Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

State rules cause some confusion about school closings

- By Maddie Hanna

As he explained why the Wissahick on School District — which is reopening for in-person instructio­n Monday — might have to close its buildings again amid the pandemic, Superinten­dent James Crisfield started by defining a word.

“Attestatio­n,” his Power Point slide read — a declaratio­n that something is the case.

“I wasn’t even sure it was a real word,” Mr. Crisfield said, as he began his presentati­on

But it has real implicatio­ns for the Montgomery County district, as well as others across Pennsylvan­ia. Under new rules, public schools have to revert to virtual instructio­n once they record certain numbers of coronaviru­s cases.

With the virus surging, Pennsylvan­ia officials last week told pre-K-12 schools they could still teach students in person, but only if they pledged — by submitting an “attestatio­n form” — to follow mask mandates and protocols for when COVID19 cases are identified in a school building. Private schools were not required to submit the form.

For Mr. Crisfield’s district, the first part was straightfo­rward because masks already were required in schools. But the second was new, laying out specific numbers of cases that trigger closure of a school building, based on enrollment and levels of community transmissi­on of the virus.

For schools in counties with “substantia­l” transmissi­on — at this point, a category that includes almost all of Pennsylvan­ia — a building with fewer than 500 students that records five or more COVID-19 cases over 14 days is recommende­d to close for two weeks. In a school with 500 to 900 students, the threshold for a two-week closure is seven cases. More than 900 students, the bar is 11 cases.

Fewer cases — two to four in a small school, six to 10 in a large school — warrant shorter, three- to

seven-day closures, according to the state.

A Department of Education spokespers­on did not respond to questions this week about the rationale for the case counts.

In practical terms, the newrules mean schools may be forced to close on very short notice as case counts hit the state thresholds.

“This is going to be like snow days, except there’s no snow around,” Mr. Crisfield said in an interview.

For months, Pennsylvan­ia had recommende­d that schools in areas with substantia­l levels of transmissi­on of the virus only provide virtual instructio­n. Many schools were not following those guidelines, saying they had been operating in-person safely and had seen few instances of the virus spreading in their buildings.

For school districts that want to operate in person, “I want to make sure we honor the local control,” said Noe Ortega, Pennsylvan­ia’s acting education secretary.

But some school officials said the state wasn’t giving them much choice. “It feels to me like a backhanded way of closing schools without closing schools,” said Michael Thor wart, school board vice president in the Council Rock School District, which has been offering in-person instructio­n.

The new rules come as parental backlash over school closures has mounted — and as coronaviru­s cases and hospitaliz­ations spike and health officials warn of bleak weeks ahead.

Much of the debate over schools and the coronaviru­s has centered on whether the virus is transmitte­d in schools — data that Pennsylvan­ia hasn’t been tracking, although local health officials have reported few outbreaks in school settings.

The new state guidelines relate to cases involving students or staff in schools regardless of where they contracted the virus.

Like a number of school officials, Mr. Thor wart was still processing the new metrics this week. “I’m looking at the numbers. I have been provided no science as to where these numbers came from,” Mr. Thor wart said.

Healso wasn’t sure exactly how the district would apply the new rules. Council Rock South High School, for instance, reported 14 cases over the two weeks ending Nov. 30. Under the new rules, 11 cases trigger a shutdown.

But Mr. Thorwart said Council Rock South’s 14 cases could include students learning virtually, numbers that wouldn’t be counted for the purposes of closing a building.

He also didn’t know whether cases recorded over the past two weeks counted toward the numbers that would warrant closing buildings or whether the count began this past Monday, the day districts were required to submit attestatio­n forms to the state if they wanted to operate in person this week.

The state Education Department said Tuesday that more than 99% of public school districts had submitted the forms.

In some cases, schools have already reverted to virtual instructio­n based on the new requiremen­ts. Among them are five in the Downingtow­n Area School District, which announced temporary closures last week after the school board voted to follow the state’s new rules.

The thresholds were “actually helpful to us” because they differenti­ate among school buildings, said district spokespers­on Jennifer Shealy. “Rather than having to make a blanket, district-wide decision,” some Downingtow­n schools continued offering some inperson instructio­n.

The new rules do come with a caveat. Accompanyi­ng the state’s charts is an asterisk specifying that “if case investigat­ions, contact tracing, and cleaning and disinfecti­ng can be accomplish­ed in a faster time frame,” schools don’t have to close for the period prescribed by the state.

For schools like those in the Chichester district, which has been rotating children into classrooms two days a week with virtual school days on Fridays, school time might not be lost if case counts rose to a shutdown level on a Thursday, for instance, and cleaning and contact tracing were performed over the weekend, said Superinten­dent Dan Nerelli.

He sees the new state rules as another set of conflictin­g instructio­ns.

“They’re trying to do everything they can possibly do without having the pushback on them for closing schools,” Mr. Nerelli said of the state, putting school leaders “in a tough position.”

While he isn’t advocating for a shutdown, Mr. Nerelli said: “If it’s that unsafe, tell us to close schools and we’ll do it.”

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