10 Million COVID Tests Earmarked for U.S. Schools to Try to Keep Doors Open

President Joe Biden's administration announced on Wednesday it will increase COVID-19 aid for schools by giving 10 million tests in an attempt to help keep their doors open amid a surge of Omicron infections.

The highly transmissible Omicron variant has been causing problems for schools across the country. Several school districts have stopped in-person classes and transitioned back to online learning after an increase in infections and staffing shortages.

The White House announced it will give 5 million lab-based PCR tests and 5 million rapid tests to schools. The tests will be available to states this month.

Biden's administration said the additional tests will help ease the national supply shortage and assist schools to reopen safely.

States that want the tests for its school districts must apply through the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). The tests are expected to be distributed beginning as early as next week, Education Secretary Miguel Cardona said.

"We're doing everything we can to make sure that our children have an opportunity to stay in school," Cardona told CBS Mornings. "That's where they need to be, and we know we can do it safely."

The CDC previously announced "test-to-stay" policies to help keep students in classrooms and keep schools open. The policy allows students to remain in class if they test negative after being exposed to someone who has COVID-19.

U.S. Government Gives Schools COVID-19 Tests
President Joe Biden's administration announced on January 12, 2022, that it is giving schools 10 million COVID-19 tests to try to help keep them open. Above, Biden is seen before giving remarks in Statuary Hall of the U.S Capitol on January 6, 2022, in Washington, D.C. Greg Nash-Pool/Getty Images

The CDC is set to release new guidance later this week to help schools implement the "test-to-stay" policies.

The 10 million tests are on top of more than $10 billion devoted to school-based tests authorized in the COVID-19 relief law and about $130 billion earmarked in that law to keep kids in school.

Cardona said students need to be in their classrooms and the announcement shows the administration's commitment to helping schools stay open.

"We recognize that schools are the hubs of the community" and they should be open for instruction, the secretary added, saying it is "vital for our students."

The push is part of the Biden administration's wide-ranging efforts to expand supply and accessibility of COVID-19 testing as it faces mounting criticism over long lines and supply shortages for testing nationwide.

The White House on Wednesday announced that Dr. Tom Inglesby, the director of the Johns Hopkins Center for Health Security at the Bloomberg School of Public Health, is joining its COVID-19 response team to oversee its testing initiatives.

Starting on Saturday, private insurers will be required to cover the cost of eight at-home COVID-19 tests per month for covered individuals, and the administration is nearing the roll-out of a new website to allow Americans to request what will eventually be 500 million free tests that can be shipped to their homes.

The increased supply testing, though, will likely be too late for many Americans trying to safely navigate the omicron-fueled case surge, which is already showing signs of cresting.

The school testing initiative announced Wednesday comes after the nation's third-largest public school system, in Chicago, closed for days after an impasse between teachers and officials over reopening policies. The closure was a black eye for President Joe Biden, who made reopening schools—and keeping them open—a priority.

"We have been very clear, publicly and privately, that we want to see schools open," White House press secretary Jen Psaki said Monday. She cited the massive amount of funding for schools as evidence of the administration ensuring "we were prepared and had resources needed to address whatever may come up in the pandemic."

The new crop of tests is enough to cover only a small fraction of the more than 50 million students and educators in the nation's schools. The administration hopes the tests will fill critical shortfalls in schools that are having difficulty securing tests through existing federal funding or are facing outbreaks of the more transmissible COVID-19 variant.

The administration also is working to target other federally backed testing sites to support school testing programs, including locating Federal Emergency Management Agency sites at schools.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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