New York Daily News

SCHOOLS MOSTLY OK BUT FACE SHUTDOWN

Blaz, under fire, urges parents to prep for the worst

- BY MOLLY CRANE-NEWMAN, MICHAEL ELSEN-ROONEY, DENIS SLATTERY AND MICHAEL GARTLAND

Mayor de Blasio urged parents to plan for school closures as early as Monday, as the number of COVID-19 cases continues to surge throughout the Big Apple.

The daily percentage of people testing positive citywide shot up to 3.09% on Friday, the highest it’s been since June 5, de Blasio revealed. The weekly average of that number, which is the metric the city applies to closing schools, hit 2.83% — just below the city’s 3% threshold.

“People should get ready,” de Blasio said on Brian Lehrer’s show on WNYC radio Friday. “Parents should have a plan for the rest of the month of November. I think that’s the safe way to think about it, have an alternativ­e plan beginning as early as Monday.”

In one day, the percentage of people testing positive for COVID over a seven-day span shot up from 2.6% to 2.83%. If that trend holds, de Blasio’s advice to parents to plan for a citywide school closure will certainly hold as well.

Hitting the 3% closure threshold would not apply to children in pre-k and 3k programs run by community-based groups, de Blasio noted.

Learning bridges programs, which provide free childcare for kids in grades 3k to 8th grade will also remain open if the city exceeds the threshold.

“There are options that will be available if we get to that point,” de Blasio said.

The mayor has weathered considerab­le pushback for his decision to maintain the 3% threshold as the number of coronaviru­s cases in public schools themselves have remained relatively low.

Out of nearly 112,000 students and staff tested as of this Tuesday, only 189 were infected — a positivity rate of .18%.

As the rate of coronaviru­s transmissi­on climbs in the city, many have also questioned why gyms remain open and indoor dining continues, at least for now, as schools are on the brink of closure.

Gov. Cuomo, meanwhile, floated the possibilit­y of renewed coronaviru­s restrictio­ns on Friday after ordering gyms, bars and restaurant­s to close at 10 p.m. starting Friday night.

The governor, who will join six northeaste­rn governors for an “emergency summit” over the weekend to discuss COVID-19 policies as cases surge across the country, said further restrictio­ns could be on the horizon.

The New York State court system put a stop to most proceeding­s requiring in-person appearance­s on Friday after a surge in coronaviru­s cases at several courthouse­s. All future bench trials and hearings will be conducted virtually, while criminal and civil jury trials already underway will continue until their conclusion, per a memo issued by Chief Administra­tive Judge Lawrence Marks.

The decision came after more than a dozen court staffers citywide tested positive for COVID-19.

The governor warned that the COVID-19 situation “will deteriorat­e” as the holidays approach and cold weather keeps more people indoors as he implored New Yorkers to refrain from traveling and

People should get ready. Parents should have a plan for the rest of the month of November. I think that’s the safe way to think about it, have an alternativ­e plan beginning as early as Monday. MAYOR DE BLASIO

gathering with family members.

“Just because you are with your family doesn’t mean you’re safe,” he said, dubbing transmissi­ons from family get-togethers “living room spread.”

Cuomo, who holds the ultimate authority over school openings and closings, said Friday he would not block the mayor’s decision to close schools at a 3% infection rate.

But he did question whether the schools are playing any role in the city’s rising infection rate.

“The problem is not coming from the schools, it’s coming from the bars, the restaurant­s, the gyms and the living room family spread,” he said. Cuomo encouraged the city to adopt a new metric for shutting down schools based on virus transmissi­on within the schools rather than the infection rate in the surroundin­g community. Several elected officials have jumped on the issue.

“We owe it to our kids to do everything we can to keep schools safe and open,” tweeted Comptrolle­r Scott Stringer on Thursday. “That means, right now, we must: 1. Shut down indoor dining. 2. Shut down gyms. 3. Shut down office buildings. 4. Make the city’s contact tracing data transparen­t.” Some parents still reeling from previous school shutdowns said the citywide closure will be devastatin­g for kids starved for in-person support.

“It’s gut-wrenching as a parent, and it’s just not necessary,” said Jennifer Johnson, mom to an 8-year-old with autism in Queens.

Johnson’s son’s school was already shut down for several weeks in October as part of the state’s targeted restrictio­ns on coronaviru­s hotspots, and only recently reopened.

She had to shell out $1,900 for a babysitter the last time her son’s school closed, and anticipate­s more childcare woes if schools shut down again.

But she’s most concerned about the academic and social consequenc­es for her son and other children with disabiliti­es.

“You’ve got kids who are nonverbal,” she said. “It literally is the difference between them speaking or not.”

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 ??  ?? Public School 112 in Manhattan (main photo and left) closed this week due to COVID cases. At right, Charisma Pliandro, at West Brooklyn Community H.S., and most other students may see schools close if virus keeps spreading. Below, schools boss Richard Carranza.
Public School 112 in Manhattan (main photo and left) closed this week due to COVID cases. At right, Charisma Pliandro, at West Brooklyn Community H.S., and most other students may see schools close if virus keeps spreading. Below, schools boss Richard Carranza.
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 ??  ?? Mayor de Blasio has come under fire for preparing for a schools shutdown despite low infection rate. Bottom, teachers union boss Michael Mulgrew.
Mayor de Blasio has come under fire for preparing for a schools shutdown despite low infection rate. Bottom, teachers union boss Michael Mulgrew.

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