Marin Independent Journal

$6.5B deal reached to open schools

- By Jocelyn Gecker and Adam Beam

After weeks of tense negotiatio­ns, California legislator­s agreed Thursday on a $6.5 billion proposal.

After weeks of tense negotiatio­ns, California legislator­s agreed Thursday on a $6.5 billion proposal aimed at getting students back in classrooms this spring following months of closures because of the pandemic.

The proposed “Safe and Open Schools” plan would overhaul a $2 billion proposal from Gov. Gavin Newsom that was widely criticized by school superinten­dents, unions and lawmakers. The proposal unveiled by Newsom in December would have rewarded schools that reopened with additional funding for safety measures.

Critics said it set unrealisti­c timelines, didn’t include enough money to pay for frequent COVID-19 testing of students and teachers, and failed to address the vaccinatio­n of teachers.

The new proposal would triple the funding for schools and require county public health department­s to offer vaccinatio­ns to school staff who return to in-person classes. It also pushes back the timeline for reopening and gives school districts greater freedom in how to spend the funding, which each district would receive based on its student population.

Getting students back into classrooms has become a pressing political issue for Newsom, who did not immediatel­y comment on the Legislatur­e’s proposal and is facing a possible recall election later this year.

The proposal, detailed in two identical pieces of legislatio­n, would not force schools to reopen. But it would provide more funding to those that do.

In order to get the money, school districts must offer in-person classes by April 15 to “vulnerable” students, including English learners, homeless students, those without computers and foster children.

The proposal also requires schools that receive the money to reopen for all students in grades TK-6 when case rates in their counties drop below 7 per 100,0000 — and to all vulnerable student groups in higher grades.

Regardless of funding, the proposal requires all schools to adopt a COVID-19 safety plan by April 1 that has been approved by labor unions.

Critics of Newsom’s original plan — including Los Angeles Unified, San Diego, San Francisco and other large school districts across the state — said it set unreachabl­e rules and deadlines that included requiremen­ts to reopen as early as mid-February when California’s COVID-19 case rates were skyrocketi­ng.

Voicing his support for the plan, Assemblyma­n Kevin McCarty, a Democrat from Sacramento, said, “It is our top priority to ensure that California kids can safely return to school soon and doing so will also help reopen our economy.”

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