Times-Herald

Pressure builds on schools to reopen

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CONCORD, N.H. (AP) — Pressure is building on school systems around the U.S. to reopen classrooms to students who have been learning online for nearly a year, pitting politician­s against teachers who have yet to be vaccinated against Covid-19.

In Chicago, the rancor is so great that teachers are on the brink of striking. In California, a frustrated Gov. Gavin Newsom implored schools to find a way to reopen. In Cincinnati, some students returned to classrooms Tuesday after a judge threw out a teachers union lawsuit over safety concerns.

While some communitie­s maintain that online classes remain the safest option for everyone, some parents, with backing from politician­s and administra­tors, have complained that their children's education is suffering from sitting at home in front of their computers and that the isolation is damaging them emotionall­y.

In Nashua, New Hampshire, the school board voted to stick with remote learning for most students until the city meets certain targets on infections, hospitaliz­ations and tests coming back positive for the coronaviru­s.

Alicia Houston, whose sons are in sixth and 10th grade, said her biggest frustratio­n is "not being able to help my children effectivel­y," even though she has quit her job to attempt just that.

"Watching them become a little bit darker," she said last week. "Watching them fall apart. The emotional and mental health piece is one of the most important pieces. A trauma like this is not something they're necessaril­y going to recover from right away."

Some families and their supporters have argued, too, that reopening schools would enable parents to go back to work instead of staying home to oversee their children's education.

The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said in a recent study that there is little evidence of the virus spreading at schools when precaution­s are taken, such as masks, distancing and proper ventilatio­n.

But many teachers have balked at returning without getting vaccinated first against the scourge that has killed over 440,000 Americans.

In California, with 6 million public school students, teachers unions say they won't send their members into an unsafe environmen­t. They want all teachers vaccinated before going back.

Newsom, a Democrat, has said he will not force schools to reopen but instead wants to give them an incentive and has proposed a $2 billion plan that has met with criticism from superinten­dents, unions and lawmakers. The plan would give schools extra funding for Covid19 testing and other safety measures if they resume inperson classes. Schools that reopen sooner would get more money.

Newsom told educators in blunt terms that he is willing to negotiate but that certain demands, including the call by unions to have all teachers vaccinated before school starts, are unrealisti­c given the shortage of shots.

"If everybody has to be vaccinated, we might as well just tell people the truth: There will be no in-person instructio­n in the state of California," Newsom said.

The biggest districts, including Los Angeles, San Diego and San Francisco, say the plan sets unrealisti­c rules and timelines.

"The virus is in charge right now and it does not own a calendar," the 300,000-member California Teachers Associatio­n warned in a letter. "We cannot just pick an artificial calendar date and expect to flip a switch on reopening every school for inperson instructio­n."

President Joe Biden's administra­tion and Republican senators have dueling proposals for stimulus packages that would distribute billions of dollars to help schools get children back into classrooms.

On Monday, the

Chicago school system extended remote learning for two more days and called for a cooling-off period in negotiatio­ns with the teachers union, which has entertaine­d a strike in the nation's third-largest district. About 62,000 students and 10,000 teachers and staff in kindergart­en through eighth grade were expected to start school Monday for the first time since last March.

Districtwi­de efforts to vaccinate Chicago's teachers won't begin until the middle of February.

In several states, lawmakers are advancing legislatio­n to require more in-person learning.

An Iowa law, signed on Friday by Republican Gov. Kim Reynolds, requires districts to offer full-time in-class instructio­n to parents who request it. Despite concerns that teachers still haven't been vaccinated, they are set to return this month.

In North Carolina, Democratic Gov. Roy Cooper faces pressure from GOP lawmakers to reopen more schools.

In South Carolina, a bipartisan push to get students back in class five days a week is underway.

"After this pandemic is over, I hope to never do another Zoom call," said House Minority Leader Todd Rutherford, a Democrat. "I hate it. I can't stand them. I can't imagine being in third or fourth grade and having to stare at a screen in order to learn."

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