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Kansas City’s Coronavirus Numbers Are So Bad Schools Will Probably Have To Close Again

A classroom at Pawnee Elementary in the Shawnee Mission School District set up for in-person learning.
Rosalie Schard/Shawnee Mission Post
A classroom at Pawnee Elementary in the Shawnee Mission School District set up for in-person learning.

It’s looking ever more likely that Kansas City-area schools will have to close again, this time for lack of teachers.

In Shawnee Mission and other districts, that day is fast approaching.

“Your staffing is just going to get so stressed to the point that (keeping schools open) will not be feasible,” Johnson County Department of Health and Environment epidemiologist Elizabeth Holzschuh told the Shawnee Mission School Board on Tuesday.

With roughly 400 new coronavirus cases per day in Johnson County, contract tracers can’t keep up.

Shelby Rebeck, the health services coordinator for the Shawnee Mission School District, said school nurses are working 20-hour days. But they’re still struggling to identify close contacts because the community refuses to help.

“These are real people who are contact tracing,” Rebeck said. “Real human beings, nurses who work in our schools, and when they are berated by parents, or parents who just flat-out say, ‘I am not going to speak to you, I am not going to participate in this contact tracing,’ it is frustrating. It is scary. We’re scared for our teachers.”

Shawnee Mission has 74 staff members in quarantine. That number that doesn’t include teachers out on medical leave or those who’ve retired or resigned because of the pandemic.

Since July 1, 52 certified staff members have left the district. Michael Schumacher, the interim assistant superintendent, said it’s usually fewer than five.

Schumacher also said Kelly Services, the staffing agency that provides substitutes to most school districts in and around Kansas City, is having trouble keeping up with unprecedented demand. On Monday, nearly a quarter of all substitute teacher requests went unfilled.

That’s after Kansas and Missouri relaxed the rules for who can substitute teach during the pandemic.

School board member Laura Guy said every day she hears from teachers who feel the situation is untenable. Last week, when Johnson County coronavirus cases spiked, many teachers told her they expected the district to go back to remote learning.

Yet the health department said schools could remain open.

“(Teachers) are feeling a lot of heightened anxiety, especially now that we’re in the red zone,” Guy said. “Teachers that had chosen to teach in-person didn’t think they’d be teaching in-person while we were in the red zone.”

Board President Heather Ousley said she’s worried schools won’t be able to reopen after Thanksgiving break because of the uncontrolled community spread of COVID-19.

"We told you we would give you two weeks' notice,” Ousley said. “I'm telling all the parents of this district right now that this community did not get its act together."

Copyright 2021 KCUR 89.3. To see more, visit KCUR 89.3.

Elle covers education for KCUR. The best part of her job is talking to students. Before coming to KCUR in 2014, Elle covered Indiana education policy for NPR’s StateImpact project. Her work covering Indiana’s exit from the Common Core was nationally recognized with an Edward R. Murrow award. Her work at KCUR has been recognized by the Missouri Broadcasters Association and the Kansas City Press Club. She is a graduate of the University Of Missouri School Of Journalism. Elle regularly tweets photos of her dog, Kingsley. There is a wounded Dr. Ian Malcolm bobblehead on her desk.