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School Climate & Safety

Aging Buildings. Poor Ventilation. What Will It Take to Keep Coronavirus Out of Schools?

By Daarel Burnette II 鈥 August 12, 2020 5 min read
Custodian Joel Cruz cleans a desk in a classroom at Brubaker Elementary School, last month in Des Moines, Iowa. School districts are spending millions of dollars on specialized cleaning products and protocols to instill confidence that buildings are safe for in-person instruction.
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Every Thursday at 11 a.m., Tulsa鈥檚 school facilities director, Sue Ann Bell, appears live on the district鈥檚 Facebook page to show parents the extraordinary and very expensive efforts her staff is making to fight off the coronavirus when students return.

In one episode that鈥檚 garnered more than 2,000 views, Bell, along with a Spanish-language translator, walks the glistening hallways of Anderson Elementary School, detailing how her staff has repeatedly scrubbed the walls, floors, lockers, and door handles, installed Plexiglas around the front office secretaries鈥 desks, and placed signage in the hallways urging students to stand six feet apart, wear a mask, and wash their hands.

She then enters the school鈥檚 now spaced-out library where a janitor hoses down chairs with BioSpray, a hospital-grade disinfectant known to kill 99.9 percent of bacteria.

鈥淲e want to be ready,鈥 Bell says, staring into the camera.

America鈥檚 schools are on average more than 44 years old, aging buildings that can host thriving colonies of bacteria, lead, and mold. Kids are often taught in classrooms that are either freezing cold or burning hot. Flu outbreaks are frequent.

Now, administrators are being asked to fight off the coronavirus, which causes COVID-19, a much more contagious and lethal airborne disease than the flu.

Over the last couple of months, directors of school facilities have gotten a crash course on the dynamics of building-, personal protective equipment, and effective cleaning chemicals. They鈥檙e also wading into public relations work, deployed by their bosses to be the messengers-in-chief on health and safety protocols.

Bell, who manages a sprawling portfolio of real estate, has seen all sorts of things during her 25 years tending to Tulsa鈥檚 82 schools, including tornados, floods, and dust storms. (鈥淵ou never know what Mother Nature is going to throw at you,鈥 she said.)

See Also: What Needs to Change Inside School Buildings Before They Reopen

But nothing, she said, comes close to the coronavirus. The research keeps evolving, the guidance keeps changing, and parents鈥 fears keep ramping up.

鈥淚鈥檓 working seven days a week trying to prepare for this,鈥 Bell said.鈥 鈥淢y mind is constantly asking, 鈥榃hat are the areas that we鈥檙e not thinking about?鈥 and that鈥檚 what keeps me up at night.鈥

Days before schools were set to open for hybrid learning, Tulsa鈥檚 school board voted to keep buildings closed until the local infection rate declines.

Air Ventilation Needs Are 鈥楿rgent鈥

The coronavirus, several researchers have concluded, spreads more rapidly in crowded, poorly ventilated areas where there鈥檚 heavy breathing or shouting and can stay in the air and on surfaces for several hours.

With students returning to school, even in smaller groups on a part-time basis, experts have raised concerns that school buildings will only exacerbate infection rates.

The hallways are narrow, classroom space is limited, and students, loud and rambunctious, touch everything, including each other. Not all schools are, or will, require students to wear masks, despite compelling evidence that face coverings are one of the best preventions against spread of the virus.

Districts have been required by states to overhaul their cleaning strategies and they鈥檝e pledged to more frequently deep-clean buildings.

Their primary concern, though, is air ventilation.

The U.S. Government Accountability Office said in a in June that, in order to prevent the spread of the coronavirus, more than 41 percent of school districts need to update or replace their heating, ventilation, and air conditioning systems in at least half their schools.

鈥淭he need is urgent,鈥 said Corey Metzger, the chair of the schools team for ASHRAE鈥檚 epidemic task force.鈥疉SHRAE, a professional group for heating, refrigerating, and air-conditioning engineers, has put out for schools to prepare for the coronavirus.

Metzger runs an engineering consulting firm in Ames, Iowa, that designs schools and helps school administrators keep their buildings up to code. This summer, he said, several districts have asked his team to help upgrade ventilation systems, a process that can run anywhere between 50 cents to $50 a square foot. Others see the price tag, gawk, and decide to open up their poorly ventilated schools anyway.

Cash for Facilities Is Scarce

All the readying it takes to reopen school buildings comes at a steep price many districts can ill afford.

Spending on facilities is one of the most inequitable and insufficiently funded corners of school finance.

A study in 2016 showed that the average school needs more than $4.5 million worth of repairs. Because more than 80 percent of capital costs are funded locally, whether a district has money to upgrade a building depends mostly on whether the surrounding taxpayers think it鈥檚 a good idea.

With districts facing sizeable budget cuts in the coming months, many administrators have either frozen or cut their school building maintenance costs, a less noticeable measure than teacher layoffs.

In 2015, voters in Tulsa passed a $415 million bond for the district, which serves a student population that is more than 80 percent low-income and 59 percent Black and Latino. A panel that monitors the spending of that bond this summer expanded its rules to allow for administrators to upgrade several of their schools鈥 ventilation systems, which cost the district around $2.7 million.

The district this summer also purchased 148 static sprayers, each costing $1,500 each, and $650,000 worth of new cleaning supplies, chemicals, and hand sanitizer, said , the district鈥檚 chief financial officer. He said he also anticipates having to pay for staff training and possibly overtime hours for maintenance workers.

The district this year has already cut $20 million from its budget and, without an infusion of federal emergency aid from Congress, anticipates more cutting soon.

Communications Is a Big Part of the Job

Bell and the district鈥檚 communications department decided to start the after hearing concerns among parents that school buildings won鈥檛 be safe.

During the sessions, which last around 20 minutes and take place throughout the city, Bell talks to bus drivers, maintenance workers, and HVAC contractors about ways they plan to prevent the spread of the virus.

She opens doors to show cabinets stocked with containers of disinfectant wipes now accessible to teachers, walks through classrooms to show spaced-out desks, and describes all the new chemicals they use to keep buildings germ-free. Throughout the sessions, which have garnered thousands of views, parents pepper her with questions about reopening plans.

鈥淲e want families to know that we鈥檙e doing things differently this year,鈥 she said.

A version of this article appeared in the August 26, 2020 edition of 91制片厂视频 Week as What Will It Take to Keep Coronavirus Out of Schools?

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