The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Superinten­dent says no school until at least mid-April, or perhaps later

- By Leon Stafford lstafford@ajc.com

Clayton Schools will be closed until at least mid April because of the coronaviru­s, and all proms are being postponed or reschedule­d to possibly later in this school year.

In a roughly 30-minute Facebook Live Monday that was as much motivation­al as it was informatio­nal, Super- intendent Morcease Beasley said he is unsure how the rest of the 2019-2020 school year will play out, but there is no chance schools will reopen before Spring Break on April 6.

“I can assure that we will probably not come back until after spring break, if we return then,” Beasley told more than 2,000 people who tuned in for the district’s first- ever Facebook Live.

Additional­ly, he said May graduation ceremonies are uncertain because of the ongoing threat from the virus. “This is the time to believe in science,” Beas- ley said. “This is the time to have faith.”

Clayton Schools, like districts across metro Atlanta, last held classes March 13, a day after Gov. Brian Kemp suggested school systems close their doors because of the fast-moving coronaviru­s.

At the time, Kemp hinted the closures could last for two weeks. But that timeline has since either shifted or been discarded as the nation grapples with a pandemic that has killed 471 Americans and infected close to 35,000. Almost 800 Geor- gians had been infected by the virus as of midday Monday, with about 25 deaths.

Clayton has had 18 confirmed cases.

Beasley told viewers the district is distributi­ng breakfast and lunch to stu- dents at 21 schools across the county and is joining forces this week with the Atlanta Community Food Bank to also provide groceries at some sites.

He responded to over- whelmed parents who have complained that they aren’t equipped to be teachers as the school closing drags on.

“Many of you are sending us emails saying, ‘We’re not teachers,’” he said. “We understand. We’re just asking that you do what you can as parents.”

Residents left hundreds of comments, ranging from questions about how parents who can’t afford computers can get access to the Internet to kudos from parents thankful the district was putting children’s safety first.

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