Marin Independent Journal

Piecemeal plan for immigratio­n reform

- By Alexandra Jaffe

President Joe Biden’s administra­tion has joined Democrats in unveiling a major immigratio­n overhaul.

WASHINGTON » President Joe Biden is in a political firestorm over how and when to get more schools open during the coronaviru­s pandemic, with Republican­s seizing on confusion surroundin­g Biden’s goal to reopen a majority of schools within his first 100 days to paint the president as beholden to teachers’ unions at the expense of American families.

Biden’s administra­tion in recent weeks has sent muddled and at times contradict­ory messages about his goal. On Tuesday night, the president said his 100-day goal was to have most elementary schools open five days a week, seeming to conflict with his own press secretary, who had said last week that schools would be considered “open” if they held in-person classes even one day a week.

Downplayin­g furor

Biden’s aides dismiss the controvers­y as a flareup that will disappear once the coronaviru­s is better under control and more school districts reopen, pointing to recent polls suggesting the public so far believes Biden is doing a good job in handling the issue.

But there could be lingering damage if Biden is seen to break an early promise on an issue so important to so many Americans.

Teachers’ unions have said they support reopening schools once officials are able to make the buildings safer, but they need the $130 billion included in Biden’s proposed American Rescue Plan to make it happen. And even if the bill passes Congress by the Democrats’ mid-March deadline, it’s unclear whether districts would be able to make changes in time to hasten school openings before the end of Biden’s first 100 days.

Dan Domenech, executive director of the School Superinten­dents Associatio­n, said teachers are willing to go back to in-person learning “only if this bill is passed, only if the dollars get to the school districts in time for them to be able to do the work that they need to do in terms of spacing, in terms of sanitizing, and only if we get the majority of our teachers vaccinated.”

“It’s possible. But at this stage, at this point, it’s not probable,” he said.

American Federation of Teachers President Randi Weingarten said in an interview she hopes Biden will meet his goal, and has said teachers should return to school when COVID-19 mitigation strategies are in place. But she noted that with social distancing, school still won’t feel normal.

“You’re not going to be able to have every single child in every single school in the normal way that we think about normal school,” she said.

Until the nation reaches herd immunity with the widespread distributi­on of the vaccine, Weingarten said, “we’re not going to be normal.”

Competing interests

This leaves Biden caught between teachers’ unions expressing caution towards his expanded goal on reopening, and critics who say just one day of classroom time a week for a majority of schools is far too little. Data from Burbio, a service that tracks school opening plans, recently reported that 66% of K-12 students already are learning

in-person to some degree.

Republican­s have been using the issue to hit at Democrats for weeks, pointing to data suggesting that many schools are safe to open now and charging that the Biden administra­tion is siding with teachers’ unions over science and the needs of American families.

“In places across America where public education depends on the whims of a powerful public sector union, the best interests of children have often come dead last,” Mitch McConnell, the top Republican in the Senate, said during a floor speech earlier this month. “As the months have rolled by and the data have poured in, it’s become clear that schools can open safely.”

“An administra­tion that puts facts and science first would be conducting a fullcourt press to open schools,” McConnell said.

Republican­s see the issue as one that has an urgent and immediate impact on nearly every American family, and one that’s particular­ly salient for the kinds of suburban swing voters who can be decisive in tough House districts and statewide races.

Republican strategist Rory Cooper said the issue is particular­ly relevant in “collar counties around major urban areas.” He and other parents are “enraged with the state of schooling right now,” he said.

Kids at risk

Children face “mental health issues, academic issues, physical and social issues. And the priority seems to be on the adults who worked in the school system, rather than the children who are supposed to benefit from it,” Cooper said.

Democrats believe they can turn the issue back on any Republican­s who vote against the COVID-19 aid bill, and plan to hammer those lawmakers for blocking funding to get kids back to school.

But Republican­s are already using the issue against Democrats in races this year. One of California Gov. Gavin Newsom’s Republican

opponents, Kevin Faulconer, launched his campaign hammering Newsom on the issue after stepping off a yellow school bus, a symbol of the frustratio­n of parents whose kids remain locked out of classrooms because of the pandemic.

While teachers’ unions have embraced what they say was much-needed leadership from the president after the Trump administra­tion left educators worried about their heath and without adequate protection, they also acknowledg­e that Biden’s goal has put pressure on the unions to deliver.

“Has it made it harder, you know, on everyone to have an ambitious, bold goal for the American people? Of course,” Weingarten said, adding that she gives Biden “credit for wanting to help families get to a sense of hope.”

Part of what’s contributi­ng to the confusion, according to National Education Associatio­n President Becky Pringle, is that there’s no one-size-fits-all program that schools can implement to meet Centers for Disease Control and Prevention guidelines on how to safely reopen. She said she felt that’s what was guiding the Biden administra­tion’s now-discarded oneday-a-week standard for reopening.

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 ?? EVAN VUCCI — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? President Joe Biden speaks in the Oval Office of the White House in Washington on Wednesday.
EVAN VUCCI — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS President Joe Biden speaks in the Oval Office of the White House in Washington on Wednesday.

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