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Kentucky officials detail guidance for reopening schools including requiring masks and unlimited days for at-home learning

Back to school during Covid-19 pandemic with classroom setting of apple on books to signify education, and bottle of hand sanitizer and face mask on table. Concept of new school measures to contain coronavirus outbreak. Copy space on chalk board.

Kentucky Gov. Andy Beshear and members of his administration released a document Thursday that will serve as a guide for local school districts as they develop plans to reopen schools in the fall.

As school’s reopen, the local districts will develop their own plans for what the next school year will look like for their students and families. However, the Beshear administration has developed a “flagship document” that identifies safety expectations and best practices to be used by the districts.

At a press briefing Wednesday, Acting Education Commissioner Kevin Brown said the items in the plan are things that Kentucky has been discussing since the start of the COVID-19 pandemic and the best practices are areas state officials would love to see implemented but there will be some flexibility.

Guidance in the document includes:

Jacqueline Coleman, Kentucky’s lt. governor and Kentucky Education and Workforce Cabinet secretary, said the items laid out in the document focus on ensuring the safety of not only students but also those who work in the schools and families in Kentucky communities and noted the importance of flexibility for local districts to innovate.

A memorandum was approved Wednesday, Coleman said, that temporarily suspends statutes like the 10 day limit on NTI days to grant an unlimited number of those days to districts in the event they have to close schools because of a spike as well as suspends the average daily attendance model that deals with school funding, so it doesn’t adversely impact their funding if students have to learn from home as a result of the pandemic.

Additionally, Coleman stated she is writing a letter to the other education secretaries across the country to sign on to ask the federal government for additional CARES funding as well as changes to the way education funding is done at the federal level.

More guidance for school reopening will be coming from the state level in coming weeks.

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