U.S. CDC recommends schools reopen with masks and rigid health protocols
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[February 13, 2021]
By Gabriella Borter and Jarrett Renshaw
(Reuters) - The U.S. Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention on Friday issued new guidance for U.S. schools to
reopen, recommending universal mask-wearing and physical distancing as
key COVID-19 mitigation strategies to get children back in the classroom
quickly.
The guidelines, which also emphasize the need for facility-cleaning,
personal hygiene and contact tracing, are intended to give school
districts a road map to bring the nation's 55 million public school
students back to classrooms without sparking COVID-19 outbreaks.
"We believe with the strategies we have put forward that there will be
limited to no transmission in schools if followed," CDC Director
Rochelle Walensky told reporters, noting that the CDC was not mandating
that schools reopen.
The agency also said school reopenings should not be conditional on
teachers' access to COVID-19 vaccines, but strongly recommended U.S.
states prioritize teachers and school staff for vaccination.
President Joe Biden promised to reopen most K-8 schools within 100 days
of taking office on Jan. 20. He praised the CDC's guidance on Friday and
emphasized the problems arising from the continued closure of schools,
including children's mental health struggles and the exodus of parents
from the workforce.
"We have sacrificed so much in the last year. But science tells us that
if we support our children, educators, and communities with the
resources they need, we can get kids back to school safely in more parts
of the country sooner," Biden said in a statement.
Just 44% of U.S. school districts were offering fully in-person learning
as of December and 31% were operating all remotely, according to the
Center for Reinventing Public Education, which surveyed 477 of the
nation's nearly 13,000 school districts. Other districts have employed a
hybrid learning model, where students attend some school days in-person
and some virtually.
School reopenings have caused labor disputes between teachers unions,
who fear for their members' safety, and school districts in major U.S.
cities. In Chicago this week, the teachers union and district reached
agreement on a safety plan after months of negotiations that included
threats of a strike.
On Friday, the American Federation of Teachers, which has about 1.7
million members, commended the CDC's guidance for relying on "facts and
evidence."
"We urge the CDC to remain flexible as more data comes to light. The
guidance is instructive for this moment in time, but this disease is not
static," AFT President Randi Weingarten said in a statement.
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Dr. Rochelle Walensky, now director of the U.S. Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention (CDC), removes her mask to speak as Joe Biden
announces nominees and appointees to serve on his health and
coronavirus response teams during a news conference at his
transition headquarters in Wilmington, Delaware, U.S., December 8,
2020. REUTERS/Kevin Lamarque/File Photo
FLEXIBLE APPROACH
The CDC's phased mitigation strategy is adaptable depending on the
level of COVID-19 transmission in a school's community.
In areas where the COVID-19 positive test rate is below 5% and there
were fewer than nine new cases per 100,000 in the last seven days,
schools can fully reopen and safely relax social distancing measures
as long as masks are worn, Walensky said. In areas of higher
transmission, the agency is urging 6 feet (1.83 m) of separation in
classrooms and weekly testing of students, teachers and staff.
Elementary school students should learn in-person at least part-time
even in areas of high transmission, the guidance says.
Recent studies have shown that in-person learning has not been
associated with increased community transmission, especially in
elementary schools.
House Republican Leader Kevin McCarthy criticized the reopening
guidelines on Friday as not bold enough to ensure that students
return to classrooms promptly.
"Families and students deserve better. They need iron-clad
assurances that their children will be able to get back into the
classroom environment that offers the best education model,"
McCarthy said in a statement.
U.S. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, a Democrat, said on Friday that
House committees were working to pass Biden's $1.9 trillion American
Rescue Plan legislation, which includes a $130 billion investment
that could help schools follow the CDC protocols, to help schools
enforce the CDC's guidelines.
"Without strong assistance from Congress, our schools cannot afford
to enact the science-based safety precautions required," Pelosi said
in a statement.
(Reporting by Gabriella Borter in Boca Raton, Fla., Jarrett Renshaw
in Philadelphia and Trevor Hunnicutt in Washington; Editing by
Colleen Jenkins, David Gregorio and Matthew Lewis)
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