ACPS, APS, et al sue over EO

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:As a parent, my #1 goal is to keep schools open and my kid in school. If their teacher catches covid, she'll be out for 5 - 10 or more days (especially if they have kids who they catch it in sequence) and learning will slow with a sub. If my kids catch it then they'll be out of school for 10 days each.

January has already been hugely disruptive with snow closures and teacher absences. If masks help keep my kids and their teachers in school--especially given the current rates--then I'm all for keeping them.


Absolutely. Keep the masks on until the numbers come down.


The numbers for children have been down the whole time. And if you aren't wearing an N95 you aren't really stopping anything. So, stop the nonsense.
What are you smoking? Numbers for kids have been through the roof and probably are under reported due to testing shortages.

My kids, their teachers and most in their classes are all wearing N95s/KN95s/KF94s.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:As a parent, my #1 goal is to keep schools open and my kid in school. If their teacher catches covid, she'll be out for 5 - 10 or more days (especially if they have kids who they catch it in sequence) and learning will slow with a sub. If my kids catch it then they'll be out of school for 10 days each.

January has already been hugely disruptive with snow closures and teacher absences. If masks help keep my kids and their teachers in school--especially given the current rates--then I'm all for keeping them.


Absolutely. Keep the masks on until the numbers come down.


The numbers for children have been down the whole time. And if you aren't wearing an N95 you aren't really stopping anything. So, stop the nonsense.
What are you smoking? Numbers for kids have been through the roof and probably are under reported due to testing shortages.

My kids, their teachers and most in their classes are all wearing N95s/KN95s/KF94s.


Are you talking past each other? Covid "rates of infection" may be high for children (well, everyone), but the "rate of serious consequences" for children is really low.


Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:As a parent, my #1 goal is to keep schools open and my kid in school. If their teacher catches covid, she'll be out for 5 - 10 or more days (especially if they have kids who they catch it in sequence) and learning will slow with a sub. If my kids catch it then they'll be out of school for 10 days each.

January has already been hugely disruptive with snow closures and teacher absences. If masks help keep my kids and their teachers in school--especially given the current rates--then I'm all for keeping them.


Absolutely. Keep the masks on until the numbers come down.


The numbers for children have been down the whole time. And if you aren't wearing an N95 you aren't really stopping anything. So, stop the nonsense.
What are you smoking? Numbers for kids have been through the roof and probably are under reported due to testing shortages.

My kids, their teachers and most in their classes are all wearing N95s/KN95s/KF94s.


Are you talking past each other? Covid "rates of infection" may be high for children (well, everyone), but the "rate of serious consequences" for children is really low.


The topic was keeping kids in schools, not serious consequences.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:As a parent, my #1 goal is to keep schools open and my kid in school. If their teacher catches covid, she'll be out for 5 - 10 or more days (especially if they have kids who they catch it in sequence) and learning will slow with a sub. If my kids catch it then they'll be out of school for 10 days each.

January has already been hugely disruptive with snow closures and teacher absences. If masks help keep my kids and their teachers in school--especially given the current rates--then I'm all for keeping them.


Absolutely. Keep the masks on until the numbers come down.


The numbers for children have been down the whole time. And if you aren't wearing an N95 you aren't really stopping anything. So, stop the nonsense.
What are you smoking? Numbers for kids have been through the roof and probably are under reported due to testing shortages.

My kids, their teachers and most in their classes are all wearing N95s/KN95s/KF94s.


Same here. KN95 and KF94 masks have been distributed to all students and staff and these are the masks my kids choose to wear because all the other kids are doing so as well. So far, my kids have not tested positive as close contacts so I think the masks are helping. Cases should come down by a lot by mid to late February.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:As a parent, my #1 goal is to keep schools open and my kid in school. If their teacher catches covid, she'll be out for 5 - 10 or more days (especially if they have kids who they catch it in sequence) and learning will slow with a sub. If my kids catch it then they'll be out of school for 10 days each.

January has already been hugely disruptive with snow closures and teacher absences. If masks help keep my kids and their teachers in school--especially given the current rates--then I'm all for keeping them.


Absolutely. Keep the masks on until the numbers come down.


The numbers for children have been down the whole time. And if you aren't wearing an N95 you aren't really stopping anything. So, stop the nonsense.
What are you smoking? Numbers for kids have been through the roof and probably are under reported due to testing shortages.

My kids, their teachers and most in their classes are all wearing N95s/KN95s/KF94s.


Same here. KN95 and KF94 masks have been distributed to all students and staff and these are the masks my kids choose to wear because all the other kids are doing so as well. So far, my kids have not tested positive as close contacts so I think the masks are helping. Cases should come down by a lot by mid to late February.


We only have a handful of anti-science people at our school so almost all kids/teachers are wearing 94s/95s. The school gave them out.
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