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Adams: How to Avoid Needless COVID School Closings & Treat All New York City Students Equally

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The week of Oct. 5 to 9, 2020, proved a roller-coaster nightmare for New York City parents, as Mayor Bill de Blasio announced that, due to rising COVID-19 positive cases, he would be closing all schools 鈥 public, charter and private 鈥 along with other 鈥渘onessential businesses鈥 in select zip codes on .

Not so fast! Gov. Andrew Cuomo interjected. Closing schools isn鈥檛 your call, it鈥檚 my call! And I say 鈥 ! (to paraphrase)

Then, on Wednesday, New York State announced that even more schools would be closed on . Which schools?

Well, that depends on whom you ask.

The governor released .

The mayor鈥檚 office released .

If seasoned education reporters were ripping their hair out …

鈥 you can imagine how parents felt. Less than 24 hours before the first bell, many still didn鈥檛 know whether their school would be open come Thursday morning. (Some received calls during the day, others not until after 8 p.m. on Wednesday.)

Matters got when it became obvious that children who lived in areas with higher infection rates could still travel to schools outside those neighborhoods if that鈥檚 where they were enrolled, as could those 鈥 including teachers 鈥 who worked in other areas. With nonessential businesses closing in the hot zones, didn鈥檛 that mean that people would be going farther afield to fulfil their needs? Where was the containment, exactly, in this scenario?

On Tuesday, Oct. 12, the Department of Education鈥檚 press secretary, Miranda Barbot reported:

Some criticized that the sample set was so small as to be meaningless in a school district with over 1 million students. The DOE promised that , this time on the periphery of Brooklyn and Queens鈥 hot zones, would be assessed next. Meanwhile, parents of children in schools with no positive cases were furious that they were being forced to remain closed.

The New York State Catholic Conference on behalf of the Archdiocese of New York and the Diocese of Brooklyn, , 鈥淪hould our schools be ordered closed by the state absent any significant COVID-19 outbreaks because of inferior protocols at non-Catholic schools?鈥

Public school parents from schools where not a single positive case had been reported , saying, “We, as parents, came to school under the agreement that the school would shut down on a case-by-case basis. If there are positive cases, then the school should shut down. … This community is very separate from what’s going on. The people in this community are following all the rules, the school is being incredibly careful.鈥

The 鈥渢his community is very separate from what鈥檚 going on鈥 comment, as well as the emphasis that 鈥減eople in this community are following all the rules鈥 likely refers to other areas of Brooklyn. Many of the 鈥渞ed zones鈥 where COVID cases have been spiking include Orthodox Jewish neighborhoods where, as reported:

The governor has used photos of packed crowds of Orthodox Jews this week to make the case for imposing restrictions in certain areas. On Wednesday, Mr. Cuomo defended the new rules, noting that the virus test positivity rate in the state鈥檚 hot spots was about 5 percent, compared to 1 percent in the rest of the state. 鈥淭o the extent there are communities that are upset, that鈥檚 because they haven鈥檛 been following the original rules,鈥 he said. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 why the infection spread, because they weren鈥檛 following the rules and the rules weren鈥檛 being enforced.鈥

The perception outside those areas seems to be: Why not go directly to those schools that you believe are violating the health code, write up a report on their infractions and shut them down? Why institute collective penalties on everyone in the vicinity?

When the Department of Health drops in on restaurants (hey, who remembers restaurants?) and deems them in violation of multiple hygiene codes, it posts a big, ugly F in the window and closes the place down (yes, ). It doesn’t close down other restaurants on the block.

I have written 鈥 over and over and over again 鈥 about how education can鈥檛 be and shouldn鈥檛 be one size fits all.

Neither should school closings.

Instead of drawing arbitrary lines (in some neighborhoods, they literally run down the middle of blocks) and announcing that everyone on one side will be treated one way while everybody on the other will be treated another, am I really proposing something so radical when I suggest that the Department of Health assess every school individually?

Don鈥檛 make an appointment, just drop in unannounced. Look around. Are students鈥 desks 6 feet apart? Is everyone wearing a mask? Are there adequate cleaning supplies? Is there ventilation? Is food being handled safely? Are they taking students and teachers鈥 temperatures? Performing random nose swabs for COVID infection?

If the answer is no, shut the place down right then and there. And issue a fine. People tend to be highly motivated by financial penalties.

But if the answer is yes, let the kids keep learning. (Considering the predicted learning loss from last spring and this fall alone, kids desperately need to be in class.)

To avoid accusations of , visit every school, whether public, charter, private, Catholic, Jewish, Hindu or Muslim, and evaluate each on the exact same terms. Make those terms clear and transparent, the way the Department of Health does with restaurant inspections. List the violations 鈥 heck, take pictures of any issues 鈥 then enumerate what the schools need to change in order to be deemed in compliance.

When I say treat all the schools the same, I don鈥檛 mean, 鈥淚f we close one, we close them all.鈥 That鈥檚 not fairness. That鈥檚 facism.

I mean hold all schools to the same standard. It鈥檚 how we can dream of the Department of Education treating students. Why shouldn鈥檛 that also apply to the Department of Health and schools?

Alina Adams is a New York Times best-selling romance and mystery writer, the author of Getting Into NYC Kindergarten and Getting Into NYC High School, a blogger at and mother of three. She believes you can’t have true school choice until all parents know all their school choices 鈥 and how to get them. Visit her website, .

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