As summer vacation ends, hundreds of thousands of students will continue to suffer from stifling heat. Students are heading back to the classroom this month during what has so far been the hottest summer on record. In aging buildings with insufficient or no air conditioning, students of all ages are at risk of heat-related illnesses and substantial learning loss, writes Daniel Cusick. It’s a problem that will likely persist in the coming years, as the planet continues to warm from burning fossil fuels. While the federal government doesn’t keep an exact count of how many public school buildings lack the infrastructure to keep kids and teachers cool, a recent government report estimated that 41 percent of public school districts were due for heating, ventilation and air conditioning upgrades in 2020. “If not this year, maybe next year or the year after that, many school districts will have to install air conditioning as a public health measure,” said Krista Egger with the Building Resilient Futures program at the nonprofit Enterprise Community Partners. Dilapidated school buildings across the country, in both rural and urban areas, are at risk of overheating this school year. The Biden administration has allocated roughly $500 million to solve the problem, though it may not be nearly enough given how many districts need help. The Department of Energy received requests for $5.5 billion in funding through its Renew America’s Schools program and has allocated just $178 million in its first payout. Still, the funding is beginning to help. For example, a public charter school in rural Oregon received nearly $900,000 in federal funding for new insulation and cooling and heating systems, among other improvements. Outside of Boston, an elementary school now has $2 million in its coffers to electrify the building, install a heat pump system and replace aging rooftop air conditioning units. Joseph Allen with Harvard Healthy Buildings Program told Daniel that because the climate crisis is happening now, schools that aren’t up to the task could soon find themselves in trouble. “Without some kind of cooling, it’s going to be impossible to have kids and teachers in a classroom in June," he said.
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