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Closing our schools for COVID has been disastrous for African American students. In 2023, the reading performance of Black students in Minneapolis Public Schools declined even further. Shame on the teachers union and the governor, who closed and kept closed the public schools despite overwhelming evidence that neither students nor teachers were at serious risk from COVID.
In pre-COVID 2019, only 22.8% of Black third-graders in MPS were proficient on the Minnesota Comprehensive Assessments-III reading test (and that is not a high bar if you have seen the tests as I have). This pass rate declined a whopping 37% to 14.4% in 2021. Now the 2023 number has dropped to 12.7%, a ginormous 44% lower than before the governor closed the schools. Where is the accountability for this monstrous failure to "follow the science"?
Gregory Pulles, Edina
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It is a sad time for school safety in Minnesota. Despite reassurances from Attorney General Keith Ellison, the Minnesota Peace and Police Officers Association (MPPOA) has decided to politicize school safety. Make no mistake, the MMPOA position on school resource officers is not about school safety, or even SRO safety — it's about politics. The MPPOA would have you believe its opposition to legitimate rules of engagement imposed by the Legislature is about ambiguity and the threat of lawsuits — let me say that again — lawsuits over how officers respond to events under contract to the schools, not the safety of students and staff.
That reasoning is disingenuous at best. Is there not ambiguity in every aspect of law enforcement? Is the MPPOA going to advocate not responding to domestic dispute calls because, well, ambiguity? What about the mantra that "while others run from danger, we run toward it"? For context, over the past few years the MPPOA has made a hard-right turn in its politics, endorsing many more Republican candidates than Democrats. The group has made it clear that there should be no limits placed on it by radical liberal politicians. It does itself a disservice by picking a partisan political side. Its primary purpose should be public safety, not as interpreted by either political party but as required by the environment. If putting SROs in schools enhances school safety, pulling them out, by definition, puts students and staff at risk.