Schools

Parents Raise $39K To Sue Bucks Co. School For Mask-Optional Rule

Five Bucks County school districts started the new year Monday with a mask-optional policy in effect for all students.

BUCKS COUNTY, PA — One Bucks County school district that started the new year Monday with a mask-optional policy is now facing a federal lawsuit from parents.

The Central Bucks School District’s board of education voted last week against adopting universal masking requirements, despite public health officials at all levels urging school districts to mandate mask-wearing for the start of the 2021-22 school year.

The board voted after hearing from 30 parents who were evenly split on the mask mandate issue. Some parents likened mask mandates to child abuse and threatened to sue the school district if the board adopted stricter mitigations for students.

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Council Rock Keeps Mask-Optional Policy For Start Of School Year

Though the board avoided potential litigation from that set of parents, its decision to stick with a mask-optional policy has put the school district at the center of a federal lawsuit from parents whose children have special needs, the Philadelphia Inquirer reports.

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The parents who filed the suit allege the Central Bucks School District’s health and safety plan, which includes the mask-optional policy, violates their children’s rights under the Americans with Disabilities Act, the report states.

At least four other Bucks County school districts — Council Rock, Bensalem, Pennridge and Quakertown — also opened their doors to students Monday with a mask-optional policy in effect. Students are required to wear masks in New Hope-Solebury, Pennsbury, Bristol Borough, Bristol Township and Palisades, as well as at Neshaminy elementary schools.

Bucks County Community College Launches COVID Vaccine Incentives

Parents are asking a federal judge to order the Central Bucks School District to require masks and comply with public health guidelines from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the American Academy of Pediatrics.

“Since the CBSD school board did not pass the excellent proposed health and safety plan following the CDC and AAP guidance, a lawsuit will be moving forward very quickly, ideally before school starts, where the case will go to court,” Susan Lipson, an organizer of the lawsuit, said on a GoFundMe page seeking help with legal costs.

As of Monday afternoon, the fundraising campaign has brought in more than $39,000 from more than 300 donors since its creation last week. Organizers are aiming to raise at least $40,000 to cover legal costs related to the lawsuit.

Ron Feldstein, who donated $2,000 according to the campaign page, noted many other school districts in the region have mandated masks, and he questioned the Central Bucks school board’s reasoning.

“No masks will only close CBSD schools down,” Feldstein wrote on the page. “The short-sightedness is frightening.”

Lipson lauded the Central Bucks community Friday after raising tens of thousands of dollars for the lawsuit in just a few days.

“Together we have made a phenomenal statement that we need to follow CDC and AAP guidelines to keep the children, teachers and staff in our schools safe as well as prevent the spread of COVID in our community,” she wrote on the page.

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