New York Daily News

‘Don’t know what to do’

Parents plead for remote option for kids with vulnerable kin

- BY MICHAEL ELSEN-ROONEY DAILY NEWS EDUCATION REPORTER

Queens mom Rasheedah Pierce knows firsthand the devastatio­n that can follow when a contagious respirator­y virus sneaks into a home with a medically vulnerable child.

Five years ago, her 2-year-old son Kenneth — one of two twins who suffered significan­t health challenges after being born more than two months premature — caught parainflue­nza from a family member and wound up on a ventilator. He died before his third birthday.

The memory is haunting Pierce all over again as the start of classes on Monday looms for her two elementary school children.

Seven-year-old Ella, Kenneth’s surviving twin, who still battles ailments including chronic lung disease and a compromise­d immune system stemming from her premature birth, will likely qualify for the Education Department’s home instructio­n option for kids with medical conditions.

But her younger sister Erin, who is healthy, will be required to attend in-person classes under city rules — raising for Pierce the terrifying prospect that her younger daughter could catch the virus in school and infect Ella, who is still too young to get vaccinated.

“We’re afraid for her life, honestly,” Pierce said. “We’ve lost a twin. We’ve gone through this a couple years ago, and here we are with no options.”

Families across the city have demanded a broader remote option given the spike in COVID-19 cases driven by the spread of the delta variant. But the issue is particular­ly pressing for families like Pierce’s, in which one member is medically vulnerable.

The Education Department’s program for “medically necessary instructio­n” allows students with qualifying ailments to stay home this school year, and get home visits from a physical teacher or one-on-one and small group instructio­n online.

The program, however, is not open to students with family members who are at higher risk from COVID-19.

Education Department’s officials have argued data collected last year found minimal COVID-19 spread in school. The study, conducted last fall, found only 0.5% of the roughly 36,000 students potentiall­y exposed to a COVID case at school eventually tested positive — a sign transmissi­on within classrooms was low.

Officials have also argued that virus rates in schools remained similar to or lower than those in the city as a whole. City officials added that the spread of vaccines, including through a vaccinatio­n mandate for staff, add another layer of safety. “Our multilayer­ed approach to safety has made schools among the safest places to be in the city, and we will work with each family to ensure that their children safely return to school,” said Education Department’s spokeswoma­n Sarah Casasnovas.

But Pierce finds little comfort in those assurances. She says the city’s assessment­s of COVID-19 spread were made during a time when only a fraction of students were attending in-person school and kids had ample room to spread out.

Now, Pierce says, she worries that younger daughter Erin is poised to “go to a class of 25-30 children ... with the delta variant.”

And while some families may be at equal or higher COVID risk outside school than inside it, Pierce said her daughters have lived “in a bubble to a degree ... they don’t even have people touching them outside of their parents and grandparen­ts.”

It’s not only public school students facing the predicamen­t.

Yanni Tournas, the father of an elementary-schooler at Academy of the City Charter School in Queens, asked school officials if his son could continue remote learning this year because Tournas takes medication for multiple sclerosis that suppresses his immune system.

He’s built up no antibodies to COVID-19 even after getting vaccinated.

“I have no protection,” he said. School officials wrote in a Friday email reviewed by the Daily News that the charter school’s authorizer said “schools do not legally have the option to create their own remote learning program.” It wasn’t immediatel­y clear what legal restrictio­ns school officials were referring to. Other city charter networks, including Success Academy, are offering temporary remote options.

Officials at Academy of the City couldn’t be reached Friday.

For public school parents like Pierce, it’s not only the limited eligibilit­y for the city’s home instructio­n program that’s raising concerns.

The Queens mom said she’s worried that the academic support offered in home instructio­n won’t meet Ella’s learning needs. Limited daily visits from an in-person or virtual teacher won’t replace the full-day remote instructio­n that Ella, who receives special-education services, got last year, Pierce said.

The combinatio­n of health and academic concerns has left the family reeling just days before school is supposed to resume.

“We’re the day before school is starting,” Pierce said, “and I don’t know what to do.”

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 ??  ?? Yanni Tournas (main) and Rasheedah Pierce (inset) are fearful as school approaches and their children are being denied a remote option.
Yanni Tournas (main) and Rasheedah Pierce (inset) are fearful as school approaches and their children are being denied a remote option.

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