The Morning Call (Sunday)

Our children need predictabi­lity, not politics

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With a new school year just weeks away, parents across Pennsylvan­ia are left worrying and wondering. Yes, as of today, schools are planning to open. But will they remain open? Or will one day they be faced with another drop-of-the-hat closure like we experience­d in March?

Children and parents need assurance and predictabi­lity. They need schools to open safely and stay open. They cannot once again be faced with the choice of either earning a living or being full-time, inhome teachers.

Most students can learn better inside a school building. We owe it to them to open safely and not play politics with their education or their future.

The American Academy of Pediatrics recently noted that “Returning to school is important for the healthy developmen­t and well-being of children, but we must pursue re-opening in a way that is safe for all students, teachers and staff.”

As a father of five, I believe children thrive best when they have certainty and consistenc­y.

In March, we did not know how deadly this new virus might be or if our hospitals would have the capacity to treat the sick. Now we know how the virus spreads, who is most vulnerable, that hospitals are not overrun and that most people fully recover.

Unfortunat­ely, despite this knowledge, the Wolf administra­tion has continued to make this pandemic political, making end-runs around the people’s representa­tives and issuing haphazard, confusing, unfair and damaging orders.

Pennsylvan­ia’s students, parents and teachers need to have confidence that all schools will open this fall and will do so safely.

If schools close again, I fear the impacts to our communitie­s, our economy and our public school system will be irreversib­le. Parents just cannot again face the decision of providing full-time education or returning to their full-time job. Children just cannot be left to fall through the cracks.

If we are going to be successful in opening and keeping schools open, Pennsylvan­ia needs something that has been lacking in our COVID-19 response thus far: A cogent and uniform plan that takes into account the ideas and concerns raised by the people of Pennsylvan­ia. What we cannot have is one man making decisions in a vacuum. What we cannot have is political gamesmansh­ip.

The Wolf administra­tion has provided guidelines for facial coverings, hygiene and social distancing, but with little time left before school doors should open, very real questions have yet to be answered, questions that need answered to ensure schools stay open.

What is to be done about school transporta­tion and what will happen to students and parents reliant on bus services? What improvemen­ts have been made to remote learning? How will accessibil­ity for students in areas with little broadband access be provided for?

Just this past week, the governor’s Department of Education added to the confusion by piling on new guidance for school reopening, requiring schools to change plans already in the works.

Weeks away from the first day of school, there is no justificat­ion for why these questions remain.

The General Assembly has not spent the last months idle.

We have attempted to work with the governor and to raise the concerns we are hearing in our community. The governor has refused to work with us.

We passed dozens of bills to provide protection­s for workers, ensure hospitals are well-equipped and to bring a common-sense approach to reopening. The governor issued veto after veto.

Prioritizi­ng our students, despite our COVID-19-induced budget constraint­s, the General Assembly fully funded education for the entire school year.

If we are going to begin to move forward as a state and begin the recovery process, Pennsylvan­ia desperatel­y needs three things:

First, our schools must open safely for the fall. The future of our children and the livelihood­s of their parents and educators depend on it.

Second, the governor needs to listen to the people and work with their representa­tives in the General Assembly. Our government was not designed for one person to have all authority, not even during times of emergency.

Most importantl­y, people, mainly children, must take precedence over politics.

Children, parents and educators need answers now, and they need us to work together to provide them.

We must get this right. This is about our children’s education, which is their future.

Pennsylvan­ia House Majority Leader Kerry Benninghof­f represents portions of Centre and Mifflin Counties in the Pennsylvan­ia General Assembly.

 ?? AMY SHORTELL/THE MORNING CALL ?? The first day of school in 2020 is likely to be a very different picture from this view fall 2019 at the Roosevelt Elementary School in Allentown.
AMY SHORTELL/THE MORNING CALL The first day of school in 2020 is likely to be a very different picture from this view fall 2019 at the Roosevelt Elementary School in Allentown.
 ??  ?? Kerry Benninghof­f
Kerry Benninghof­f

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