WASHINGTON—The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention on Friday released updated guidance to provide educators a science-based plan for reopening K-12 schools.
The agency said it cannot force schools to reopen but can only stress that steps such as wearing masks and physical distancing of at least 6 feet are key to mitigating the spread of coronavirus.
“CDC is not mandating that schools reopen,” CDC Director Dr. Rochelle Walensky said during a briefing with reporters.
Walensky added that educators should be considered front-line workers in any vaccine rollout. Teachers unions have made similar demands before returning to the classroom.
“We strongly encourage states to prioritize teachers and other school staff to receive vaccinations,” she said.
In Georgia, educators are not currently eligible for the vaccine. Gov. Brian Kemp has defended that decision, saying there is not enough supply to inoculate the older Georgians, health care workers and law enforcement personnel who are first in line for the shots.
Walensky said that the agency found that in-school learning can take place when proper measures are taken, such as mask wearing and social distancing. The agency also said that frequent hand washing, proper cleaning of classroom surfaces and ventilation, along with contact tracing and available rapid testing, are all steps that schools can take to limit outbreaks.
House Education and Labor Chairman Bobby Scott (D-Va.) said in a statement that in order for schools to implement the CDC guidance, they need funding from the Biden administration’s $1.9 trillion coronavirus relief package. Congress is working to pass the plan and Scott’s committee has included $130 billion for schools to safely reopen.
“Maintaining physical distancing, updating and repairing ventilation systems, purchasing personal protective equipment, and other important safety measures all cost money that schools do not have,” Scott said. “This is particularly true for schools in low-income areas that lacked adequate funding well before the pandemic.”
Similarly, the Department of Education released a handbook to coincide with the guidance released by the CDC.
Walensky said that most COVID-19 clusters that occurred in school settings occurred because there was a breach in wearing a mask.
The CDC stressed that the safest way for schools to reopen is for there to be a low level of coronavirus infection in the community. The guidance uses a color-coding system to recommend if schools should reopen or continue remote learning.
Schools are recommended to open if they are in blue areas, which means there are low transmission rates of the virus, and yellow areas, which means there is moderate transmission.
If the community is in an orange zone, then the CDC recommends that schools implement a hybrid model or reduce attendance. And a red zone indicates that schools should consider virtual learning for middle and high school students.
In red zones, elementary schools can continue with a hybrid learning model, the CDC said.
The recommendations follow President Joe Biden’s efforts to get k-8 students back to in-person learning within his administration’s first 100 days.
At a Friday briefing, White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki said that Biden’s nominee to lead the Education Department will work to reopen schools. Miguel Cardona, a longtime educator, is waiting for a full Senate vote for his confirmation.
“When Secretary Cardona is confirmed, you know, this will be his top priority and we will leave it to him and his team at the Department of Education, working in close partnership with the CDC and others, to determine how quickly and efficiently” schools can be reopened, Psaki said.
American Federation of Teachers President Randi Weingarten said in a statement that she felt confident the CDC’s guidance will help schools safely reopen.
“For the first time since the start of this pandemic, we have a rigorous road map, based on science, that our members can use to fight for a safe reopening,” she said.