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A group of North County public school parents sued Gov. Gavin Newsom and other state leaders, saying the state’s reopening rules are unfairly preventing their districts from bringing students back for in-person learning and that their children are suffering because of it.
Parents from five North County districts Carlsbad Unified, San Dieguito Union High, Poway Unified, Oceanside Unified and San Marcos Unified are trying to overturn state rules issued last month that are preventing some districts from reopening their middle and high schools until San Diego County gets out of the most-restrictive, purple tier.
The Parent Association of North County San Diego also is trying to overturn rules that require a minimum of four-feet distance between students in classrooms and that require students learn in stable groups rather than change classes, which they say is difficult for middle and high schools.
Local parents take legal action over states school reopening plan
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OCEANSIDE (KUSI) – In a unanimous decision Oceanside Unified School Board voted to begin returning only some elementary students to partial in-person learning by mid-March, leaving out the many hopeful middle and high school students.
The board passed a motion pre-approved by teachers and staff that will allow elementary students receiving SPED services to return to hybrid split-day learning on March 8. On March 15, general education students will then be able to return in the same hybrid learning model.
“They have $51 million right now that they could use to put our kids back in school and they aren’t doing it,” said frustrated parent Todd Maddison participating in a rally ahead of the meeting. “I’m here because the district needs to pay more attention to what works for parents and their kids not necessarily of what works for itself.”