Teachers unions resist reopening schools despite CDC guidance around

Teacher Martin Schall prepares for a online distance learning session with his students in an empty classroom at the Geschwister-Scholl school in Tuebingen, southern Germany, on February 11, 2021 amid the ongoing new coronavirus pandemic. (Photo by THOMAS KIENZLE / AFP) (Photo by THOMAS KIENZLE/AFP via Getty Images)

Teacher Martin Schall prepares for a online distance learning session with his students in an empty classroom. (Photo by THOMAS KIENZLE/AFP via Getty Images)

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UPDATED 3:25 PM PT – Saturday, February 13, 2021

As the reported number of children suffering from suicidal thoughts reached a record high, the city of San Francisco sued its own schools for not having a detailed plan to reopen.

The lawsuit filed at the San Francisco Superior Court Thursday cited a 66 percent increase in emergency room visits from children at a local hospital. A mother who was part of the city’s testimony said she found her daughter “curled up in a fetal position crying next to her laptop.”

“This is paralyzing our city and our residents,” San Francisco Mayor London Breed said. “And I know this is a drastic step, but I feel that we are out of options at this point.”

City officials explained these schools have been allowed to reopen since September, but district teachers wanted to be vaccinated before returning to in-person instruction. This contradicted the latest CDC guidelines, which stated schools can reopen without having teachers vaccinated as long as safety measures such as masks and social distancing stay in place.

SAN FRANCISCO - JULY 10: San Francisco city attorney Dennis Herrera looks on during a news conference July 10, 2006 in San Francisco, California. Gay and lesbian couples are appearing in the California state Court of Appeals today along with conservative religious leaders and the city of San Francisco to argue the constitutionality of same-sex marriage. (Photo by Justin Sullivan/Getty Images)

SAN FRANCISCO – JULY 10: San Francisco city attorney Dennis Herrera looks on during a news conference July 10, 2006 in San Francisco, California.( Photo by Justin Sullivan/Getty Images)

City Attorney Dennis Herrera argued continued distanced-learning is detrimental to the mental health of the district’s 54,000 students. Herrera added the school district has not released a detailed plan to reopen schools, which is required by law.

Republicans on Capitol Hill, including Rep. Jason Smith (R-Mo.), said Democrats want schools to open up, but are afraid to say so on the record.

“To be public and on the record, they are afraid of it,” Smith said. “Those teacher’s unions are so strong within the Democrat party that they’re afraid to push back on them”

Smith also criticized the Biden administration’s goal to have 50 percent of schools open for in-person learning, at least once a week by his 100th day in office. The lawmaker noted Biden needs to “follow the science and encourage all these state and local leaders just to reopen schools.”

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