fbpx

What Does Purple Tier Mean For Southern California Schools?

A student at Lee Elementary School tries to enter the school on the first day of hybrid classes.

Power lines in Aguanga (Kyle Grillot/LAist) A student at Lee Elementary School in Los Alamitos enters school on the first day of hybrid classes. (Chava Sanchez/LAist) Governor Gavin Newsom announced on Monday that all of Southern California is back in in the state’s most restrictive – or “purple” – coronavirus tier starting today.

So what does that mean for schools? A quick recap: when a county is in the purple tier, that indicates that there is “widespread” risk of spreading the coronavirus. When counties are in this tier, they are generally not allowed to reopen K-12 schools. For example, L.A. County has been in purple since the tier system was released, so there haven’t been any widespread campus reopenings.

There are two exceptions to this: while in purple, counties can decide to allow for small groups of students who need in-person learning the most – like students with special needs or students who are learning English, or their public health officials can consider waivers to reopen elementary schools. Once a county makes it to the red tier – which indicates “substantial” risk, but is less restrictive than purple – and remains there for two weeks, K-12 schools have permission […]

Click here to view original web page at laist.com

Add a comment

Leave a Reply

Keep Up to Date with the Most Important News

By pressing the Subscribe button, you confirm that you have read and are agreeing to our Privacy Policy and Terms of Use
Skip to content