Indianapolis officials wait to green-light schools reopening

A yellow school bus is parked in front of the brick building of Thomas Gregg Neighborhood School in Indianapolis, Ind.
A school bus outside Thomas Gregg Neighborhood School. (Alan Petersime for Chalkbeat)

While Indiana officials have given approval for schools across the state to return this fall, Marion County officials are delaying a decision about Indianapolis schools until they better know how the city’s gradual reopening has affected the spread of COVID-19.

State officials announced last week that school buildings will be allowed to reopen after July 1, but they left the final decision to districts and local health departments. The pandemic has struck Indianapolis particularly severely compared with the rest of Indiana, and the city has also been slower to reopen other institutions, such as restaurants and shopping. 

At a media briefing Thursday, Marion County Public Health Department Director Virginia Caine said she is “very optimistic” that schools will be able to reopen, and she aims to have a definitive answer by July 15.

Indianapolis Public Schools, the state’s largest district, is scheduled to return Aug. 3. 

The city is expected to move into Stage 4 of its reopening plan next Friday, which allows movie theaters, bowling alleys, and museums to reopen at 50% capacity. Restaurants, retail stores, and indoor religious services may increase capacity. 

City health officials have been meeting regularly with district superintendents and the archdiocese, which oversees most of the county’s Catholic schools, Caine said. She also aims to meet with other private schools and charter schools before reopening. 

Marion County schools are planning how they will address safety when they reopen. Indianapolis Public Schools officials said last month that they have several steps they will take, including offering a remote learning option and social distancing in schools. But some school leaders have been frustrated that the state is not providing more guidance on student health

Mayor Joe Hogsett said that public school superintendents are “understandably anxious” for guidance on reopening. 

“There’s just a lot of planning that needs to be done before opening day comes,” Hogsett said. Nonetheless, “we’re going to follow the data and obviously be as careful as is predictably and reasonably possible.”

The Latest

More than 1,450 staff at schools were laid off Friday. Budget documents posted online indicate the school-based workforce could shrink by more than 450 positions.

SNAP-Ed, which funds nutrition programs across New York City, will expire Sept. 30. Without it, families may have less fresh produce — and advocates worry about increased child hunger.

The money funds programs that support English language learners, tutoring, STEM education, before- and after-school services, summer school, and teacher training.

The City-County Council is weighing a longer curfew after recent gun violence that left five teenagers dead. Eleven local superintendents said the proposal ‘is not about punishment — it’s about prevention.’

An appellate court judge granted a motion to take up the school segregation case, which could bring a resolution sooner than if the case remained in trial court.

Some Detroit youth say they avoid large gatherings of young people because they fear fights will break out.