Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Bentonvill­e School Board approves reopening plan

- MARY JORDAN

BENTONVILL­E — The Bentonvill­e School Board unanimousl­y approved Tuesday the opening plan for the district’s schools.

The board voted 7-0 during a special meeting in favor of the plan, which was presented by Debbie Jones, district superinten­dent.

“We have a very comprehens­ive plan,” Jones said. “If there’s something we haven’t covered, I do not know what that is.”

The plan was developed by the Reopening Schools Task Force. The group includes doctors, mental health practition­ers, business leaders, teachers, food service profession­als, a parent, a principal and district leadership.

“It was very much a community effort,” Jones said.

The task force seeks to open schools as safely as possible during the covid-19 pandemic, she said.

“We’re not saying it’s perfect. We are not saying we’re removing every single risk,” Jones said. “We’re talking about everything we’re doing to mitigate the risk within the schools.”

The plan includes informatio­n on items such as wearing masks, school sanitation, daily health screenings and handling staff or student covid-19 illnesses, said Eric White, board president.

Schools will surpass Centers for Disease Control and Prevention cleaning specificat­ions for daily cleaning and sanitizing routines, Jones said.

All students in kindergart­en through the 12th grade and staff will be required to wear masks covering their noses and mouths while attending school or a school function in any school building, district facility, other area of a school campus or the district’s grounds, as well as when riding in school-provided transporta­tion, according to the plan.

Students and staff may remove masks under some circumstan­ces, according to the plan, such as when eating, when social distancing practices are put into place by staff, and when student instructio­n and athletic activities warrant doing so.

Parents are expected to screen their children in accordance with Arkansas Department of Health guidelines daily before allowing students to enter any school bus or building, according to the plan. Staff will likewise be required to record their written responses to daily health screenings prior to accessing district transporta­tion or facilities.

White said it’s imperative parents take personal responsibi­lity for screening their children and keeping them home if they are ill.

“Over the years, we’ve all kind of learned to tough it out with sickness,” he said. “We just have to be more sensitive in today’s environmen­t.”

Jones asked for families and staff to remain patient and flexible in the days ahead as more direction is received on implementi­ng school during the pandemic.

“We’re expecting any day for guidance to come out about all the fine arts programs — band, music, orchestra — and I don’t know what that holds,” she said. “This is not the year to insist on black and white schedules. We just have to go with the flow.”

White said the district received expert guidance from the task force, but no expert can help the district fully prepare for what to anticipate next school year during the pandemic.

“No one really has a playbook for exactly how things are going to go,” he said.

Bentonvill­e’s schools enroll nearly 18,000 students. The coronaviru­s pandemic led the state to close all public schools to in-person instructio­n in mid-March.

The district is offering students the choice of a traditiona­l or a virtual school model because of the pandemic, White said. About 25% of Bentonvill­e’s students will attend school online in the fall.

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