Is there evidence of Omicron N0T transmitting anywhere it likes? I can’t imagine thinking for a moment that it won’t transmit at schools. |
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Anyway.
There's news in it-- if it sticks! About masking, testing, etc. But the bottom line it's just reiterating is that the school DISTRICT isn't shutting down AS OF TODAY. Same 5% guidelines for individual schools. |
This is so dumb. Why would there be, at least in the US? Most schools went to break before there was much omicron in the community. |
Link doesn’t work |
| Yes! Thank you MCPS for not surrendering to the crazy minority |
The thing about success in a pandemic--someone said this early on, I forget who--is that it doesn't look like anything. It is invisible. We kept schools closed until we had vaccines last year and a lot of people didn't get sick and die. How do you quantify that? How do you cut through the noise of people shrieking about unions and lazy teachers and people who just really want schools closed because unions and lazy teachers? The people repeating those drumbeats are so loud. So unrelenting. Other places kept schools open last year and people did get sick and die. Ended up disabled. Maybe not by the millions, but by the thousands. We are still losing a thousand plus Americans a day to this virus. Children are orphaned. In my head I've started calling it "the Great Winnowing." I don't know what else to say. It is mostly a winnowing of the poor, the sick, the old, the working class, the people a lot of you never see. It's a freaking tragedy and you're not even willing to test your kid or use the imperfect tools we have to stop it. No one wants kids not to go to school. No one. We just want a plan. |
The content is on Page 3. |
Yes. All numbers spiked sharply between Thanksgiving and Christmas break, coinciding with the arrival of Omicron in the US. |
Schools aren't magical places. Omicron spreads as well there as anywhere maybe more so since many kids don't wear their masks properly and the schools themselves are often overcrowded. |
Shut down sports now. This is a no-brainer, as is reducing the isolation/quarantine time to five days. In all likelihood, several high schools will meet the 5% criterion by 1/17—the end of the 14-day window that begins on 1/3—which is one week before the end of the semester. Not a great time to revert to virtual learning, which will likely happen at that point. This assumes, of course, that high schools have enough teaching staff to keep classes going, which is a big assumption when it comes to Omicron and taking into account travel, NY Eve parties, kids working jobs during break, you name it. Brace yourselves, this is going to be a wild ride (aka major disruption) during the month of January. This is a perfect example of designing policies around the last crisis (keeping schools remote far too long when it wasn’t justified) rather than the present reality (the wickedly fast and unforgiving rate of Omicron transmission). |
Oh well. Kids will get COVID. The idea of hiding from it forever through virtual school is untenable and irrational. |
Except when it saves your life when it gets you a staffed bed in a not-saturated hospital... |
And they'll keep getting it over and over again. And some will end up permanently damaged, but the way you figure it, that will give Larlx the edge they need to get into Dartmouth. |
7 day running average of new cases per 100K. |
+1,000 |