Anonymous wrote:This is really scary. I work as a case manager with DC Medicaid. School is extremely protective for thousands of DC kids--it gives them food, daily structure (and time away from the chaos at home) and in some cases keeps them away from actual physical harm.
I have no idea what the council is thinking. This is going to be devastating to many DC kids whose parents don't or can't have their kids' best interest at heart. I know it's hard to imagine this but many parents make daily and long-term decisions that harm their kids. We saw this in the pandemic--tons of kids who were not schooled at all because there was no-one in the home to login them on, there were many parents who sold the school-owned devices, etc. And this was just the educational neglect (there is physical neglect, abuse, etc).
Anonymous wrote:I surely hope that a legal interpretation of that sentence would be that it only applies to students with the medical reasons (self or family member) referenced in the beginning of the paragraph.
Anonymous wrote:I surely hope that a legal interpretation of that sentence would be that it only applies to students with the medical reasons (self or family member) referenced in the beginning of the paragraph.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:From the Council's emergency bill:
"Further, students whose families who have made the choice to keep them home due to concerns 72 around the safety of the school environment and school buildings should be able to receive an excused absence from their school. The bill grants the school the ability to provide this excused absence through January 15, 2022."
https://legiscan.com/DC/text/PR24-0375/2021
Does that mean anyone can keep their kid home, not do any virtual learning (since just being concerned doesn't qualify you for virtual), not homeschool, and just have a semester of excused absence?
How...how is that legal?
Well, it would be legal in this case because the D.C. Council writes a law making it legal. Doesn't seem like smart policy, but I also don't know the considering kids truant if they're home due to health and safety concerns is a good alternative.
Anonymous wrote:From the Council's emergency bill:
"Further, students whose families who have made the choice to keep them home due to concerns 72 around the safety of the school environment and school buildings should be able to receive an excused absence from their school. The bill grants the school the ability to provide this excused absence through January 15, 2022."
https://legiscan.com/DC/text/PR24-0375/2021
Does that mean anyone can keep their kid home, not do any virtual learning (since just being concerned doesn't qualify you for virtual), not homeschool, and just have a semester of excused absence?
How...how is that legal?