RALEIGH, N.C. (WTVD) -- The Wake County Public School board has called for a special work session on Monday to consider a future of fully returning to remote-learning as COVID-19 numbers spike across the state.
Wake County School Board chairman Keith Sutton told ABC11 the meeting, scheduled for Monday at 3 p.m., has to do with the education system's ability to "adequately staff schools."
In the span of a week, the school system has reported 80 COVID-19 cases; 33 of those being students with another 47 being staff members.
The meeting takes into account Gov. Roy Cooper's newly modified executive order for the state of North Carolina.
Sutton says a vote could come as soon as Tuesday.
The Monday afternoon board agenda includes:
Many Wake County elementary and middle schools are operating on hybrid learning; with parents choosing whether their students should be in-person or remote.
Earlier this week, Johnston and Granville County public schools announced that they will return to remote learning. JCPS will return on Monday while GPS will return Wednesday.
The decisions come as 80 percent of North Carolina counties enter the red and orange zones.
As of Tuesday, Alamance, Edgecombe, Halifax, Harnett, Hoke, Johnston, Robeson, Sampson, Vance, Warren and Wilson counties are all in the red.
Wake, Durham, Cumberland, Franklin, Granville, Nash, Wayne Chatham, Edgecombe, Lee, and Moore counties are orange.