You are reading

Cuomo Unveils COVID-19 Requirements That Must Be Met for Schools to Reopen

(Flickr/ Office of Governor Andrew Cuomo)

June 13, 2020 By Allie Griffin

Governor Andrew Cuomo unveiled the requirements that each county must meet before their schools are permitted reopen in the fall.

Cuomo said that schools would be allowed to reopen in regions that are in Phase IV of the state’s reopening plan and where the daily infection rate remains below 5 percent on a 14-day average.

New York City currently has has an infection rate of between 1 and 2 percent and is in Phase III of reopening. The city is eligible–upon approval– to enter Phase IV of reopening as early as July 20, following the state’s two week per phase schedule.

Mayor Bill de Blasio has said that New York City schools would reopen in September and detailed his reopening plan last week. However, Cuomo has repeatedly said it is the state’s decision whether to open schools in the fall.

He said the state will make the call the first week in August based on the requirements announced today.

“Everybody wants to reopen the schools, I want to reopen the schools,” Cuomo said. “It’s not do we reopen or not — you reopen if it is safe to reopen.”

He said the decision must be based on the data, which determines whether the coronavirus is under control in each region.

“If you don’t have the virus under control, than you can’t reopen [schools],” he said. “We’re not going to use our children as the litmus test and we’re not going to put our children in a place where their health is endangered.”

However, if there is a spike in COVID-19 cases after schools are approved to reopen, Cuomo said he reserves the right to close them. Schools will be closed, he said, if the regional infection rate surpasses 9 percent on a seven-day average after Aug. 1.

Cuomo also detailed state health guidelines for schools, including face mask requirements.

Each school district is responsible for developing an individualized COVID-19 reopening plan.

New York City schools will offer a mix of remote and in-class learning under its plan, de Blasio announced last week. Most students will have in-person classes two to three times per week and on the remaining days they will rely on remote learning.

email the author: news@queenspost.com
No comments yet

Leave a Comment
Reply to this Comment

All comments are subject to moderation before being posted.

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

Recent News

‘From worst to best’: LaGuardia named top U.S. airport by Forbes Travel Guide

Forbes Travel Guide named LaGuardia Airport as the nation’s best airport in October based on a survey of 5,000 hospitality and travel experts and the guide’s most well-traveled fliers.

On Tuesday, Port Authority executive director Rick Cotton accepted the Verified Air Travel Award in the recently completed Terminal C. The award is the latest in a long list of accolades given to LaGuardia throughout the course of the airport’s $8 billion transformation project that began in 2016.

Second teen arrested for fatal stabbing of 14-year-old outside Sunnyside McDonald’s last month: NYPD

A second teenager was collared for the fatal stabbing of a 14-year-old boy during an after-school brawl at a Sunnyside McDonald’s restaurant last month.

Members of the NYPD’s Regional Fugitive Task Force arrested a 16-year-old boy in the confines of the 110th Precinct on Thursday morning and transported him to the 108th Precinct in Long Island City, where he was booked for the murder of Julian Corniell of 159th Street in South Jamaica on the afternoon of Friday, Feb. 14.