I must vehemently disagree with Gov. Hogan's claim that "there is no public health reason" to keep many of our students learning virtually. /1 baltimoresun.com/coronavirus/bs…
As the only Baltimore senator on the Education, Health, and Environmental Affairs Committee, I join @Zeke_Cohen, @ElectRyanDorsey, and @CouncilmanKB and the @BTUBaltimore in voicing their concerns with the current plan to return students and teachers to the classroom. /2
While I certainly applaud BCPSS for the success they've seen in some of their smaller face-to-face instruction sites, a larger plan that brings teachers back into the classroom, unvaccinated and involuntarily, seems like far too big a risk to be taking this winter. /3
The new, highly contagious strain of COVID-19 has been identified in Maryland; only 25% of our city schools have functional upgraded HVAC systems that could guarantee the necessary air circulation for students and staff to remain safe; teachers will have to quickly adapt their /4
curriculums for both in-person and virtual learning; and estimates show that not all of Maryland's educational staff will receive the vaccine by even late spring. We must first implement the proper safety precautions before bringing our students and faculty back, /5
not install them as we go, or realize they are too insufficient as the disease spreads.
My colleagues & I held a hearing on this issue earlier this week, and I couldn't help but, again, feel the frustration that local jurisdictions are being left to their own devices to solve /6
the impossible problem of mitigating learning loss and keeping our treasured teachers, staff, and families safe. We need the sort of statewide leadership and coordination that we are now hopeful for at the national level, but we haven't been receiving it. /7
I encourage MSDE to listen to teachers and educational professionals on how to make schools safer for returning. /8
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Oh happy day! It feels as though every day we have endured recently has been historic, and oftentimes, painfully so - as though this global crisis we have been weathering, and the devastating apathy and vitriol we've felt, may never come to an end. /1
But today, in all the darkness and division, we saw a glimmer of not only the values America used to stand for, but also the glaring faults that we have allowed to linger in the shameful periphery of our history for too long - and the commitment to finally righting them. /2
I want to thank all those who have stood up for racial & economic justice in our classrooms and streets, in the voting booths and halls of government. You, who were inspired to continue fighting during the most fearsome of times, helped us reach this day for our nation /3
This year’s Martin Luther King, Jr. Day comes nearly two weeks after white supremacists stormed the Capitol building in an attempted coup & 2 days before Kamala Harris is inaugurated as the first Black woman and first person of Indian descent as Vice President. /1
It also comes after a hot, vocal summer where we witnessed the largest civil rights movement of our lifetime in the Black Lives Matter protests following the tragic deaths of George Floyd, Breonna Taylor, Ahmaud Arbery, and too many more. /2
I cannot shake this feeling that we have come so far and simultaneously moved so little.
Yet, I continue to find faith in the voices marching in the street that have grown louder, in the welcoming of one of the most diverse cabinets our federal government has ever seen, /3