Many schools are still closed weeks after Hurricane Helene. Teachers
worry about long-term impact
Send a link to a friend
[October 16, 2024]
By JOCELYN GECKER, MORIAH BALINGIT and MICHAEL MELIA
Tens of thousands of students in the Southeast are dealing with school
disruptions after Hurricane Helene wreaked havoc so severe — on homes,
campuses and municipal power and water systems — that some districts
have no idea when they will reopen.
While virtual learning helped during the COVID-19 school closures, that
has not been an option for this crisis because internet and cellphone
service has remained spotty since the storm struck in late September. In
hard-hit western North Carolina, some districts warn students will miss
up to a month of school, and others say they can't yet determine a
timeline for returning to classrooms.
“I feel like a month is a lot, but it’s not something that can’t be
overcome,” said Marissa Coleman, who has sent her four children to stay
with grandparents in Texas because their home in North Carolina's
Buncombe County has no running water. “But if we get further into
Thanksgiving and Christmas, it’s like, how are they actually going to
make this up?”
In mountainous Buncombe County, Helene swept away homes, cut power and
destroyed crucial parts of the water system for Asheville, a city of
about 94,000 people. The storm decimated remote towns and killed at
least 246 people throughout the Appalachians, where massive cleanup
efforts have been complicated by washed-out bridges and roads. It was
the deadliest hurricane to hit the U.S. mainland since Katrina in 2005.
The Buncombe County School system, which serves over 22,000 students,
told families Tuesday on the district's Facebook page no decision has
been made "with regards to start date or length of day" because of a
need to repair buildings, restore phone and security systems and redraw
bus routes.
Even when schools reopen, educators worry the disruption could have
profound effects on students' learning and emotional well-being.
Children who experience natural disasters are more prone to acute
illness and symptoms of depression and anxiety, research shows. The
physical and mental health impacts put them at greater risk of learning
loss: Absences can undermine achievement, as can the effects of trauma
on brain function.
The challenges come amid growing concerns about the impacts of climate
change on students. Wildfires have swept through communities, displacing
families. Many school systems with inadequate heating or air
conditioning have closed during extreme weather or forced students and
educators to endure sweltering or frigid temperatures. According to the
World Bank, 400 million children lost school days because of
“climate-related closures" in 2022.
Days after Helene made landfall, Hurricane Milton roared ashore last
week farther south along the same Florida coast as a Category 3 storm.
While about half the state's districts were closed, all of them they
were planning to reopen by the end of this week.
Schools affected by Helene are trying to provide stability. The Buncombe
district has suggested parents trade books with neighbors and friends
for their kids. “Have them write, maybe about something they’re looking
forward to when school starts again,” the district told parents on
social media. “Turn everyday experiences into math problems.”
Cécile Wight, a mother of two in Asheville, said she has been grateful
for concern shown by schools including surveys checking on families'
well-being and an elementary school bus driver who took his own car to
visit each child on his route.
“That has been huge, just having the emotional support from the school
system and from the people we know at the school,” she said.
[to top of second column]
|
A view of damage in Asheville, N.C., is seen during an aerial tour
with President Joe Biden who looked at areas impacted by Hurricane
Helene near Asheville, N.C., Wednesday, Oct. 2, 2024. (AP
Photo/Susan Walsh, File)
But uncertainty remains. Wight said her family is able to stay at
their home because they have well water, but many other families
have yet to return since evacuating. Most of Buncombe's 45 schools
still lacked running water as of Tuesday, meaning they're unable to
meet basic safety and hygiene standards.
Schools have have begun exploring whether it would be possible to
open without running water, relying on portable bathroom trailers.
In a letter to families, Asheville Superintendent Maggie Furman said
the district is considering drilling wells at each school so they
don't have to rely on city water.
Coleman said her kids are eager for some kind of normalcy.
“I understand the schools are going to have to take some time to
find a way to open safely, and I support that 100%. But I definitely
am not in the camp of ‘We need to wait until we get water back,
until everything’s normal again to open.’ I just think that’s going
to be too long,” Coleman said.
The Tennessee Department of Education is still trying to determine
how many schools remain closed since Hurricane Helene and how many
took too much damage to reopen.
Echoing the COVID-19 pandemic, several schools in Tennessee have
postponed traditions like homecoming games, parades and dances. Many
colleges are also granting extensions on application deadlines,
officials say, to reduce high school seniors' stress.
In storm-drenched areas elsewhere, some early education providers
may never reopen.
Private child care and preschool centers are particularly vulnerable
in the aftermath of a natural disaster, said Militza Mezquita,
senior advisor for education in emergencies at Save the Children.
Many already operate on thin margins, meaning a temporary closure
can easily turn permanent. As for-profit companies, they are also
ineligible for many types of disaster aid. A natural disaster can
wipe out 10% to 20% of providers, Mezquita said.
“Child care recovery is very critical to the whole recovery
ecosystem,” Mezquita said, noting the people essential to recovery —
road workers, cleanup crews, doctors and nurses — often have young
children that need to be looked after. “If they are not able to
adequately get their children in care, they can’t go to work.”
Despite the instability, educators like Heather Smith, who was named
North Carolina’s Teacher of the Year in the spring, encourage
families to see the lessons storms can provide. Smith brought along
her two children, ages 8 and 4, to serve meals at her church.
“Our kids are learning so much every day, whether it’s about
adversity, whether it’s about helping a community,” said Smith, who
rode out the storm at her home in Waynesville.
Similarly, Wight has been taking her children to volunteer for
relief efforts at a school. She said it has helped them feel active
and involved in the community.
“If COVID taught us something, it's that we can make things work.
The kids are resilient,” Wight said. “They will eventually catch up
on the academic side of things.”
___
Associated Press writer Alia Wong contributed to this report.
All contents © copyright 2024 Associated Press. All rights reserved |