Schools
Desert Sands USD Gets Approval To Reopen Elementary Campuses
The approval was announced Tuesday as a result of the district's safety plan and Riverside County's falling coronavirus case rate.
COACHELLA VALLEY, CA — The Desert Sands Unified School District's transitional kindergarten through sixth-grade students may return to the classroom following news Tuesday that Riverside County’s adjusted daily coronavirus cases have dropped to less than 25 infections per 100,000 residents.
The DSUSD is one of four districts countywide that received the green light Tuesday from the county due to its approved COVID-19 safety-plan; state approval of the district's plan is anticipated, the county announced.
“The pandemic has had a major impact on education, like everything else, and as case rates currently continue to decline we can start getting more kids back in class,” Dr. Cameron Kaiser, Riverside County’s public health officer, said in a released statement. “But this can’t be without safety precautions or monitoring. Our districts and schools are committed to operating safely, and so am I.”
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The other three Riverside County school districts approved to reopen are Corona-Norco Unified School District, Murrieta Valley Unified School District, and the Palo Verde Valley Unified School District in the eastern desert.
Parents within the districts are asked to check with their school or district for more information on returning to in-person learning.
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The DSUSD had communicated it was eyeing a reopening for elementary students pending the falling case rate. More information from the district is expected to be released shortly.
The Riverside County coronavirus daily case rate has dropped to 16.6 infections per 100,000 population, according to Riverside University Health System. It needed to fall below 25 cases per 100,000 in order for elementary schools with approved safety plans to reopen, according to state guidelines.
A county schools' team, including Kaiser, "continues to review other districts’ safety plans expeditiously along with state review," the county said Tuesday in a news release.
“It has been a very difficult year for our teachers, students and parents. So many have been waiting for a return to in-person learning,” Riverside County Board Chair Karen Spiegel, Second District Supervisor, said in a released statement. “This is an important day for our students and entire education community.”
Schools previously open for transitional kindergarten through sixth-grade education under the earlier waivers process remain in operation, as do those schools that opened for all grade levels during the county’s brief period in the state’s red tier framework, Kaiser said. No public school district reopened under those scenarios.
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