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NYC mayor: Public schools will be all in person this fall

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Copyright 2021 The Associated Press. All rights reserved

FILE In this March 24, 2021 file photo, Melissa Jean reads "The Gruffalo" to her son's pre-K class at Phyl's Academy, in the Brooklyn borough of New York. New York City schools will be all in person this fall with no remote options, Mayor Bill de Blasio announced Monday, May 24. (AP Photo/Mark Lennihan, Pool, File)

New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio promised a return to normal next fall for the nation's largest public school system, announcing Monday that classrooms will open for in-person instruction in September with no remote option.

“It’s time for everyone to come back,” said de Blasio, a Democrat. “It’s time for us all to be together. It’s time to do things the way they were meant to be done. All the kids in the classroom together getting a great education from educators who care, staff members who care."

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De Blasio said the roughly 1 million students who attend traditional public schools will be in their classrooms with some version of the coronavirus protocols that have been in place in the current academic year, including mask wearing and COVID-19 testing.

After closing schools in March 2020, New York City was one of the first large U.S. cities to reopen school buildings in the fall of that year, but the majority of parents chose online-only learning for their children.

Children and staff members who have been in physical schoolrooms have been randomly tested for COVID-19, and the city has reported very low rates of virus transmission in the schools.

The head of the union that represents city teachers signaled it would accept the plan, saying there was “no substitute for in-person instruction,” though it said some students might still need a remote option next fall.

“We still have concerns about the safety of a small number of students with extreme medical challenges," said Michael Mulgrew, president of the United Federation of Teachers. ”For that small group of students, a remote option may still be necessary.”

Asked about the mayor's decision Monday, New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo, who has clashed with de Blasio throughout the pandemic over who has the right to set COVID-19 rules, also suggested he was on board.

Cuomo, a Democrat, said he anticipated schools statewide would fully reopen in September, “unless there is a dramatic change in the COVID trajectory.”

“We’re going to set a statewide policy which will govern all school districts. But if you ask me today, by the current trajectory that we are on, I think there’s no reason why every school shouldn’t be open in September.”

The governor didn't address whether the state would allow districts to continue remote learning for students whose families don't want them to return to classrooms.

De Blasio, who outlined his plan for September at a virtual news briefing after first announcing it on MSNBC's “Morning Joe," said city educators would reassure parents who have kept their children home for fear of the coronavirus by inviting them to visit schools and see how safe they are.

“Anyone who has a question or concern, come into your child’s school. See what’s going on. Get the answers," the mayor said.

De Blasio said declining COVID-19 infection rates and rising vaccination rates mean that a remote learning plan will no longer be necessary.

“We can’t live in the grip of COVID the rest of our lives,” de Blasio said. “It is going to be in our past as a crisis. It may be yet another disease out there like the flu and other things but it will be manageable.”

Mark Cannizzaro, the head of the union that represents principals, said in a statement that "with the proper resources and support, our schools will continue to be safe, and the return of all staff for in-person instruction will allow schools to properly program in advance.”

The announcement came as officials elsewhere in the country were promising a return to classrooms.

Los Angeles Unified School District officials will offer five-day-a-week, in-person learning next fall, but they expect a few students will still need a remote option, Superintendent Austin Beutner said Monday.

“Some students and some staff members may need to stay at home until all at schools are vaccinated due to health reasons because they live with an immune-compromised family member,” Beutner said, adding that he expects the majority of students and staff to be at school every day.

New Jersey Gov. Phil Murphy announced last week that the state's public schools would open for in-person learning only in the fall.

De Blasio said city schools would be able to accommodate all students under current guidelines from the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention that call for 3 feet of separation, but he speculated that the standard may be relaxed before schools open Sept. 13.

The school plans come as state and local officials try to entice people hesitant to get vaccinated with incentives ranging from free beers to scratch-off lottery tickets.

Cuomo on Monday announced at Jones Beach that anyone who gets vaccinated in New York through the end of the month can receive a free two-day pass to any state park. The governor also announced that 15 state parks in New York will open pop-up COVID-19 vaccination sites.

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Associated Press writer Michael Hill contributed from Albany, New York.


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