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Newsom, Lawmakers Reach Deal To Reopen Schools; LAUSD Hopes To Bring Back Students By Mid-April

SACRAMENTO (CBSLA/AP) — Students in Los Angeles County could be headed back to school within weeks after an agreement announced Monday between Gov. Gavin Newsom and the state's legislative leaders that could give California's public schools $6.6 billion if they return to in-person instruction by the end of March.

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A YMCA staff member assists a child as they attend online classes at a learning hub inside the Crenshaw Family YMCA during the Covid-19 pandemic on February 17, 2021 in Los Angeles, California. - While many area schools remain closed for in-person classes, the learning hub program provides structured distance education resources including free WiFi, electricity, staff support, academic tutoring, and recreation activities to provide a safe environment to support low income and minority communities. (Photo by Patrick T. FALLON / AFP) (Photo by PATRICK T. FALLON/AFP via Getty Images)

California, the most populous U.S. state, has 1,037 public school districts, more than 6.1 million students and about 319,000 teachers.

Most public school classes have not been held in-person since March of last year because of the coronavirus. Many districts have struggled to reach agreements with teachers' unions on the best way to return students and staff to the classroom.

RELATED: LAUSD Opens COVID Vaccine Site At SoFI Stadium Monday For Education Staff Only

Newsom, who could face a recall election later this year spurred by his handling of the coronavirus, has been at odds with legislative leaders on the best way to encourage school districts to return students to the classroom. California can't order schools to return to in-person instruction, but state officials can offer a lot of money to those that do.

The agreement sets aside $6.6 billion for schools that return to optional in-person instruction by March 31. The bill is a deal between Newsom, state Senate President Pro Tempore Toni Atkins and Assembly Speaker Anthony Rendon, all Democrats. It was confirmed by Atkins' office. Newsom's office has scheduled a formal announcement for late Monday morning.

RELATED: Teachers, Food Workers Now Eligible To Get Vaccinated In LA County

The details of the plan are complicated and were confirmed by two state officials with knowledge of the plan who spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak about it publicly.

California counties are divided up into different coronavirus infection level tiers, with each tier having specific rules about how businesses and other public spaces can operate during the pandemic.

To be eligible for this new money, school districts in regions that fall under the most restrictive level — known as the purple tier — must return to in-person instruction at least through second grade, the officials said.

LAUSD Supt. Austin Beutner was among the first people to get a COVID-19 vaccine at the district's new site outside SoFi stadium in Inglewood.

"We expect to do that in time to welcome students back to campuses in the middle of April," Beutner said.

Vaccinating all teachers is one of the primary demands from UTLA, the teachers union, which today welcomed the effort to more efficiently vaccinate all teachers.

"We are here in full support of this effort," said UTLA's Arlene Inouye. "We have felt that vaccination is one of the important and essential components to return to school safely."

Newsom is promising 25,000 doses for LAUSD staff in the next two weeks, in addition to the 17,600 doses allotted to the district from LA County in that time.

The hope is to vaccinate 42,600 LAUSD staff by mid-March.

But on Monday night, UTLA blasted Newsom's proposal to tie funding to reopening.

"If you condition funding on the reopening of schools, that money will only go to white and wealthier schools that do not have the transmission rates low-income Black and brown communities do," Cecily Myart-Cruz, UTLA president, said. "This is a recipe for propagating structural racism."

Districts must also have in-person instruction for special populations of students in all grades, the officials said, including the disabled, foster youth, the homeless, English learners, students without access to technology and students at risk of abuse and neglect.

Districts in the next highest tier, the red tier, must return to in-person instruction for all elementary school grades, plus at least one grade in middle and high school, the officials said.

The money will be distributed through the normal funding method that provides local districts with state money, the officials said, which would ensure more money for schools that serve primarily low-income students. In addition, the officials said districts would get an additional $1,000 for every homeless student they have.

To get the money, districts must meet the requirements by March 31, the officials said. Beginning April 1, for every instructional day school districts do not meet the requirements, the amount of money they are eligible to receive will go down by 1%, the officials said.

The bill would not require all students and staff to be vaccinated before returning to the classroom. And it would not require districts to get approval from teachers' unions before returning, the officials said.

The officials said testing is required for schools in the purple tier. But school districts that have already reopened or have plans to reopen in March would be exempt from testing requirements, the officials said.

(© Copyright 2021 CBS Corp. The Associated Press contributed to this report.)

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