"About 65 percent
of public school teachers in the U.S. belong to unions, and despite the
myriad challenges of teaching and learning remotely, it’s possible for
them to do their jobs online."
The Growing Fight Against the School Death Trap
Teachers,
bus drivers, health aides, and other school workers are organizing
against a culture that is trying to feed them into the jaws of the
pandemic.
A
special education teacher at a public high school in Queens remembers a
week in April when, almost every day, she learned another student at
her school had lost a parent or grandparent to Covid-19. Now she fears
reopening this fall—even with a hybrid learning model like the one proposed in New York—will trigger another wave of grief.
“I
feel like they’re sending me back to orphan my kids,” she told me,
asking to remain anonymous because she fears professional repercussions
for speaking out. She misses seeing her students in person, but all the
talk around opening in a masked, socially distanced, constantly
sanitized environment reminds her of “The Emperor’s New Clothes.” None
of the plans she’s seen seem realistic for her overcrowded school, and
she’s worried teachers will spread the virus to students and their
families, many of whom live in multigenerational households. She lost a
parent in high school and is horrified by the prospect of more kids
going through the same—and feeling complicit as “a vector of death.”
With more than 144,734 Americans lost to Covid-19, teachers and school staff around the country share her worries. A recent study
from South Korea found that young children can infect others, and kids
over 10 can spread the virus as effectively as adults. Of course,
schools cannot open without the workers who keep our education system
running—teachers, bus drivers, custodians, food service personnel,
paraprofessionals, school nurses, and others. Many fear that going back
will put them, their families, their students, and their communities at
risk. According to an Ipsos poll
conducted in May, nearly one in five teachers would quit if they had to
return to school this fall, and around half have considered leaving
their jobs. Some are writing their wills.
A
growing number of education workers are asking their school and union
leaders and elected officials to postpone reopening until the virus is
under control. A national movement, Refuse to Return,
calls for staff and students not to come back in person “until our
counties report no new cases of Covid-19 for at least 14 consecutive
days,” the outer window
in which experts say 99 percent of symptomatic people will develop
signs of infection. Since Harley Litzelman, a high school history
teacher and union organizer in Oakland, California, launched the campaign in late June, affiliated Facebook groups have formed in 26 states and the District of Columbia, and more than 80,000 people have signed the Refuse to Return petition. On July 27, local organizers are planning a Day of Action Against Pandemic Inaction, with car caravans, remote protests, and phone and email drives targeting their school superintendents and local and state officials.
Much of the discussion
around reopening has worked backward from the premise that schools must
provide in-person learning in some capacity. Litzelman wants to flip
that logic. For him, it’s not just about refusing to put himself, his
students, and his fiancée, who has asthma, at risk: It’s a rejection of
the idea that Americans must “normalize the constant death of our
neighbors” to keep the economy running as the pandemic rages on. While
an initial call to action directly addressed teachers, Refuse to Return
aims to engage nonteaching staff, parents, students, and “even people
unrelated to education, because ultimately this campaign is about
preventing greater community transmission everywhere.”
“It
is our responsibility to exercise our power as workers to force our
leaders to do what they have refused: end this pandemic,” Refuse to
Return’s sample resolution
reads. “Our demands are intrinsically tied to the movements for racial
justice, as Black and Brown communities have disproportionately borne
the brunt of this pandemic and will continue to do so if elected
officials force students and staff to return to campus before it is
safe.” According to CDC data,
Black and Latinx people in the United States are three times as likely
to contract Covid-19 as white Americans and almost twice as likely to
die from it. Litzelman sees connections between the pandemic, school shootings, and the water crisis in Flint, Michigan—all
lethal failures of a capitalist system in which leaders “acclimate
Americans to the idea that this is just something that we deal with.”
Litzelman
points out teachers have more leverage to stay home than many American
workers, including other school employees. About 65 percent
of public school teachers in the U.S. belong to unions, and despite the
myriad challenges of teaching and learning remotely, it’s possible for
them to do their jobs online.
In contrast, Sequoia, a
nonunion health tech who works alongside the school nurse at an
elementary school in Aurora, Colorado, is “between a rock and a hard
place” this fall. If a student or staff member becomes infected, “I will
be coming in direct contact with them when they come to the clinic, and
I will be around them for an extended amount of time,” she said. But if
her school doesn’t open for in-person learning, she doesn’t get paid.
Sequoia’s
paychecks continued after the school shut down this spring, since her
position was already budgeted, but her district, like many around the
country, is now facing a deficit.
Some of the ideas floated to reduce costs include “charging children to
use the school bus, upping athletic fees, getting rid of nurses and
replacing them with my position, which I think is completely crazy,
especially during a pandemic.”
She
and the school nurse share a small clinic and will have to borrow an
isolation room from another department. If they have more than two
people at the school showing symptoms, Sequoia doesn’t know what they’re
going to do. But at the same time, she can’t imagine not coming back to
her students if the campus opens. “It would be like abandoning the Titanic as it goes down. I’m like, that’s my ship, I’m going to go down with it,” she said.
Sequoia
joined a Facebook group affiliated with Refuse to Return and has
emailed Governor Jared Polis, asking him to make a decision about
reopening because she feels Colorado’s school districts are dragging
their feet. When the school year starts on August 17, she’d ideally like
to begin remotely, despite the fact that her son, who has autism and is
nonverbal, has struggled with online learning. “It is easier to bring a
child back up to their level than it is to bury a child,” she said. “So
if it means keeping the kids safe and they’re behind a little bit, then
so be it.”
Covid-19 is already killing school workers, even
before the doors open for fall. In Arizona, three teachers shared a
classroom to give virtual summer school lessons. Despite wearing masks,
sanitizing, and maintaining distance, all of them tested positive for the virus, and one, Kimberley Chavez Lopez Byrd, died in June. In Florida, Jordan Byrd
(no relation), a 19-year-old college student who worked as a school
custodian, recently died after contracting the virus. The school’s
principal and his wife, who is the principal of another school in the
area, both tested positive and experienced “relatively mild” cases.
“Our school family is devastated,” a teacher at Jordan Byrd’s school wrote on Facebook, according to a report in the Tallahassee Democrat,
“and this occurred with no teachers, paraprofessionals [or] students on
campus. If this disease spread in the school where masks were required,
social distancing, and other safety measures were in place, imagine
what it will look like when kids are arriving on buses, sitting in
classrooms, walking the crowded halls, and eating lunch with no masks.”
The Florida Education Association, which represents around 150,000
educators, including public school teachers and staff, is suing the state, arguing that returning to school before the virus is under control violates the state’s constitution.
Chuck
Paquette, a veteran school bus driver near Syracuse, New York, who’s
been in public school transportation for over 30 years, knows three
drivers who’ve decided to retire early rather than chance their health
going back to work. He says he’s no alarmist but is taking the risk
seriously: Though he recovered from Covid at home in March, he deals
with lingering effects and understands there’s a risk he could become
infected again. Even with a mild case, “I’ve never been that kind of
sick in my life.”
Paquette wonders about the logistics of
going back: What happens when a kid on his bus tests positive? If he has
to quarantine, will he be forced to use his sick days? Will he be given
masks to hand out when students inevitably arrive at the bus stop
without one? “What do I do when I’m driving down the road and Johnny
says, ‘Susie took off her mask?’” he said.
In Detroit, protesters blocked school buses from transporting students to summer school, which was offered in person on a voluntary basis. Two students were confirmed positive for the virus after an activist group, By Any Means Necessary, sued, and a judge ordered
the Detroit Public Schools Community District to test those attending
face-to-face classes. “There should have been a foot put down,
children’s lives in danger,” Todd Weems, a bus driver who quit, told Detroit TV station WXYZ.
Refuse to Return’s messaging doesn’t call for an actual strike—which is illegal for public school teachers in many states, though that didn’t stop a wave of walkouts in 2018—but Litzelman wanted the name to convey “a commitment to militant action.” While some unions, including United Teachers Los Angeles and the Chicago Teachers Union,
have called for a fully remote reopening and are advocating for broader
social justice policies, many “have not wanted to take as aggressive a
position as the one we have.”
However, he’s seeing the campaign language
get picked up around the country, and groups including Louisiana’s Jefferson Federation of Teachers and the Santa Rosa Teachers Association in California have adopted the central demand of “14 days, no new cases” before resuming instruction in person.
Around the country, educators are drawing on their collective power. In March, the threat of sick-outs
from rank-and-file teachers union members helped push New York City’s
schools to shut down as the virus spread. “When I look through the
literally thousands of posts in all of the different groups, we see
stakeholders and school staff of all varieties,” Litzelman said. “If we
all refuse to return, we will all protect one another.”