Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Push to reopen schools could leave out millions of students

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President Joe Biden says he wants most schools serving kindergart­en through eighth grade to reopen by late April, but even if that happens, it is likely to leave out millions of students, many of them minorities in urban areas.

“We’re going to see kids fall further and further behind, particular­ly low-income students of color,” said Shavar Jeffries, president of Democrats for Education Reform. “There’s potentiall­y a generation­al level of harm that students have suffered from being out of school for so long.”

Like some other officials and education advocates, Mr. Jeffries said powerful teachers unions are standing in the way of bringing back students. The unions insist they are acting to protect teachers and students and their families.

In a call Thursday evening with teachers unions, Dr. Anthony Fauci, the federal government’s top infectious-disease expert, said the reopening of K-8 classrooms nationally might not be possible on Mr. Biden’s time frame. He cited concern over new variants of the virus that allow it to spread more quickly and may be more resistant to vaccines.

Mr. Biden is asking for $130 billion for schools to address concerns by unions and school officials as part of a broader $1.9 trillion coronaviru­s relief package that faces an uncertain fate in Congress. If his reopening goal is realized, millions of students might still have to keep learning from home, possibly for the rest of the school year.

California was an epicenter of infection in the first part of January, and public health officials say many of the state’s districts are in areas where transmissi­on remains too high to reopen. But a statewide group called Open Schools California is pushing for reopening as soon as public health standards are met.

“I think that data will bear out that the children who have been most disadvanta­ged are going to be low-income children, Black and brown children, children with special education, learning difference­s, homeless and foster youth,” said Megan Bacigalupi, a mother of students in the Oakland, Calif., public schools and one of the organizers.

 ?? Mark Lennihan/Associated Press ?? In this Sept. 29, 2020, file photo, a teacher leads her students into an elementary school in Brooklyn, N.Y., as hundreds of thousands of students headed back to classrooms in New York. President Joe Biden says he wants most schools serving kindergart­en through eighth grade to reopen by late April. But even if that happens, many schools in urban areas that serve high concentrat­ions of minority students are likely to stay closed.
Mark Lennihan/Associated Press In this Sept. 29, 2020, file photo, a teacher leads her students into an elementary school in Brooklyn, N.Y., as hundreds of thousands of students headed back to classrooms in New York. President Joe Biden says he wants most schools serving kindergart­en through eighth grade to reopen by late April. But even if that happens, many schools in urban areas that serve high concentrat­ions of minority students are likely to stay closed.

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