The Mercury News

Biden optimistic on reopening K-8

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President Joe Biden is promising a majority of elementary schools will be open five days a week by the end of his first 100 days in office, restating his original goal after his administra­tion came under fire when aides said schools would be considered open if they held in-person learning just one day a week.

Biden’s comments, during a CNN town hall in Milwaukee, marked his clearest statement yet on school reopenings. Biden had pledged in December to reopen “the majority of our schools” in his first 100 days but has since faced increasing questions about how he would define and achieve that goal, with school districts operating under a patchwork of different virtual and in-person learning arrangemen­ts nationwide.

“I said open a majority of schools in K through eighth grade, because they’re the easiest to open, the most needed to be open in terms of the impact on children and families having to stay home,” Biden said.

He said comments by White House press secretary Jen Psaki earlier this month that one day a week of in-person learning would meet his goal were “a mistake in the communicat­ion.”

Asked when the nation would see kindergart­en through eighth grades back to in-person learning five days a week, Biden said, “We’ll be close to that at the end of the first 100 days.” He said he expected many schools would push to stay open through the summer, but suggested reopening would take longer for high schools due to a higher risk of contagion among older students.

The town hall touched on a range of issues related to the coronaviru­s, from protection­s for small businesses to the administra­tion’s vaccinatio­n plans. Biden said that by the end of July there would be 600 million doses of the vaccine available, enough to vaccinate every American.

The town hall was aimed at selling his $1.9 trillion coronaviru­s aid package directly to the American people, part of an effort designed in part to put pressure on Republican lawmakers and refocus Congress on speedy passage of the bill now that his predecesso­r’s impeachmen­t trial is behind him.

Biden underscore­d how much he wants to move beyond Donald Trump on Tuesday night, repeatedly refusing to talk about the former president.

“For four years, all that’s been in the news is Trump. For the next four years, I want to make sure all the news is the American people,” he said.

Biden stressed at the town hall that the massive spending bill already has broad public support. The House is expected to vote on the measure next week.

“The vast majority of the American people like what they see in this package,” Psaki said as she previewed Biden’s sales effort. She added that the support in opinion polls “should be noted by members of Congress as they consider whether they’re going to vote for it or not.”

Biden landed on a slick, snow-covered tarmac to below-freezing weather about 90 minutes before the evening program. He took questions from a small audience of Democrats, Republican­s and independen­ts invited for a small, socially distant gathering at the historic Pabst Theater.

Biden’s trip to Wisconsin, a political battlegrou­nd state he narrowly won last November, comes as coronaviru­s infection rates and deaths are falling after the nation endured the two deadliest months so far of the pandemic. The White House is also reporting an increase in the administra­tion of vaccines throughout the country after a slow start. But Biden has stressed that the nation still has a long road ahead as thousands of Americans die each day in the worst U.S. public health crisis in a century. The virus has killed more than 485,000, and newly emerging variants are complicati­ng the response effort.

The Biden administra­tion is trying to get enough Americans vaccinated to achieve “herd immunity” and allow life to return to a semblance of normalcy. But it’s unclear when the vaccinatio­n will be widely accessible to Americans.

Dr. Anthony Fauci, the nation’s top infectious disease expert, told CNN prior to the town hall that the general public likely won’t have access to the vaccine until May or June, pushing back earlier estimates of April.

 ?? EVAN VUCCI — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? President Joe Biden participat­es in a televised town hall event on Tuesday in Milwaukee.
EVAN VUCCI — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS President Joe Biden participat­es in a televised town hall event on Tuesday in Milwaukee.

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