School cancelled in Arizona area after 'sick out' over reopening
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[August 15, 2020]
By Andrew Hay
(Reuters) - An Arizona school district that
ignored state safety guidelines and voted to begin in-person learning on
Aug. 17 has had to cancel classes after staff said it was unsafe to
return and called in sick.
Greater Phoenix's J.O. Combs Unified School District cancelled all
instruction for Monday due to "insufficient staffing," days after its
board disregarded state benchmarks on when students can safely return to
classes during the pandemic.
The "sick out" underlined the difficulties in returning to in-person
learning in the United States after schools in Tennessee, Georgia, and
Alabama closed this week as students and staff were infected with
COVID-19 or forced to self-isolate from exposure.
"We have received an overwhelming response from staff indicating that
they do not feel safe returning to classrooms with students," J.O. Combs
District Superintendent Gregory Wyman said in a statement, adding that
he did not know when in-person learning would resume.
Arizona is becoming a battleground in the debate over school reopening,
hundreds of parents and students demonstrating on Monday in Phoenix for
a return to in-person classes after teachers staged protests calling for
a delay until October.
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"It was great to see J.O. Combs school district came together and
used their collective power," said Kelley Fisher, a Phoenix
kindergarten teacher who has led protests by school staff. "I'd love
to see a nationwide sick out."
Christina DeRouchey was among Phoenix parents at the Monday rally
and led demonstrations in her Deer Valley Unified School District
calling for in-person learning to begin on Aug. 17.
When the district delayed the start until mid October she moved her
first-grade son to a charter school where he will start in-person
tuition on Monday.
"We just want the choice that is best physically, mentally and most
importantly emotionally for our children," said DeRouchey.
(Reporting By Andrew Hay; Editing by Shri Navaratnam)
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