California reaches deal to fund school reopening for youngest children
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[March 02, 2021]
By Dan Whitcomb
LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - California's
governor said on Monday he and Democratic lawmakers had reached a deal
to fund the reopening of schools for students up to second grade, as the
numbers of new COVID-19 cases in the state and country drop to their
lowest this year.
A Reuters tally shows that COVID-19 infections are decreasing in the
United States, with 68,240 new infections reported on average each day,
or 27% of the peak daily average reported on Jan. 7. The United States
has recorded 28,681,793 infections and 513,721 coronavirus-related
deaths since the pandemic began.
California's $6.6 billion budget package marks the latest effort by a
U.S. state to get school children back in class after nearly a year
confined to home learning by political leaders in the face of the
coronavirus pandemic.
"You can't reopen your economy unless you get your schools reopened for
in-person instruction," Governor Gavin Newsom, said at a Monday
afternoon news briefing announcing the agreement with Democratic leaders
in the state legislature.
But the deal does not include an order by Newsom, a first-term Democrat,
for public schools to open by a certain date, and the governor conceded
that negotiations may still need to take place with teachers' unions.
"We expect all of our transitional kindergarten to grade two classrooms
open within the next month," Newsom said. "And our core belief is this:
Once you dip your toe in ... once you build trust, then we will start to
see a cadence of reopening across the spectrum."
The $6.6 billion will partly pay for personal protective gear and
improved classroom ventilation. The deal would also make vaccinating
teachers and other school employees a priority in California, the
nation's most populous state.
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California Governor Gavin Newsom attends the opening of the
country's first federal and state operated community vaccination
site during the outbreak of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) in
Los Angeles, California, U.S., February 16, 2021. REUTERS/Mike Blake
NEWSOM CRITICIZED
Newsom has imposed some of the harshest restrictions of any U.S.
state on California's roughly 40 million residents, and many
businesses remain closed one year into the pandemic.
The governor, who was sharply criticized after he was photographed
eating at a posh Napa Valley restaurant late last year despite
ordering Californians to stay home, has seen his approval ratings
dip and is the subject of a recall effort.
Despite plummeting numbers of COVID-19 cases, hospitalizations and
deaths nationwide, most students across the United States remain
stuck at home as governors and local leaders seek to navigate
complicated political and logistical hurdles to reopen schools.
Public school students in many of Maryland's most populous areas
returned to in-class instruction on Monday.
"School buses are on the road this morning - a welcome sight as we
give more young Marylanders the opportunity to get safely back in
the classroom," Governor Larry Hogan said on Twitter.
New Jersey Governor Phil Murphy on Monday announced that as of March
15, pre-K-12 teachers and childcare workers would be eligible for
vaccination.
While New Jersey lags behind other states in making vaccinations
available to teachers, Murphy said two-thirds of classes are already
hybrid or completely in-person.
(Reporting by Dan Whitcomb; editing by Jonathan Oatis and Cynthia
Osterman)
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