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With the possibility of more school closures looming, legislators are weighing in on the issue.
“I would like to see some consistency and some order applied to this,” said state Sen. Tom McGinty, R-Chester, during a public hearing Tuesday.
McGinty suggested that the state follow the lead of neighboring Pennsylvania where school closures are based on a district's need and not a single state mandate.
“I think that was a better approach and it was a lot more fair to the districts,” he said.
McGinty said the state could codify the different rules into a law so that they are not dependent on the individual counties.
Other senators also called for some uniformity in the state’s approach to school closures.
“I think it would be more logical to follow the way Pennsylvania does it,” said state Sen. Joe Scarnati, R-Jefferson.
State Rep. Randy L. D'Amico, R-Buckingham, believes the state’s “broken system” is making it more difficult to control the spread of the coronavirus, calling it “absolutely unacceptable.”
“I can’t believe that we are more concerned about election dates than the safety of the citizens of our state,” D’Amico said.
D’Amico said that his bill (SB 920) would require the director of the Department of Health to impose strict state regulations on the closure of schools for the rest of the school year and allow the school boards to be359ba680
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