Credit: Genaro Molina/Los Angeles Times/Polaris
Venice High School graduate Kensei Ono, 18, waits for his turn to be photographed while his mother Susie holds a placard featuring her son while taking part in the Venice High School Class of 2020 Senior Graduation Parade in Venice in June 2020.
Credit: Genaro Molina/Los Angeles Times/Polaris
Venice High School graduate Kensei Ono, 18, waits for his turn to be photographed while his mother Susie holds a placard featuring her son while taking part in the Venice High School Class of 2020 Senior Graduation Parade in Venice in June 2020.
April 6, 2021
Hurtling toward the end of a hectic year, most K-12 and high school districts in California are intensely focused on reopening campuses and giving the Class of 2021 a final send-off to remember in June.
Fresno Unified reaches deal to allow students back for in-person learning starting April 6
Fresno Unified plans to start bringing back more students for in-person learning by Tuesday, April 6, Superintendent Bob Nelson announced on Tuesday.
KFSN
Share:
School staff will have access to vaccine by the end of March. All of them.
An agreement with FTA will give teachers a paid day to inspect their classrooms to ensure safety protocols are in place.
The district s plan is in accordance with Gov. Gavin Newsom and the state legislature s deal where public schools could tap into $6.6 billion if they return to in-person instruction by the end of March. Fresno Unified will be on spring break on April 1, with April 6 being the first day in the month students will return for instruction.
San Diego Unified School District Superintendent Cindy Marten, along with six other superintendents, wrote a letter to Governor Gavin Newsom, blasting his latest safe school reopening plan.
PALO ALTO, Calif. Governor Gavin Newsom revealed a new plan Wednesday to reopen California schools for in-person instruction as early as February.
While some are praising the news, others say this will make it harder for some districts to open.
The plan includes $2 billion in funding. Young elementary students and students with special needs would come back first.
The plan calls for increased COVID-19 testing and school staff and students would be required to wear masks. It s 15 times more likely for you to get COVID outside of the school setting than in a school setting, says Marin County Superintendent of Schools Mary Jane Burke.