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Boston delays school reopening plan after virus cases surge

The next phase of the Boston Public Schools reopening plan has been delayed because the city’s coronavirus positivity rate has climbed higher than 4%

Via AP news wire
Wednesday 07 October 2020 16:42 BST
Virus Outbreak-Boston Schools
Virus Outbreak-Boston Schools (The Boston Globe)
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The next phase of the Boston Public Schools reopening plan was delayed Wednesday because the city's coronavirus positivity rate has climbed higher than 4%, Mayor Marty Walsh said Wednesday.

“We believe it is prudent at this time to pause the school reopening plan," Walsh said at a news conference.

Preschoolers and kindergartners who were scheduled to report to school the week of Oct. 15 instead will now start Oct. 22, Walsh said, although he added that the date is dependent on how the virus data develops between now and then.

He called it a difficult decision, given the benefits of in-person instruction.

“I understand the importance of having school for our young people," he said.

Remote learning began on Sept. 21 and families were allowed to opt for hybrid learning scheduled to start this month.

Some students including those with special needs, English learners, those experiencing homelessness, and those who are in state care have already been allowed to return to in-person classes. They will continue to be taught in person, the mayor said.

“For many of these students, not being in school presents a risk that cannot be mitigated the way that the risk of COVID can be,” Walsh said. “The risk of moving backwards, that is very difficult to recover from.”

Grades 4 through 8 are now scheduled to transition to a hybrid model the week of Nov. 5, and grades 9 through 12 the week of Nov. 16. The district has about 54,000 students in 125 schools.

Massachusetts is among the hardest-hit states, with at least 9,323 COVID-19 deaths and more than 133,300 confirmed cases.

There have been more than 17,700 cases and 764 deaths in Boston alone as of Tuesday, according to Marty Martinez, the city's chief of health and human services.

The average positivity rate for the seven days ending Saturday reached 4.1%, the highest it's been since early June, Martinez said.

The Boston Teachers Union welcomed Walsh's decision, but called for the city to do more to ensure that city schools are safe.

“In light of the positivity rate exceeding 4%, consistent with and in part resulting from troubling statewide and national trends in COVID-19 spread, we support the postponement of broadening in-person learning within the Boston Public Schools that the Mayor announced today," union President Jessica Tang said in a statement.

She called on the city to release the results of school air-quality tests, and asked for independent facility inspections to ensure the safety of students, staff and parents.

The city's schools are “safe and ready” for students, Superintendent Brenda Cassellius said at Wednesday’s news conference.

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