Los Angeles Times

LAUSD to test all for coronaviru­s

L.A. Unified students and staff will get weekly checks, vaccinated or not.

- By Howard Blume

Students and staff must be checked even if vaccinated.

All students and employees of the Los Angeles Unified School District will be required to take weekly coronaviru­s tests regardless of their vaccinatio­n status, under a new district policy announced Thursday.

The district had previously required such testing only for those who are unvaccinat­ed.

The announceme­nt was made by interim Supt. Megan K. Reilly in a letter sent to parents.

“We are closely monitoring evolving health conditions and adapting our response in preparatio­n for our full return to in-person learning on August 16,” Reilly said in the letter. Baseline testing for students returning to campus begins Aug. 2, she added.

Families have the option to remain off campus — and to avoid coronaviru­s testing — by choosing distance learning. Officials, however, are encouragin­g students to return, saying that, for the vast majority of students, the best learning takes place in a classroom.

The deadline for opting to remain online had been Friday. But early Friday evening, the district announced on social media that it had extended the deadline by another week, through Aug. 6. Families that don’t choose will be assigned to learn in person.

The policy change comes amid rising coronaviru­s cases in Los Angeles County and beyond, with the surge largely blamed on the highly infectious Delta variant. Many parents have recently expressed concern over safety as the start of school approaches in the nation’s second-largest school system.

For them, the revised policy was welcome news.

“I was both relieved and thrilled to see that the LAUSD will once again be testing all students and staff, regardless of vaccina

[L.A. Unif ied, tion,” said Jenna Schwartz, co-founder of the Facebook group Parents Supporting Teachers. “As the parent of a 6th grader who isn’t old enough to be vaccinated, I will be relying on those around him getting tested regularly, as well as community vaccinatio­n.”

But the decision did not please all parents.

“As a parent, it is my responsibi­lity to keep them healthy and safe, I do not need the district to poke and prod my healthy children unnecessar­ily. This mitigation strategy they claim to be of the highest standard is severely overreachi­ng,” said one west San Fernando Valley parent, who requested anonymity out of concern that her child could be targeted as a result of her criticism of the district.

Teachers union President Cecily Myart-Cruz issued a supportive statement after the district announceme­nt.

“Vaccines are like seatbelts: necessary but not invincible,” Myart-Cruz said. “Just like we need seatbelts, airbags, and speed limits, we need masks, ventilatio­n, and testing to keep school communitie­s safe.”

In an interview Thursday before the announceme­nt, Myart-Cruz generally praised the district’s focus on safety, while noting growing fears regarding the Delta variant.

She also encouraged district employees and community members to get vaccinated but said she does not support a vaccinatio­n requiremen­t for employees or students.

In April, when campuses reopened for the first time in more than a year, the vast majority of students did not return. At the time, the percentage­s of those returning were 7% for high schools, 12% for middle schools and 30% for elementary schools. Persisting safety fears were a primary reason.

This summer, officials expected any reluctance to return to decline dramatical­ly, especially because of low infection rates and a gradual return to normal.

But in-person enrollment in summer school, which was available to all students, remained low compared with total enrollment, with fewer than 1 in 5 students taking part. A lot of families might have simply wanted the summer off from school before the fall.

Then came the rapid increase in infections due to the Delta variant.

Although health officials have said that approved vaccines provide strong protection against the virus, including the Delta variant, they do not completely prevent vaccinated people from becoming infected. They do, however, largely prevent vaccinated people from becoming severely ill or dying from COVID-19.

“I’m glad to see LAUSD taking this extra step to protect our community now that we know that even vaccinated people may be able to spread the Delta variant,” said Eagle Rock parent Carmel Levitan. “LAUSD did an amazing job last spring — the safest major district in the country — and it’s a relief that they are continuing to put safety first.”

Children younger than 12 are not yet eligible for vaccinatio­n and many older students have not been vaccinated, along with some employees.

The new L.A. Unified policy “is in accordance with the most recent guidance from the Los Angeles County Department of Public Health,” Reilly wrote.

The county health department does not require testing of those at schools who are vaccinated, but it permits school systems to adopt a stricter policy.

Details on the testing program are online at

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