FOR BREAKING NEWS VISIT WWW.QNS.COM  AUGUST 19, 2021 • THE QUEENS COURIER 25 
  Catholic Schools 
 Brooklyn and Queens Catholic schools set to implement  
 COVID-19 safety protocols when schools reopen in September 
 BY CARLOTTA MOHAMED 
 cmohamed@schnepsmedia.com 
 @QNS 
 Th  e  Offi  ce  of  the  Superintendent  
 of Catholic Schools for the Diocese of  
 Brooklyn, which includes 69 elementary  
 schools in Brooklyn and Queens,  
 announced that COVID-19 safety protocols  
 will be in place when schools open on  
 Wednesday, Sept. 8. 
 In the absence of a mandate, the New  
 York State Department of Health recommends  
 school districts adopt universal  
 indoor masking for all based on guidance  
 from the American Academy of Pediatrics  
 and the Center for Disease Control and  
 Prevention (CDC). 
 Th  erefore, Catholic academies and parish  
 schools in Brooklyn and Queens will  
 require all students, faculty and staff  members  
 to wear masks beginning on the fi rst  
 day of school. 
 Additionally, school offi  cials will continue  
 to encourage vaccinations, social distancing, 
  hand washing and hand hygiene.  
 Schools will maintain the rigorous daily  
 cleaning and sanitizing of facilities, and  
 they’ll use enhanced ventilation. 
 Parents will be reminded to keep their  
 child home from school if they are sick,  
 and their child will be required to receive  
 medical clearance from a health care  
 provider so that they can safely return to  
 in-person instruction. 
 Th  e Catholic academies and parish  
 schools will also continue to follow city  
 and state guidelines regarding contact tracing, 
  quarantine and isolation protocols. 
 “As the numbers of coronavirus cases  
 continue to spike in children, and the  
 overall numbers of hospitalizations in  
 New York City are on the rise, this is  
 the most responsible approach to take  
 when we begin the new school year,” said  
 Superintendent Dr. Th omas  Chadzutko.  
 “I know the return to these safety measures  
 is not the situation parents, teachers  
 or students were hoping for in the 2021- 
 2022 school year, but we cannot ignore  
 the trends.” 
 According to Chadzutko, if the schools  
 are successful in preventing a further  
 increase of cases as the academic year  
 moves along, they will revisit the guidelines  
 and adjust them accordingly. 
 “As much as we want a return to normalcy  
 in our classrooms, we want our  
 students, faculty and staff   to  be  safe,”  
 Chadzutko said. 
 While he has received his vaccine and  
 continues to encourage others to do so  
 as well, Nicholas DiMarzio, bishop of  
 Brooklyn, said it is their hope that the  
 COVID-19 vaccines will help bring an  
 end to “this terrible virus that has controlled  
 our lives for much of the past year  
 and a half.” 
 Catholic  schools  in  Brooklyn  and  
 Queens, in adherence to strict guidelines,  
 opened on time for the 2020-21 school  
 year, and were able to off er  fi ve-day-aweek  
 instruction. Enrollment increased in  
 nearly 40 percent of the schools last year  
 in grades K-8. 
 To  learn  more  about  Catholic  
 Schools in Brooklyn and Queens, visit  
 catholicschoolsbq.org. 
 “I know the return to these safety measures  
 is not the situation parents, teachers or students  
 were hoping for in the 2021-2022 school  
 year, but we cannot ignore the trends.” 
 — Superintendent Dr. Thomas Chadzutko 
 Photo via Getty Images 
 
				
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