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SHADOW SCHOOLS — A roller rink. The YMCA. Houses of worship. All are creating makeshift classrooms this fall as school campuses remain closed around the country because of the pandemic. For working parents, it brings much-needed relief after what’s been an exhausting four-plus months since the coronavirus pandemic began. But it also raises public health questions: If it’s not safe to open schools this fall, why would these so-called “learning hubs” be any different?

California reporter Katy Murphy writes that the prolonged crisis has forced American communities into a late-summer frenzy to replace what schools normally provide, especially for children who don’t have a safe or quiet place to learn at home. While affluent parents are forming multi-family "pods" and hiring nannies and educators to teach their children at home, cities, nonprofits and businesses are racing to fill the void with programs that can look like parallel schools — without teachers.

From California to North Carolina, YMCAs and Boys and Girls Clubs are creating all-day learning centers that make sure students stay on task during virtual classes with their actual schools while their parents are at work. In some cases, local governments are stepping in with subsidies and child care — New York City plans to provide 50,000 free daily slots for school kids whose campuses have staggered schedules.

OLYMPIC DREAMS DEFERRED — In a normal year we would have spent this past week watching Simone Biles nail a new vault stunt or Katie Ledecky glide across a pool (without a glass of milk on her head). But the 2020 Olympics games, originally scheduled to end this Sunday in Tokyo, have become another pandemic casualty: They’re now set to take place in the summer of 2021. The postponement is also another setback for the U.S. Olympic Committee, which has been roiled by the conviction of Larry Nassar, the USA Gymnastics doctor who sexually abused young athletes for over a decade. The investigation has even sparked congressional reform.

Sarah Hirshland took over the USOC in 2018, while the organization was still coping with the fallout of the investigation. She’s the group’s first female permanent CEO. Nightly spoke with Hirshland this week about how the organization and aspiring Olympic athletes are coping with the delay and whether she thinks the Tokyo games will happen, at all. This conversation has been edited.

You should have now been in Tokyo right now cheering on Team USA athletes — what are you doing instead?

Last year we went into a pretty significant transformation for the organization. The postponement of the games has given us a little more space to accelerate that implementation in our governance reform work. We’re investing in our athlete services more deeply than we might have been able to if we were in Tokyo. We have invested quite a bit over the last six months to 12 months in building mental health expertise. Stress, anxiety, depression, addiction, eating disorders, those sorts of mental health challenges that, frankly, are just societal, can be exacerbated under the high stress environment of Olympic and Paralympic sport.

The greatest challenge continues to be awareness of the resources and the stigma in saying it's OK to not be OK.

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