State school board gets pushback on mask mandate
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[August 19, 2021]
By PETER HANCOCK
Capitol News Illinois
phancock@capitolnewsillinois.com
SPRINGFIELD – A capacity crowd packed into
the Illinois State Board of Education room on Wednesday as many more
stood outside the building to protest the state’s new indoor mask
mandate in all public and nonpublic schools.
“I'm so tired of hearing how resilient our kids are. Resilience is
something you choose,” said Ruby Johnson, a mother of seven children
from New Lenox. “Our kids did not choose to be masked all day, unable to
see their friends or teachers smile at them, to have to COVID test to
stay in school, to be burdened with the idea that they carry an
invisible disease that they could make their friends sick with.”
Gov. JB Pritzker issued the mask mandate in an executive order Aug. 4,
shortly after the U.S Centers for Disease Control and Prevention issued
updated guidelines for schools in response to a surge in the highly
contagious delta variant of COVID-19. Those guidelines urge “universal
indoor masking” by all students over the age of 2, staff, teachers, and
visitors to K-12 schools, regardless of vaccination status.
Since then, ISBE has put more than two dozen public and nonpublic school
systems on probationary status for refusing to comply with the mandate,
although some have since had their status restored after later agreeing
to comply.
Under the state’s administrative code, schools can be placed on
probation for “deficiencies that present a health hazard or a danger to
students or staff.” When that happens, the schools are given 60 days to
submit a plan for correcting the deficiency and, if they fail to do so,
risk losing their state recognition altogether.
“I'm taking this requirement extremely seriously because every single
student in Illinois deserves a safe in-person education this fall,”
State Superintendent Carmen Ayala said at the start of Wednesday’s
meeting. “I know this is a difficult time to be a leader, and I deeply
appreciate the cooperation and the leadership of all the superintendents
and principals across our state.”
But a number of local and regional superintendents argued that the
decision about how to reopen safely should be left to local leaders,
just as it was during the early phases of the pandemic.
“For decades now in Springfield, our school leadership across the state
has fought one battle after another over state mandates,” said Kyle
Thompson, the regional superintendent for Region 11 in east-central
Illinois. “Our politicians at the state capitol are often well
intentioned when they add to our daily demands over the curriculum we
provide, the meals we serve, our dress codes and much more. However, too
often they don't realize the costs that come from these more isolated
decisions. Under COVID-19, mandates have become politically polarizing
and our students are suffering as a result of it.”
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Dozens of people crowd into the Illinois State Board
of Education meeting Wednesday in Springfield to protest a universal
mask mandate now in place for all public and nonpublic schools in
the state.(Capitol News Illinois photo by Peter Hancock)
Shane Gordon, superintendent of Bluford USD 318 in
southern Illinois, said the polarizing atmosphere surrounding mask
mandates has been a challenge for all school officials in Illinois,
and he said ISBE’s strict enforcement of the mandate was adding to
the challenge.
“My district did choose to follow the mandate, by a 4-3 vote,” he
said. “Quite honestly, this decision was one made out of fear of
this organization and the consequences associated. I'm before you
today to express that fear is no way to govern, and fear is no way
to lead.”
Since that vote, Gordon said, he and members of the Bluford school
board have been targets of harsh criticism in the community.
“I wish to express the current situation created by Springfield is
untenable in many school districts across the state,” he said. “Good
people are leaving as a result of this.”
But not all superintendents who spoke Wednesday opposed the mask
mandate or ISBE’s enforcement of it.
Sheri Smith, superintendent of the Forrestville Valley School
District in northwest Illinois, argued that putting districts on
probation might be too lenient because it actually gives districts
additional time to continue defying the executive order.
“Why do I care about other school districts? Generally speaking, I
don't have time to do that,” Smith said. “However, without immediate
consequence and accountability, superintendents and local school
boards are left to once again navigate impossible scenarios.
Probationary status does not limit a school's ability to participate
in (interscholastic) events. That means locally we're left to
determine if our students are placed in undue risk by participating
with noncompliant districts.”
Those statements came during the public comment portion of the
board’s meeting. The board took no further action on the mask
mandate, and Ayala gave no indication that she intends to ease up on
the enforcement of it.
Capitol News Illinois is a nonprofit, nonpartisan
news service covering state government and distributed to more than
400 newspapers statewide. It is funded primarily by the Illinois
Press Foundation and the Robert R. McCormick Foundation.
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