BARCELONA (Spain): Check-in counters are empty at a terminal of Barcelona’s El Prat airport as authorities prepare to transfer all activity to one terminal with the decline in air traffic amid the pandemic.—AFP
BARCELONA (Spain): Check-in counters are empty at a terminal of Barcelona’s El Prat airport as authorities prepare to transfer all activity to one terminal with the decline in air traffic amid the pandemic.—AFP

NEW YORK: New York’s public schools closed on Thursday, sparking debate over whether the measure would help fend off a second coronavirus wave when classroom transmission is low and non-essential businesses remain open.

While European countries have so far kept schools open, focusing instead on shutting down indoor dining, bars and gyms, America’s most populous city has taken the opposite approach.

Mayor Bill de Blasio said on Wednesday the country’s biggest public school system, which teaches 1.1 million students, would revert to remote learning “out of an abundance of caution”. The announcement came after the city — where Covid-19 has killed more than 24,000 residents, most in the spring — recorded a seven-day average positivity rate of three percent.

“The data’s very clear that we have to keep our children safe, our educators safe,” de Blasio told CBS.

The move is controversial though, with parents pointing out that recent testing has shown that schools are not the source of New York’s spike in infections.

Officials say the positivity rate in schools is just 0.23 percent.

Almost 13,000 New Yorkers have signed a petition entitled “Keep NYC Schools Open” that campaigners and kids delivered to city hall and state Governor Andrew Cuomo on Thursday.

In it, they argue that officials are sacrificing children’s futures to keep non-essential businesses open.

Cuomo has warned that New York City could soon be designated an “orange zone,” which would trigger the shutdown of non-essential activities including indoor dining and gyms, but for now they remain open.

“Exercising in a gym is not more important than educating the next generation of our city’s citizens. Eating indoors is not less dangerous than students sitting six feet apart with their masks on,” reads the petition.

The parents also say the school closures, which don’t force private schools to halt in-person learning, discriminates against poor families who struggle to afford childcare and depend on free school meals.

“The effect this is having on our kids is going to last a lifetime,” Megan Cossey, the mother of an 11-year-old, said outside city hall.

More aggressive

New York’s 1,800 public schools first closed on March 16 when the city became the early epicentre of America’s virus outbreak.

They were initially shuttered until April 20 before being shut until the end of the school year as the pandemic engulfed the Big Apple.

They began reopening in September when New York became America’s only major city to commit to offering in-person classes as part of a hybrid system that included online learning. About 300,000 children returned to classrooms.

Many cities, such as Chicago, Houston, Los Angeles, Philadelphia and Miami, opted solely for the virtual model.

As a condition for teachers returning to classrooms, de Blasio’s government agreed with powerful teaching unions that schools would close again if the three percent threshold was crossed.

Michael Mulgrew, president of the United Federation of Teachers, defended the shutdown, noting that health experts say it is right to be extra cautious.

“We have to get much more aggressive on areas where children are coming into buildings because we want them to be safe and their families to be safe,” he told News 12.

Published in Dawn, November 20th, 2020

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