Schools

Cuomo Ready to Make Decision on Schools This Week, Says Schools Should Plan on Opening

Gov. Andrew Cuomo says he's ready to make the decision on reopening schools this week - but some 50 districts had not yet submitted their reopening plans to the state

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New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo says he will make the decision this week on whether to open schools for in-person instruction in the fall. Anjali Hemphill reports.

New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo says he's ready to make an initial decision on reopening schools this week.

"Schools should plan on reopening," Cuomo said via conference call Saturday morning, one day after his July 31 deadline for the districts.

It has been five months since the state's first recorded case of the coronavirus, and New York continues the churn further into reopening practices while keeping some measures in place to protect the progress made since the pandemic's peak in the tri-state just a couple months ago.

Whether or not New York schools resume in-person instruction in the fall, a number of parents are expected to keep their children home to continue instruction through the remote learning started at the beginning of the pandemic. Anecdotally, Cuomo says his office has received a flood of phone calls from parents concerned about plans to reopen schools.

"The discussion assumes if the schools open all the parents will send their kids back to school. That is not the case," Cuomo said.

The concept minimizes bottlenecks at the main entrance, assures proper screening -- and is just one of many changes aimed at keeping everyone healthy when classes resume in September. News 4's Rana Novini reports.

Remote learning may not be the perfect answer to safety concerns, however, as each district deploys different strategies and resources for its students.

"Remote learning, if not done well, can be a vehicle of division. Remote learning tends to work better in the wealthier school districts and tends to work less well in poorer school districts," Cuomo reflected on the call.

Cuomo gave all school districts until July 31 to submit their plans to safely resume instruction and mitigate the spread of the virus. Of the 700 districts in the state, around 50, including New York City, had not formally submitted their plans, the governor said Saturday.

Mayor Bill de Blasio and Schools Chancellor Richard Carranza detailed the city's proposal late last week. Their's calls for reopening schools only if the percentage of citywide positive tests is less than 3 percent over a seven-day rolling average. If that percentage is equal to 3 percent or higher, schools will close. The city, along with the rest of the state, has seen just a 1 percent seven-day rolling positive test rate for weeks now.

The plan the city has drafted includes closing a classroom if one or more students from that class test positive for coronavirus and switching to remote learning for 14 days. If two or more students in different classrooms test positive, officials will close the entire school and enact remote learning for the same time period. If at least two children are infected and the link is unclear, the school will be closed pending the outcome of an investigation.

Daily Percentage of Positive Tests by New York Region

Gov. Andrew Cuomo breaks the state into 10 regions for testing purposes and tracks positivity rates to identify potential hotspots. Here's the latest tracking data by region and for the five boroughs. For the latest county-level results statewide, click here

Source: ny.gov

82,737 New Yorkers were tested for the coronavirus on Friday, a milestone for the state and daily record, Cuomo said. The positive rate of testing held at just below one percent.

Four additional people died from the virus, bringing the state total to 25,164.

Bar and restaurant compliance continues to be an issue for downstate officials. On Friday, 41 establishments across New York City and Long Island were issued violations related to the governor's coronavirus safety executive orders. Of the 41 bars and restaurants to receive violations, Cuomo said 27 were in Manhattan.

Seven more suspensions were ordered Friday, all within New York City.

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