Schools
After 1st School Week, 9 Wash Heights Classrooms Closed For COVID
Juan Pablo Duarte, WHEELS, P.S. 128, and Success Academy, are among the Washington Heights schools that have recorded coronavirus cases.
WASHINGTON HEIGHTS, NY — As the first week of fully in-person learning since the pandemic comes to a close for New York City's public schools, 126 of the 65,000 classrooms across the city were either fully or partially closed due to coronavirus cases detected in the building.
That number includes at least nine classrooms in Washington Heights schools. The DOE map is often not completely updated.
Here are those local schools dealing with COVID-19 cases:
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Success Academy Charter School: 701 Fort Washington Avenue
- A classroom was closed on Sept. 15 and will remain closed until at least Sept. 23.
P.S. 132 Juan Pablo Duarte: 185 Wadsworth Avenue
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- A classroom was closed on Sept. 16 and will remain closed until at least Sept. 23.
WHEELS + JHS 143 Eleanor Roosevelt: 511 West 182nd Street
- Both schools within the same building closed a classroom on Sept. 16 and will keep them closed until at least Sept. 25.
P.S. 115 Alexander Humboldt: 586 West 177th Street
- A classroom was closed on Sept. 16 and will remain closed until at least Sept. 23.
P.S. 128: 560 West 169th Street
- The school had one classroom closed on Sept. 11 that is expected to reopen on Sept. 19, and closed another classroom on Sept. 16 until at least Sept. 25.
P.S. 8 Luis Belliard: 465 West 167th Street
- A classroom was closed on Sept. 15 and will remain closed until at least Sept. 24.
P.S. 4 Duke Ellington: 500 West 160th Street
- A classroom was closed on Sept. 17 and will remain closed until at least Sept. 25.
In total, 421 classrooms across the five boroughs have been closed down since the first day of school on Monday as the DOE tracked 560 coronavirus cases among students and staff, according to the map.
That number is less than 1 percent of the 65,000 spaces the city is using as classrooms this year. The city typically has around 48,000 classrooms, but added other spaces to help with social distancing, according to Mayor Bill de Blasio.
On Friday, 80 of the classrooms were still closed and 46 were under partial closure, the map shows.
No schools have had to be fully closed down since the start of the school year. Under new policies, entire schools will only be closed this year when there is evidence of "widespread transmission," as determined by the Health Department and Department of Education.
The first week of data comes as New York City welcomed back all 1 million of its public school students to the classroom for the first time since the pandemic struck, bringing all eyes to the ability of the city to deliver on its promise for the "gold standard" of health and safety in the 2021-22 school year.
On Friday, the mayor called the data a "strong start" to the school year.
"This is, thank God, relatively few against the comparison of 65,000 classrooms," the mayor said Friday. "We're seeing low positivity in the testing we're doing so far. It's a strong start."
On top of an intricate plan of vaccine mandates, social distancing and extensive cleaning policies, the city is trying out a new way to address coronavirus cases in schools given vaccine rates among older students.
Students who are vaccinated will be able to stay in their classroom even if a coronavirus case is detected as long as they are asymptomatic, leading to the partial closure of classrooms at the middle and high school levels. Unvaccinated students will quarantine at home and can "test back in" to class with a negative test after the seventh day.
In elementary schools, where children are not old enough to get the shot, the entire classroom will quarantine should a positive case be detected.
The mayor has called those rules a conservative approach to stopping the spread of the virus and noted it could change as the school year progresses.
"The standard we're holding right now is conservative," the mayor said Tuesday. "It's something that we have said explicitly we would reconsider depending on how things go over the first few weeks."
Patch reporter Anna Quinn contributed to this report.
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