Langley covid policy has been a joke. You either work for the school or have addt'l incentives to spin this. There are many cases where the "administration" is relenting to certain parent pressure to keep kids and making up close contact policy eeven though there are clear cases of covid in the classroom. Many parents with active covid cases have sent their kids to school because the previous test was "negative". |
| All DMV Schools should close next week, week and a half and let this burn out. You cannot tell me that there won't be students/teachers who become contagious BETWEEN tests (no matter how frequent) - creating an overlapping chain. Previous iterations of Covid were "containable" with testing and quarantine of close contacts. If schools stay open through the Omnicron surge count on many students and their families catching it. We are talking a couple of weeks to let it burn through the region - don't understand the thinking here. |
Agree with this. Let’s go back the week of the 31st. |
Yeah, their close contact policy is a joke. And I know I’m not in the minority who thinks that. |
How does it "burn out" if everyone is kept home? Don't people need to be in school, at work, etc to actually get it so it can move through all available hosts and "burn out"? |
| It seems silly for schools not to at least go back to last year’s policies (or greater, given how easily Omicron spreads) TEMPORARILY. Why can’t we all just be really intense about it through the end of the month, rather than these soft policies? (Which will certainly lead to illness and quarantine, which are more dangerous and disruptive than say, a month of really-focused policies?). It just seems so short-sighted. Let’s go hardcore for January and not be falsely optimistic about this virus not about to rip through our classrooms. |
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It's honestly depressing that so many on this thread are clueless about the potential threat of this illness. If you actually follow postings of doctors/scientists/epidemiologists- NOT politicians, government agencies, and Facebook groups with agendas- long COVID is very real and is affecting a significant swath of young and middle-aged vaccinated people. (Examples: Eric Feigl-Ding, Peter Hotez, Scott Gottlieb....)This is NOT the flu. Yes, vaccines and boosters help a lot, but they aren't sufficient! And we can't even get the country to cooperate fully on the vaccination/booster front! And, yes, the data changes as we learn more and as the viruses evolve, so mitigations must evolve too...
Data tracking, testing, and communication is shockingly poor for a country with our wealth and tech sophistication. We have had two inept administration responses to this. The CDC and others made a major messaging error to classify anyone not hospitalized or dead as experiencing a "mild" version of covid. Covid is an illness that, after minimal acute (mild) symptoms have occurred, blood clots can form 4-6 weeks later. There is a long list of symptoms for long covid symptoms/conditions that include neurological and organ damage. Who wants to sign up for that? There is also evidence to suggest that the illness may accelerate early onset dementia and a scary list of other chronic autoimmune illnesses. I agree that we must send our kids to school. But let's please live in reality. This virus is dangerous. We need to push our schools to install appropriate HVAC mitigation, require use of kn95 or n95 masks, and buy some damn tents and heaters for kids to eat outside when community spread is out of control (like now). I can promise you that several Asian countries are benefitting from their (albeit uncomfortably authoritarian to America's ethos) approach and will have a comparative economic and health advantage coming out of the pandemic. We are literally crippling and killing ourselves at this point with our arrogance, ignorance, and tribal politics. |
Exactly. Even the most selfish among us (who seem to disproportionately circle this board like it was a Qanon rally) should be able to appreciate short-term versus long-term problems. Short term closure is a short term inconvenience but it prevents longer-term worker shortages and associated consequences for businesses and the economy. And that’s not even counting the human suffering and grief costs, which I know the pretend-there’s-no-pandemic crowd don’t care about at all. So many Karen’s trying to call the Covid manager and demand better service, because Covid Karen’s needs come first. |
| Me thinks some public school teachers maybe from Chicago teachers union are trolling. Science is settled. Kids need to be in school. Private schools set the bar and make it hard for public schools to close again. |
EVERYTHING HERE IS 100% RIGHT. This is the most accurate and sensible Covid-related post on DCUM. |
+1. And I know a lot of people applying and deciding on schools are in here too ... Heads of School ... show your communities and prospective parents that you're actually being thoughtful on this for the long-term. (I mean if i was on here and saw that one of the schools I was applying to had testing twice a week, and another once a week, or every other, that would make a difference for me.) |
No |
| Open the schools up. Were all vaccinated and boosted and had COVID even. We’re ready to go back. |
Leave it to a DCUM Wine Mom to find a way to blame something on public school teachers from 1000 miles away. Maybe next week you should wait until afternoon to start drinking. |
As long as you are ready, nothing else matter. Have you tried calling the manager? |