![]() We have IMMEDIATE slots available for full-day infant/toddler care and full-day preschool! Slots are limited, so don’t wait! You can also watch the news outlets for the "Child Development Council of Franklin County" on the closure announcements.ĪRE YOU A WORKING PARENT? ARE YOU IN SCHOOL OR TRAINING FULL TIME? We will send out communications via agency email and the automated text system. Please be mindful that CCS will not be in session on Wednesdays for the remainder of this school year and CDCFC will make decisions for those snow days accordingly. Chicago Public Schools canceled classes last week after the Chicago Teachers Union suspended a walkout, and schools reopened Wednesday.CDCFC will revert back to our normal Inclement Weather Procedure and follow the decision of Columbus City Schools for weather-related school closures. Other COVID news: Ohio National Guard deployed to help with COVID-19 testing site in ColumbusĪcross the country, teacher unions in cities such as Chicago and Los Angeles have either called for or considered calling for a push to online learning. The move to virtual learning was recommended by district administrators due to a spike in COVID-19 cases in the region. "Many buildings are reporting HVAC issues and are operating with little or no heat in the cold weather."Ĭincinnati Public Schools board of education voted Monday to shift all students to virtual learning for two weeks starting Wednesday. "Even when educators can cover enough classes, reported staffing shortages in transportation and food service are causing late buses and inadequate distribution of meals to students,” the letter states. The union said in its letter that Columbus City Schools has between a 20% and 30% substitute fill-in rate for absent educators. If there are HVAC issues, we are addressing those issues." ![]() More: Which Columbus-area schools have gone remote?ĭixon said at the briefing that the district "will continue to provide the PPE that school buildings need. The CEA said a two-week pause on in-person learning would allow the district to "secure and distribute proper masks, deep clean our buildings and potentially make repairs to the HVAC systems that are not working." Individual schools have been moved to remote learning because of staffing issues, Dixon said.Ĭolumbus City has increased the number of schools moved to remote learning due to those staffing issues from three at the beginning of this week to a dozen by Thursday. In its letter, the CEA agreed the best learning happens in person, but wrote “we strongly believe that the best way to ensure maximum in-person learning in the coming months is to combat the current surge with decisive action today.”ĭuring its first week back from winter break, Columbus City Schools experienced a high of 24 schools closed in one day due to staff shortages, and it went completely remote at the end of the week due to absences of transportation workers. More: Ohio to send COVID-19 tests to schools, pause other distribution amid shipment delays “We know that in-person learning is the best and the safest place for our students, and we will continue to make sure we are learning in person as much as possible.” “We are committed to in-person learning as much as possible,” she said. More: Teachers union calls on Columbus City Schools to go remote for two weeksĬolumbus City Schools Superintendent Talisa Dixon said at a media briefing Wednesday afternoon that she had not yet received the letter. ![]() the same day, is … unsustainable,” CEA president John Coneglio wrote in the letter. “The current model of daily decisions to open some schools on below-skeleton staffing and close others, sometimes as late as 6:30 a.m. It was signed by more than two-thirds of the union’s 4,200 members. The letter was delivered to the district Wednesday after being sent to Columbus Education Association (CEA) members on Tuesday. More than 2,800 teachers in Columbus City Schools have signed a union letter demanding the district pivot to remote learning for two weeks as COVID-19 hospitalization and case numbers continue to increase in Franklin County. ![]()
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