After the first week of school was interrupted by a record-breaking heat wave this year, the School District of Philadelphia Board of Education will vote this week about whether to resume beginning classes after Labor Day.
This year Philadelphia schools started on Aug. 27 in the midst of a stretch of summer days consistently reaching more than 90 degrees – leaving students and teachers sweating inside school buildings, many schools without air conditioning. As a result, the public schools were force to close at 1 p.m. for most of that first week.
RELATED: Corporate tax breaks cost Philadelphia's schools more than $60 million in 2017
A proposed school district calendar for 2019-2020 has classes beginning on Sept. 2, 2019, the Tuesday after Labor Day, and includes an eight-day winter break and weeklong spring break. The school year would end June 12, 2020. A proposed calendar for 2020-2021, however, begins classes Aug. 31 (a week before Labor Day that year), includes a two-week winter break, and ends classes on June 14, 2021.
The school year cannot extend beyond June 15 next year because of how teachers are paid, but Pennsylvania requires public schools to have 180 days of instruction, causing the inconsistent start dates.
Both schedules will be voted on by the school board during Thursday's meeting.
Despite the possible change to a post-Labor Day start, the school district said that hot weather this year is not the only reason why the change is under consideration, though the volume of parent feedback was a significant factor.
Follow Marielle & PhillyVoice on Twitter: @mariellemondon | @thePhillyVoice
Like us on Facebook: PhillyVoice
Add Marielle's RSS feed to your feed reader
Have a news tip? Let us know.