In my experience, school superintendents are gracious and diplomatic when faced with hardships, whether dealt unexpected cuts in state aid, new regulations, or community uproars. Oh, they may vent in private but their public remarks are even-handed, focused on solutions and compromises. And they hardly ever ding a politician.
Judging by Twitter, they’ve reached their breaking point as Gov. Phil Murphy –seemingly by the day—changes rules for reopening schools.
First every student had to have some version of in-school instruction. Then every district had to offer every family full-time remote instruction while keeping schools open, regardless of how many children would actually show up. Then, this past Wednesday, Murphy said schools could open all-remote, with the codicil that each district planning to do so would have to show the state Department of Education the reasons why they can’t offer in-person classes, what they are doing to solve those problems, and when exactly they’ll open school buildings. He also —and this is important—left vague what liability the district would shoulder if students or teachers caught the coronavirus while requiring that all superintendents sign an attestation promising safety.
Richard Bozza, executive director of the New Jersey Association of School Administrator, the association that represents superintendents, said, “[t]here’s legislation that has been out there for colleges and universities to protect them. We believe schools should be included in that. The last thing we want to see is all that hard work, to do all of the things that are required to make (schools) safe end up in litigation.”
Murphy’s reply to this logical concern? “You heard our principles [in his administration’s decision-making]: health and safety, high-quality education, equity, and flexibility. Liability was not on the list.”
(There is an Assembly bill, proposed by Christopher DePhillips (R-Bergen), that would grant immunity to school districts if anyone catches COVID-19 but the NJ School Boards Association says “this bill does not grant immunity to any school district, nonpublic school, or person causing damage by his willful, wanton, or grossly negligent acts of commission or omission.” The bill is in its early stages. One other note: Lakewood attorney Michael Inzelbuch announced at the district’s public meeting this week that during the during the summer Extended Year Program, held in buildings with all precautions, a teacher was diagnosed with coronavirus.)
Back to Twitter-land. Here are some public comments made by our cadre of traditionally restrained New Jersey superintendents.
An abdication of responsibility @GovMurphy in the highest form today; straddling fence only serves to pit teachers against parents and schools against schools – all on the eve of opening! NJ’s Schools deserve better than this charade
— Superintendent Lavender (@Kingswaysuper) August 12, 2020
. @GovMurphy Reflecting on today's press conference.
— David Aderhold (@david_aderhold) August 12, 2020
Anytime health guidelines for public schools need to be "hammered out” 6 months into a global health pandemic and 3 1/2 weeks before schools open, there may be a reason to pause and ask yourself, what could possibly go wrong?
Murphy: Hey, don't blame me, I said that you can open the schools.
— Kevo_ess (@kevo_ess) August 14, 2020
The same guy who wants to micro-manage every other aspect of our lives is just throwing his hands up when it comes to schools. pic.twitter.com/hoGQVb2PmG
Dont know what to make of @GovMurphy press conference:
— Charles Sampson (@FRHSDSup) August 12, 2020
There is an attestation that legal counsel has advised most superintendents NOT to sign.
Remote was never an option. To pretend it was is disingenuous.
What certification? Its Aug 12.
If you want remote call it-This is chaos
The "vast majority" had hybrid because that's all that was allowed. Conveniently left that out.
— Charles Sampson (@FRHSDSup) August 13, 2020
. @GovMurphy Today's guidance hurt public education. Passes liability. Places districts against one another, and worse, communities against educators. To date there are no NJDOH guidelines for K-12 and the NJDOE plan uses the word consider* over 200 times. What are we certifying?
— David Aderhold (@david_aderhold) August 12, 2020
Murphy's School Plan:
— Kevo_ess (@kevo_ess) August 13, 2020
1. Schools can reopen.
2. Figure it out for yourselves and let us know what you plan to do.
P.S. I'm going to put out a list of requirements, and you'll have to sign an attestation so that I can't be held responsible if anything goes wrong.
I can attest to a few things, none of which are the guarantees the DOE (I think) is asking for. But I can attest that leaders own their decisions, they don't pass them off so others can shoulder the burden in their stead. #NJhungergames https://t.co/DNKPThFTKv
— Scott Feder (@SSfeder) August 13, 2020