to the school community.

Lee-Sung confirmed that district health employees had begun receiving COVID-19 vaccines as Phase 1A essential workers and could be followed by other employees, deemed Phase 1B, sometime in February.

The district’s online COVID-19 dashboard Friday listed 138 school-site coronaviru­s cases, a decline from the 185 infections reported Jan. 15.

But some are concerned the voluntary reporting system, which automatica­lly removes cases after 14 days, doesn’t give a true picture of transmissi­ons.

“The big problem is those are only the cases they know about,” said Newport Harbor High School English teacher Alex Goodman. “The only people showing up are people who test positive and volunteer that to the district.”

Goodman said in the final weeks of the fall semester, as few as three students were showing up for in-person classes, while the rest attended remotely by choice. Some were isolating at home due to possible coronaviru­s exposure, while others were staying away as a precaution.

As an added safety measure, Goodman started teaching lessons outdoors. Ahead of Monday’s reopening, there’s still a lot of uncertaint­y, he said.

“A lot of us are really worried about going back with things as bad as they are,” Goodman said, bringing up new concerns about a more contagious variant of the virus. “It’s so hard to know what to do.”

Tamara Fairbanks, president of Newport-Mesa Federation of Teachers, said by email Friday that many educators are still “deeply concerned” about the decision to reopen secondary schools while virus cases remain relatively high.

“As COVID-19 infection rates surge throughout the county, we do not believe that NMUSD has the consistent protocols of physical distancing, wellness screenings, and COVID-19 notificati­on processes in place to keep our students, parents and communitie­s safe,” Fairbanks wrote.

When Newport-Mesa Unified trustees called a special meeting Dec. 17, to discuss a possible return to distance learning, things were in an uncertain state.

County health experts anticipate­d a post-holiday coronaviru­s surge that would pack hospitals and intensive care units with sicker-than-usual COVID-19 patients. The district had a reported 149 infections.

But another considerat­ion was keeping schools functionin­g during a pandemic. Contact tracing had become a daunting task and took hours of staff time, while replacing teachers who had fallen ill or were under quarantine­was daunting.

“The volume of this, I need to share with you, has absolutely paralyzed our department,” Leona Olson, assistant superinten­dent of human resources, said at the meeting.

District spokeswoma­n Annette Franco said Friday the idea of an adaptable learning model that would flex in response to a changing health outlook was always part of the plan. Officials will continue to monitor school cases and adjust as needed.

Franco said the temporary reclosure of secondary school campuses gave Newport-Mesa time to open elementary schools and allow instructor­s under precaution­ary quarantine to continue teaching from home.

“Thankfully, it did help,” she said. “The big thing we’re really doing now is pushing the importance of taking safety precaution­s outside of school. [Because] we can control the schools, but we can’t control what happens outside of school.”

And as the COVID-19 vaccine begins trickling into Orange County, hope seems to be on the horizon.

“There’s a light at the end of the tunnel now,” Franco said.

 ?? Don Leach Daily Pilot ?? MIDDLE AND high schools in Newport-Mesa Unified will reopen Monday using an in-person hybrid model after a short hiatus to address virus and staff issues.
Don Leach Daily Pilot MIDDLE AND high schools in Newport-Mesa Unified will reopen Monday using an in-person hybrid model after a short hiatus to address virus and staff issues.

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