In an interview Thursday, Jordan said he didn’t think the fans were an adequate solution.
“Members have been writing and calling with concerns about, on a cold day like today, will that cold air come into their rooms and will they be freezing in the classrooms?” he said.
School District of Philadelphia Superintendent William Hite said Thursday that the union’s request for mediation would not delay the return for some teachers Monday.
“It could possibly delay the return of students later,” Hite said. “But it will not delay our expectations for teachers to be in classrooms and they would only be in classrooms by themselves.”
The meditator will be on a tight schedule: staff who work with children in pre-K through second grade are due back to buildings Monday, with children in that age group allowed to return on Feb. 22 if their families opted for a return in a fall survey.
Hite’s call to return to classrooms aligns with city public health officials, as well as guidance from the Pennsylvania Department of Education, Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.