{"id":80188,"date":"2022-01-04T02:30:00","date_gmt":"2022-01-04T11:30:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.juneauempire.com\/news\/juneau-schools-to-reopen-monday-as-planned\/"},"modified":"2022-01-04T02:30:00","modified_gmt":"2022-01-04T11:30:00","slug":"juneau-schools-to-reopen-monday-as-planned","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.juneauempire.com\/news\/juneau-schools-to-reopen-monday-as-planned\/","title":{"rendered":"Juneau schools to reopen Monday, as planned"},"content":{"rendered":"
As businesses and schools announce delayed openings due to surging COVID-19 cases, Juneau’s public school students will return to school Monday, Jan. 10 — as planned — district officials confirmed Tuesday afternoon.<\/p>\n
“Our goal remains kids in classrooms,” said board president Elizabeth Siddon in a late Tuesday afternoon phone interview. She added that the district’s mask policy and other mitigation measures will remain in place as students return.<\/p>\n
“I, along with you, am watching carefully as we see the most recent version of this pandemic sweep across our country,” stated an email from Superintendent Bridget Weiss, which school officials shared with the Empire before it was released. “We have prepared for this and because we have made solid decisions along the way, we are ready to welcome students on Monday.”<\/p>\n
[City raises risk level amid surging COVID cases]<\/a><\/ins><\/p>\n Kristin Bartlett, chief of staff for the district, said that teachers and staff will start returning to schools this week.<\/p>\n “JSD is getting ready to welcome staff back for service on Thursday and Friday of this week, and then students next Monday as scheduled. There are no plans for virtual learning at this time,” Bartlett said in an email Tuesday afternoon. “As has been the case over the past two years, the Juneau School District will continue to monitor the pandemic and adjust operations and protocols as new information becomes available and new tools for prevention are accessible.”<\/p>\n The announcement comes a day after the Alaska Department of Health and Social Services reported a significant increase in the number of COVID-19 cases across the state, city officials reported that 12 staff members at Bartlett Regional Hospital are unable to work due to quarantine and isolation requirements and the City and Borough raised the city’s risk level to “Level 3-Modified High.”<\/a><\/p>\n When school officials developed the school calendar for the current school year, they purposefully added time to the back half of the holiday break with the expectation that many families may travel for the holidays after COVID-19 restricted many people from traveling last year.<\/p>\n The decision has paid dividends as schools around the country grapple with a return to classrooms amid a surge of cases and on the heels of holiday travel and gatherings.<\/p>\n “Our later return date allows us a longer buffer from holiday travel and gatherings,” Siddon said in a message to the Empire Tuesday afternoon. “Hopefully, this week buys us an opportunity to catch cases as people return,” she said.<\/p>\n Bartlett said the district is “echoing the city’s recommendation that travelers — including students, staff and families — get tested for COVID-19 upon their return to Juneau.”<\/p>\n