North Carolina lawmakers on Wednesday finalized a mandate for school districts to offer daily in-person instruction to K-12 students, some of whom have been kept out of classrooms for nearly a year due to COVID-19 safety worries.
The House’s 77-42 vote approving the compromise measure with the Senate — which voted for the same bill Tuesday — sends the legislation to Democratic Gov. Roy Cooper’s desk. The passage now sets up the year’s first public showdown between Republicans, who control the legislature, and Cooper, who can sign the bill, veto it or let it become law without his signature.
Rather than supporting the legislature’s mandate, Cooper instead is strongly urging any remaining school boards for the state’s 115 districts yet to reopen to offer at least some in-person classes, citing health guidance showing it can be done safely.
Bill supporters want classrooms swiftly reopened, saying students are risking academic failure and mental health difficulties should they have to remain at home for the rest of the school year. While the bill still allows parents to keep their children learning virtually, districts would have about two weeks after the measure is enacted to reopen schools for families who want classroom learning up to five days a week.
In a news release before Wednesday’s vote, Cooper didn’t specifically announce he’d veto the bill but expressed unhappiness with the measure, suggesting it was too restrictive. The measure also would allow children in grades 6-12 to return to classrooms without complying with state guidelines that direct 6 feet of social distancing among students in this age group.
“Children should be back in the classroom safely and I can sign this legislation if it adheres to (state) health safety guidance for schools and protects the ability of state and local leaders to respond to emergencies,” Cooper said. “This bill currently falls short on both of these fronts.”
While many mostly large districts have kept children at home, some systems have responded since Cooper’s request by opening classrooms again. Thousands of Wake County high schoolers returned to classes Wednesday for the first time since last March. Charlotte-Mecklenburg high school students also will return to class starting next week on a rotating basis.
Even though several House and Senate Democrats joined all Republicans in voting for the measure this week, getting enough Democrats to override a Cooper veto and hand him a defeat has proven challenging for the GOP over the past two years. Republican majorities fall short of being veto-proof.
Some teachers, especially those at high-risk for COVID-19, have expressed fear about returning to in-person classes. Cooper announced last week that teachers, principals and school staff of all ages could get vaccinated starting Feb. 24. Vaccine supplies may prevent immediate access to the shots, which aren’t a prerequisite under the state’s safety standards for classrooms.
The final measure, approved Wednesday in the House with little debate, directs local school boards to create a process where teachers and staff can self-identify as high-risk for COVID-19, with a goal of giving them alternative work assignments that minimize face-to-face contact. Teachers or staff with sons or daughters who are at high-risk for the virus also could take on alternate responsibilities.
 
Photo via Casey Toth/The News & Observer and AP.
 
									                                                                        Related Stories
‹

Test Scores Show Historic COVID Setbacks for Kids Across USWritten by COLLIN BINKLEY The COVID-19 pandemic spared no state or region as it caused historic learning setbacks for America’s children, erasing decades of academic progress and widening racial disparities, according to results of a national test that provide the sharpest look yet at the scale of the crisis. Across the country, math scores saw […]
 
Online School Put US Kids Behind. Some Adults Have Regrets.Written by BIANCA VÁZQUEZ TONESS and JOCELYN GECKER Vivian Kargbo thought her daughter’s Boston school district was doing the right thing when officials kept classrooms closed for most students for more than a year. Kargbo, a caregiver for hospice patients, didn’t want to risk them getting COVID-19. And extending pandemic school closures through the spring […]
 
‘I Didn’t Really Learn Anything’: COVID Grads Face CollegeWritten by COLLIN BINKLEY Angel Hope looked at the math test and felt lost. He had just graduated near the top of his high school class, winning scholarships from prestigious colleges. But on this test — a University of Wisconsin exam that measures what new students learned in high school — all he could do […]
 ![]()
Survey: Even as Schools Reopen, Many Students Learn RemotelyWritten by COLLIN BINKLEY Large numbers of students are not returning to the classroom even as more schools reopen for full-time, in-person learning, according to a survey released Wednesday by the Biden administration. The findings reflect a nation that has been locked in debate over the safety of reopening schools during the coronavirus pandemic. Even as national […]
 
CHCCS, Orange County Schools Adopt Updated In-Person Learning Models for K-5 StudentsWith new mandates in place from the state government, Orange County Schools and Chapel Hill-Carrboro City Schools recently made changes to their plans of in-person instruction for elementary school students. The Orange County Schools Board of Education unanimously approved a variation to the Plan A learning model during its meeting Monday night, which will see […]
 
Cooper, Legislative Leaders Announce Deal on K-12 SchoolsWritten by GARY D. ROBERTSON Democratic Gov. Roy Cooper and Republican legislative leaders announced compromise legislation Wednesday that will mean more K-12 students in North Carolina will return to daily in-person instruction, some almost immediately. The agreement, announced in a rare bipartisan news conference by some the state’s most powerful leaders, comes nearly two weeks after […]
 
Veto Override of NC School Reopening Bill Fails in SenateThe state Senate failed on Monday to override Democratic Gov. Roy Cooper’s veto of Republican legislation that would have directed North Carolina’s K-12 school districts to offer in-person instruction to all students in about two weeks. The 29-20 floor vote to override fell just short of the three-fifths majority required, so the veto was upheld. […]
 
Summer School To Counter COVID Online Learning Ok'd by NC HouseAll North Carolina school districts would be required to offer in-person summer school that targets children at risk of academic failure due to poor virtual learning during the pandemic, according to legislation approved unanimously by the House on Wednesday. The bipartisan measure envisions roughly six weeks of instructional time, offered by current or retired teachers […]
 
NC Republicans Back Program for Students Lagging From VirusChildren who have struggled to adapt to virtual learning during the pandemic would be greatly helped by a summer school program designed to target K-12 students in North Carolina at risk of academic failure, House Speaker Tim Moore said Tuesday while unveiling the proposal. Moore and other House Republicans are backing legislation that would require each local […]
 
North Carolina Lawmakers Finalize In-Person Instruction MandateNorth Carolina lawmakers on Wednesday finalized a mandate for school districts to offer daily in-person instruction to K-12 students, some of whom have been kept out of classrooms for nearly a year due to COVID-19 safety worries. The House’s 77-42 vote approving the compromise measure with the Senate — which voted for the same bill Tuesday — […]
 ›