Home California State Superintendent Tony Thurmond Issues Statement in Response to Legislative Deal on School Reopening

State Superintendent Tony Thurmond Issues Statement in Response to Legislative Deal on School Reopening

by ECT

SACRAMENTO — State Superintendent of Public Instruction Tony Thurmond today issued the following statement in response to a legislative deal announced by Governor Gavin Newsom and lawmakers that is designed to help more schools open classrooms for in-person learning:

“There is no question that students learn best when they are together with their peers and educators in a physically and emotionally safe school environment. Our schools need every resource possible to implement the layered safety measures that will facilitate a safe return to in-person learning for students, school staff, teachers, and their families.

“I want to thank Governor Gavin Newsom and our leaders in the Legislature for crafting a proposal that will provide our school districts and educators additional resources to help resume safe in-person learning and invest in expanded learning and academic interventions to help students accelerate learning and recover from the impacts of this pandemic.

“Vaccines offer more schools their best chance at accelerating a return to in-person learning, so I am especially encouraged to see this proposal cements the Governor’s announcement that a portion of doses will be set aside for the education workforce. Until more people are vaccinated, I urge our school districts to continue to pursue and invest in rapid, robust coronavirus testing of asymptomatic school staff and students as a key safety measure to reducing potential spread.

“As larger numbers of students return to school campuses, the California Department of Education (CDE) will continue collaborating with equity leaders, practitioners, and educational stakeholders to design and expand strategies for supporting our state’s highest-need students, accelerating academic growth, and addressing learning gaps experienced during this public health crisis. My team looks forward to continuing to build out programs and professional development to support educators, expanding effective family engagement practices across the state, and developing tutoring, expanded learning, and other academic intervention strategies for students. In the coming days the CDE will be announcing the school district recipients of our latest round of mini-grants to target equity gaps in education, and we also will be opening up the submission process in our $1 million California Digital Divide Innovation Challenge to turn bold ideas into action that can ensure all California students have access to high speed internet once and for all.

“In the last few weeks we have seen more and more school districts across California announce plans and timelines to reopen their campuses as COVID-19 case rates fall and more people are vaccinated. While we are making encouraging progress, we have to heed the advice of public health leaders who say we cannot get complacent:  as communities, we must continue to practice common sense safety measures such as wearing face coverings and physical distancing so that we can keep infections low enough to return as many students as possible to the classroom.”

The California Department of Education is a state agency led by State Superintendent of Public Instruction Tony Thurmond. For more information, please visit the California Department of Education’s website. You may also follow Superintendent Thurmond on Twitter, Facebook, and YouTube.

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5 comments

Jg Mar 2, 2021 - 12:24 pm

This is a scam by the teachers unions. Holding money hostage to return to work that they are already getting paid for. Poor Newsom will give all our tax dollars to appease special interests.
More sad news for Californians. Reagan would have made them come to work or lose their job.

Robert C. Mar 2, 2021 - 3:19 pm

Ah, I was beginning to worry. We hadn’t seen one of Tony’s unnecessary “statements” for a while.

Michael R Sagehorn Mar 2, 2021 - 9:43 pm

JG- Pres/Gov Reagan would have likely died exposed to Covid. Teacher unions aren’t the policy makers. Counties and school districts make policies, not classified or certificated unions. President Reagan was personally responsible for killing 241 of my fellow Marines and Sailors- my friends and colleagues. Spare me your nonsense.

Robert C. Mar 3, 2021 - 4:51 am

Michael, your posts are always amusing. They never fail to completely soar away from the article topic into irrelevancy.

Michael R Sagehorn Mar 3, 2021 - 9:23 pm

Your lead-off commenter mentioned Reagan. Not as strong of a leader as you imagine. Had some good qualities, but not faultless. When its safe to return, we will likely resume instruction on school sites. Unions don’t make those decisions. You are correct in the sense that the Superintendent of Public Instruction has very few instructional or school management powers. Counties and local districts make decisions. The State Superintendent does not

Mr. Thurmond was an assemblyman from my district. He was termed out. I guess Robert you’ve assumed the role as the content manager. Good for you, mate.

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