- Elizabeth Larson
- Posted On
More Lake County schools reopen for in-person instruction
Since the start of the school year, only two local districts – Upper Lake Unified and Lucerne Elementary – started all grades in the “hybrid” model that allowed for in-person instruction as well as distance learning, as Lake County News has reported.
The Lake County Office of Education reported that its schools also have been open since August for in-person classes, as has the Lake County International Charter School.
The rest of the districts at that point were in the distance learning model, and had been planning to reopen in the winter but had to remain in distance learning due to the county going into the purple, or most restrictive, tier on the blueprint at the end of November.
Even before the tier adjustment, elementary schools were able to open under the governor’s State Safe Schools for All plan, which focused on bringing the younger grades back first and phasing in other grade levels through the spring. The plan’s phased-in approach was based on the understanding that younger children are at a lower risk of contracting and transmitting COVID-19.
Konocti Unified School District opened to in-person hybrid instruction for kindergarten through sixth grades on Feb. 22, with grades seventh through 12th returning to campus on March 22.
Kelseyville Unified School District’s kindergarten through fifth graders returned to school on March 8, and sixth through 12th on March 23.
Lakeport Unified School District reopened on March 8 for in-person classes for K-6 and on March 22 for seventh through 12th grades.
In the Middletown Unified School District, Minnie Cannon and Cobb Elementary School opened to in-person instruction on half-days on March 1, the same date that Coyote Valley opened to in-person hybrid instruction.
Middletown Middle School is open to in-person instruction – no hybrid – and students returned to campus on March 22. All other grade levels at Middletown unified are in the in-person hybrid mode.
All schools are still offering distance only learning to those families that choose it, said Jill Ruzicka of the Lake County Office of Education.
Kelseyville Unified Superintendent Dave McQueen said the district was able to reopen transitional kindergarten through fifth grades while still in the purple tier.
Once Lake County went into the red tier, the district reopened Mountain Vista Middle School and the high school for hybrid instruction, McQueen explained.
“All the sites are open,” he said.
He said half of the district’s students are back on campus and half remain on distance learning because they wanted to stay home.
In the Lakeport Unified School District, Superintendent Jill Falconer said the principals of the middle and high schools, which opened for in-person learning last Monday, “report that things are going well and that students are very happy to be back on campus.”
She added, “Students have been respectful of the new rules and guidelines. We are overall very pleased to have had a smooth transition to Hybrid and it is just awesome to have some of our students back on campus.”
In related news, federal officials reported $28.3 million in assistance from the American Rescue Plan is allocated to help Lake County’s schools.
The breakdown is as follows:
– Kelseyville Unified, $5,054,000;
– Konocti Unified School District, $13,835,000;
– Lakeport Unified School District, $3,239,000;
– Lucerne Elementary School District, $944,000;
– Middletown Unified School District, $2,454,000; and
– Upper Lake Unified School District, $2,848,000.
“We don't have any idea when we will actually see the money,” Falconer said.
She said the district is using its current budget/Local Control and Accountability Plan advisory committee to help gather input from stakeholders and determine the best use of the money.
Special thanks to Jill Ruzicka of the Lake County Office of Education for assistance in confirming the dates of in-person instruction reopening of the county’s school districts.
Email Elizabeth Larson at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.. Follow her on Twitter, @ERLarson, or Lake County News, @LakeCoNews.