Superintendent Ciaccio and HFM area school superintendents urge NYS to adopt CDC social distancing guidelines

Area school superintendents have come together to ask state officials to ease COVID-19 restrictions and make it easier for schools to return students to the classroom. 

Superintendents serving the Hamilton-Fulton-Montgomery BOCES region, including FFCS Superintendent Ciaccio submitted a united letter this week to state officials. The letter asked that classroom social distancing standards be reduced from six to three feet.

The following letter was submitted to New York State Department of Health Commissioner Howard Zucker:

Dear Dr. Zucker:

The superintendents of Hamilton-Fulton-Montgomery BOCES are united in our desire to see an easing of COVID-19 classroom social distancing restrictions in line with the guidelines issued by the CDC on March 19, 2021. We also believe that a consistent application of quarantine orders should be utilized by all New York counties.

Reduce classroom social distancing standard from six feet to three feet

In addition to the CDC’s updated guidance, which reduces the classroom distancing standard from six feet to three feet, a number of other recent developments indicate that it is safe to reduce the requirement. These developments include:

  • Local health departments allowing student participation in high-contact interscholastic athletics
  • An increasing number faculty and staff receiving COVID-19 vaccinations
  • Decreasing virus transmission in our region

During the last 12 months, the reduction of in-person learning and lack of access to other school supports have disproportionately affected economically disadvantaged students, students with disabilities, students of color, and those who do not have strong internet connectivity. It is time to return to in-person schooling for all of our students, and we ask that the minimum six foot separation rule in classrooms be reduced to three feet to allow all students to return to daily in-person instruction for the remainder of the 2020/21 school year.

The current six foot separation rule severely limits our ability to offer an optimal educational experience to students across the spectrum. Over the past year we have seen a sharp decline in attendance, engagement, performance, and growth. There is no question that our students are suffering as a result of diminished educational opportunities. We will only be able to begin to ascertain the academic, social and emotional damage done when all of our students are consistently attending school once again.

We believe students can safely return to in-person learning by applying the same standards used by counties to determine high risk sports participation with a distancing requirement set at three feet. Should a county’s positivity rate rise above 4% for a seven day rolling average, schools would revert to the six foot requirement.

Thank you for your attention to this matter. We understand that the pandemic has been extremely difficult to navigate, and we appreciate the hard work and leadership provided at the state level.

Sincerely,

The Superintendents of Hamilton-Fulton-Montgomery BOCES

Richard Ruberti, Greater Amsterdam School District

Stephen Tomlinson, Broadalbin-Perth Central School District

Nick Fitzgerald, Canajoharie Central School District

Michelle Ellis, Edinburg Common School District  

Thomas Ciaccio, Fonda-Fultonville Central School District

John Bishop, Fort Plain Central School District

David Halloran, Gloversville Enlarged School District

William Crankshaw, Greater Johnstown School District

Heather Philo, Lake Pleasant Central School District

Christopher Harper, Mayfield Central School District

Leslie Ford, Northville Central School District

Adam Heroth, Oppenheim-Ephratah-St. Johnsville Central School District

Richard Rose, Piseco Common School District

Thomas Sincavage, Wells Central School District

Nicole Dettenrieder, Wheelerville Union Free School District

David Ziskin, Hamilton-Fulton-Montgomery BOCES