Chicago mayor says public schools safe to reopen despite pandemic

Chicago mayor says public schools safe to reopen despite pandemic
Chicago's mayor says their public schools are safe, but teachers union calls for them to continue remote work due to the pandemic. Source: Scott Olson/Getty Images North America/Getty Images via AFP

The mayor of Chicago has said the US city’s public schools are “safe” and will reopen Monday, despite teachers union calls for them to continue remote work due to the COVID-19.

“We expect all of our teachers who have not received a specific accommodation to come to school tomorrow,” Lori Lightfoot said during a press conference.

“Those who do not report to work, and I hate to even go there, but we’re going to have to take action,” she said, without going into detail.

Special accommodations can be granted for those with high-risk family members, she said, while insisting that “our schools are safe.”

The state of Illinois, where Chicago is located, listed 2,428 new cases Sunday, officials said, with 40 deaths.


Chicago’s public schools serve more than 355,000 students — the third-largest school district in the US after New York and Los Angeles.

Chicago Public Schools (CPS) has clashed with the city’s main teachers union, which has told members to continue remote work out of safety concerns during the pandemic.

Lightfoot said the model for in-person learning follows guidelines from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, as well as the city’s health departments and the state of Illinois.

The plan is also backed by health experts, including top government scientist Anthony Fauci.

CPS chief Janice Jackson warned Sunday that without an agreement, access to the remote-learning programmes would be cut off after Monday.

The union has threatened to strike if the district locks teachers out of the programmes.

Reopening schools has been a source of major debate in the US, by far the hardest-hit country by the pandemic with 26,180,411 cases and 441,302 deaths.