Department of the Interior and Local
Government (DILG) Secretary Eduardo Año on Sunday opposed proposals to resume
the holding of face-to-face classes in schools at this time, saying it might
cause a spike in coronavirus disease (Covid-19) cases.
This, after
some lawmakers expressed the desire for the reopening of schools in some areas
of the country with minimal or no cases of Covid-19.
“Kapag
sinabi mong face-to-face na 'yung mga estudyante, you're talking of millions of
students, so wala ka nang kontrol diyan kapag sinabi mong face-to-face. Kapag
sinabi mo namang selected, ano naman ang criteria mo? (When you say
face-to-face (classes) of the students, you’re dealing with millions of
students, so we have no control over it when you say face-to-face. But when you
say selected, what are the criteria?),’’ Año said in a radio interview.
He also
pointed out that President Rodrigo Duterte had already pronounced that
face-to-face classes would not be allowed until the end of this year.
“So
sundin natin ang utos ng Pangulo. By January naman, marami naman tayong
pagbabago diyan (Let us follow the order of the President. By January, there
would be numerous changes),’’ he added.
In a
Senate hearing last week, Senator Sherwin Gatchalian, who chairs the Committee
on Basic Education, expressed support to the proposed localized and limited
face-to-face learning workshops to ease the burden of parents who are having
difficulty teaching their children at home.
He said
if massage parlors have already been allowed to operate, schools must also be
allowed to open for limited face-to-face classes, as he noted that the Covid-19
situation is getting better in some areas of the country.
Senators
Imee Marcos and Nancy Binay also noted that cockpit arenas and tourism sites
have also now reopened.
Despite
these arguments, Año still opposed the holding of “physical classes’’, saying
the enforcement of the minimum health standards will be extremely difficult to
control in schools.
Last
October, DepEd started its preparations for the limited face-to-face classes in
areas with no reported Covid-19 infections.
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