Trump Urges States To Consider Opening Schools Before Summer

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President Donald Trump speaks about the coronavirus in the Rose Garden of the White House, Monday, April 27, 2020, in Washington. Trump says states should “seriously consider” reopening their public schools before the end of the academic year, even though dozens already have said it would be unsafe for students to return until the summer or fall. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon)

WASHINGTON (AP) – President Donald Trump says states should “seriously consider” reopening their public schools before the end of the academic year, even though dozens already have said it would be unsafe for students to return until the summer or fall.

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Trump made the comments Monday in a call with governors discussing how to reopen their economies, among other topics.

“Some of you might start thinking about school openings, because a lot of people are wanting to have the school openings. It’s not a big subject, young children have done very well in this disaster that we’ve all gone through,” he said. While addressing Vice President Mike Pence, Trump added that it’s something “they can seriously consider, and maybe get going on.”

None of the governors on the call responded to the suggestion, according to a recording obtained by The Associated Press.

Trump made the comments as the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention worked to finalize guidelines for reopening the economy. For schools, that included putting students’ desks 6 feet (1.8 meters) apart, serving meals in the classroom instead of the cafeteria and closing playgrounds.

Reopening schools is considered key to getting the economy moving again. Without a safe place for kids, many parents would have difficulty returning to work.

But some education officials say opening schools quickly would bring major risk and little reward, especially since the end of the school year is approaching.

“Are they going to reopen for two weeks? Three weeks?” said Daniel Domenech, executive director of the American Association of School Administrators, “It’s not the right thing to do. Particularly when we’re involving the safety and welfare of our students.”

At a White House news conference Monday, Trump acknowledged that there’s little time left in the school year, even as he said many states are thinking about getting kids back into the classroom.

“I think you’ll see a lot of schools open up even if it’s for a very short period of time,” he said. “In terms of what this vicious virus goes after, young people seem to do very well. Young people seem to do very well so I know that there are some governors that aren’t necessarily ready to open up states, but they may be ready to open up the school systems.”

Schools across the nation have closed during the coronavirus pandemic, and dozens of states have ordered their schools to remain closed through the rest of this academic year. Only a few have publicly discussed earlier openings, including Montana, which says school districts can resume classroom instruction on May 7.

In many districts, officials have said it’s still unclear whether students will be able to return to the classroom by next fall. And even if they do, many are planning for social distancing measures that could make school look radically different from the past.

Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti said on CNN that it’s “way too early” to reopen his city’s schools, adding that “you don’t get a lot of credit for moving too quickly to reopen.”

Responding to Trump’s comments, one of the nation’s largest teachers unions said there’s still much work to be done before schools can open safely. The American Federation of Teachers said there needs to be better testing and tracking for the virus, and schools must have access to personal protective equipment.

“It’s good the president understands that reopening society and the economy hinges on successfully and safely reopening schools,” said Randi Weingarten, the union’s president. “But the question should not be whether we open schools, but how we do it safely. COVID-19 is a terrible virus that has already taken too many lives, and, in the absence of a vaccine, there is no magic wand or magic elixir as the president would have us believe.”

If schools reopen too quickly and end up spreading the coronavirus, schools could find be held legally liable, said Francisco Negrón, chief legal officer for the National School Boards Association. And while coronavirus cases have been mild among U.S. children, many schools have students with medical conditions that could make them vulnerable, he said.

“The foremost concern for schools is going to be safety of their students and safety of their employees,” Negrón said.

In the CDC’s draft guidelines for schools, the agency suggested a three-phase reopening process for schools in communities with “low levels of COVID-19 spread and those with confidence that the incidence of infection is genuinely low.”

The guidance encourages schools to create isolation areas for students who develop symptoms. And if anyone with COVID-19 is found to have been in the building, it advises schools to shut down for one or two days to clean and disinfect.

Domenech, of the school administrators association, said the guidelines pose significant logistical hurdles. Trying to keep younger students 6 feet (1.8 meters) apart could prove to be impossible, he said, and many schools have so many students they would violate suggested limits on large gatherings.

Still, schools are looking for ways to limit student interaction as they reopen, including plans to bring only a portion of the students in at once. Schools might bring half the students in for the morning, for example, and rotate in the other half for the afternoon. While they’re at home, students could keep taking classes online, Domenech said.

“Everybody wants to have the kids back,” he said. “We understand the impact that this has on the economy. You have working parents and they need their kids to be safe and in a school environment so they can go back to work. Sooner or later schools will have to reopen. The question is how.”


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Phineas
Phineas
4 years ago

“Big subject”? “Alot of people are wanting to have school openings”. Can’t someone teach him the language already. I can tell his quotes from a mile away.

Yoni's Little Brother
Yoni's Little Brother
4 years ago

I wonder if Trump realizes that many southern schools begin their summer vacation in 3-4 weeks from today. Opening before they close for the summer is improbable
Once again Trump spoke before thinking..

Educated Archy
Educated Archy
4 years ago

What an immature red herring comment. As usual Phineas loves nit picking. Grow up you two year old

a yid
a yid
4 years ago

many school lack air conditioning , yes luckily he does not have to make decision about nuclear devices

Educated Archy
Educated Archy
4 years ago

The #1 priority is and should be schools reopening. Here are a few reasons why,

1) Without schools reopening you cannot attain phase one of reopening the economy at all. Many of us can work from home but not with children around.
2) Kids are what we live for. Most of our earnings go to our childrens education. Us frum yidden are well aware of that. But even secular jews and goyim who send to public school spend enormously on education. This is their future. How can we deprive them?
3) This is terrible for a child’s mental health. Children need structure and social connections. This is killing them. And yes us parents cannot take it any more. We refuse to keep our kids locked up climbing the walls. Enough is enough

Now lets discuss the risks and lets see how low it is,
1) Kids have not come down with symptoms by enlarge. Now there is a theory that they carry it even with no symptoms. Who says thats true? Were they tested?
2) Most of us had it already. Sure we hear far out stories of people that get it a second time. But we all agree its rare and generally not the case. How do we know that most of us had it? I heard form a medical professional who is not giving tests for covid 19 due to sypmtoms. He is testing for other reasons. He said 80% thats right 80% got it. Almost every jew I meet had fever sypmtoms and coughs all the same time. Was that just a Boro park flu and not covid?
3) Obviously any educator over 60 or ill should not get near the school. (And ill parents would not send) Thus that leaves it with the lower risk population.
4) The curve is down for two weeks already just as Phineas wrote.

I am not minimizing the suffering we went thru with covid 19. But the cure is worse than the illness. The risk can be minimized. At a certain point uou need to say the “chemo” is killing the body more than the cancer.

In order to fully stay safe you’d need to stay on lock down till April 2021. After all the spanish flu resurged. Is that viable?

Enough is enough.. We cannot keep our kids locked up any more. We should protest in Albany and Trenton to stop this madness. Civil disobedience should be conducted too. Parents hsould flood parks and ignore the damn rules. Its too much already. We acnnot handle it any more.

Phineas
Phineas
4 years ago

My daughter in Bais Yaakov of Queens (yes, we send her from West Hempstead) is not going to crowded Kew Gardens in the next month whether the school opens or not.

Aleph
Aleph
4 years ago

Trump thinks by giving confused mixed messages he can avoid blame. But everyone is onto his stale act. Opening up too soon will endanger the MDs and med personnel, etc. Already as many killed in 2 months ss in Vietnam in 10 years. Does he care? No.

Boroch
Boroch
4 years ago

It is a bad idea to open schools now; the teachers can infect the kids and vice-versa. What is wrong with online learning? Also, we have not witnessed any school violence, or mass school shootings, since the shutdown.

Judge
Judge
4 years ago

Now that all the frum schools are filled to the gills with PPP money I’m sure they will be rushing to endanger their older Rebbes and teachers for 3-5 weeks of basically lost And distracted spring/summer “learning.”

B’H scientists and doctors will be able to get schools open in the fall. Until then, enjoy the kindeach!