The Columbus Dispatch

Schools are being shut down again

Omicron, shortages of tests, staff fuel closings

- Erin Richards

For some of America’s schools, 2022 sure feels a lot like 2020.

A majority of schools opened in-person this week for their spring semester start, but a growing number have shifted abruptly to remote learning again amid the omicron-fueled surge in COVID-19 infections and subsequent staffing shortages.

Public and scientific sentiment is on the side of in-person learning, and parent groups nationwide called Monday for schools to stay open. But districts in and around Atlanta, Detroit, Newark, New Jersey, and Milwaukee, Wisconsin, as well as individual schools in Columbus,

Reynoldsbu­rg and elsewhere, nonetheles­s reverted to virtual learning for days or weeks, mostly because of staff shortages due to illness or quarantine.

It’s an issue that’s likely to get worse before it gets better.

On Tuesday, 14 Columbus City Schools and some Reynoldsbu­rg City Schools were learning remotely due to staffing shortages, bus driver shortages or heating issues.

As of 6 p.m. Monday, 3,229 schools nationwide had closed for the week starting Jan. 2, according to Burbio, which tracks school calendars. After just one school day, that figure is already well above the previous weekly record of school closures this academic year – 2,846 buildings closed the week of Nov. 7. And many districts haven’t officially returned for the second semester yet.

Sara Bode, a pediatrici­an at Nationwide Children’s Hospital in Columbus, and the medical adviser to Columbus Public Schools, said the situation is evolving – and it looks different from community to community.

To start off the week, about 10 of Columbus’ 110 schools had to pivot to virtual learning Monday because of lack of staff, Bode said. Over in Cleveland, public schools were operating remotely because of COVID-19 transmissi­on rates hovering around 30%, she added.

Bode also sits on the Council of School Health at the American Academy of Pediatrics, which has advocated for in-person learning for children’s academic and emotional health. The academy has no plans to change that recommenda­tion, despite the high surge of the omicron variant, Bode said.

“The goal is to have kids physically present in schools,” Bode told USA TODAY. “If we focus on things we can control like universal masking, vaccinatio­n, more testing, and quick isolation of kids with symptoms, that’s still an effective plan.”

On Tuesday, 13 Columbus City Schools were learning remotely due to staff shortages *(not all of the same schools as Monday ) and another was doing so because of a “partial heating outage.”

In Reynoldsbu­rg City Schools, students at both high school campuses and the preschools pivoted to remote learning this week due to “staffing and bus driver shortages,” according to the district.

It’s an issue plaguing school districts everywhere.

Shortage of COVID-19 rapid tests

Some districts that aimed to increase rapid testing for COVID-19 as a layered mitigation tactic are struggling to secure

the necessary supplies.

In Greater Columbus, Upper Arlington Schools is “essentiall­y out of testing kits” and is working on getting more, according to a letter from the superinten­dent. Gahanna Jefferson is out of at-home COVID-19 rapid test kits, according to the district’s website.

New Albany-plain Local Schools has a “large supply of tests available for students or staff that may be identified as a close contact or are symptomati­c” in each of the district’s school buildings, according to district spokespers­on Patrick Gallaway

In Chicago, where schools opened Monday, the teachers union is expected to vote Tuesday on whether members support working in buildings or working remotely starting Wednesday. According to the union, the district has not secured enough rapid COVID-19 tests and has not developed a solid testing plan. District and city officials say testing is available and schools can operate safely.

“There definitely is a problem right now with testing supplies, and that certainly

does impact mitigation,” Linda Mendonca, president of the National Associatio­n of School Nurses, said Monday.

In Massachuse­tts, the availabili­ty of about 200,000 tests across the Commonweal­th helped schools fully reopen this week, Kim Driscoll, Salem’s mayor, said during a news conference at a high school Monday.

But they need more.

“Rapid tests are the most difficult thing to procure in bulk quantities right now,” Driscoll said. “Thanks to the state contract, we’re hoping to get them here within a week.”

Mike Gray, whose company CMG Partners II imports and distribute­s COVID-19 tests, said there are not enough tests being manufactur­ed to fulfill what the Biden administra­tion and state government­s have promised to schools and communitie­s.

Alcon, one of the test manufactur­ers, only makes about 102 million tests a month, Gray said. And Abbott, another manufactur­er, makes about 50 million tests a month and is ramping up to 70 million, he said.

“The testing is going to be a real challenge for this country,” Gray said. “You can’t take them away from health systems for kids to go to school.”

What about student vaccine mandates?

Mandating vaccines for students as a mitigation tactic has been the third rail, but hasn’t yet been tried in the Columbus area.

In New Orleans, some schools were open for in-person instructio­n Monday, some were closed for a day or two more for COVID-19 testing, and some shifted to remote instructio­n because too many staff were on leave for illness or isolation.

To keep buildings open, school and state officials are pressing toward a COVID-19 vaccine mandate for New Orleans students 5 and up starting Feb. 1.

“We need to do everything to preserve in-person learning,” Henderson Lewis Jr., the New Orleans public school superinten­dent, told USA TODAY on Monday.

Elsewhere, such mandates have been met with resistance. In California last month, a judge halted San Diego Unified’s student vaccine mandate for students 16 and older. A different judge allowed Los Angeles’ student vaccine mandate to proceed.

But Los Angeles pushed back its vaccine mandate for students to fall 2022 once it became clear more than 30,000 unvaccinat­ed students would be forced into virtual learning as a result of the rule, which was supposed to take effect this semester.

Students will eventually be subjected to a state-required vaccine mandate, California Gov. Gavin Newsom announced last year.

Columbus Dispatch reporter Megan Henry and USA TODAY reporter Alia Wong contribute­d to this story.

erin.richards@usatoday.com @emrichards

 ?? KRIS CRAIG/PROVIDENCE JOURNAL ?? Students at Johnston High School leave the building, dismissed early on Monday because 23 teachers called in sick and there weren’t enough substitute­s to cover.
KRIS CRAIG/PROVIDENCE JOURNAL Students at Johnston High School leave the building, dismissed early on Monday because 23 teachers called in sick and there weren’t enough substitute­s to cover.

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