|
I think the public schools will start in person but as the weather gets colder and the cases of the delta variant increase then the schools will shut down and be virtual by the winter.
That’s why we opted for private for our kids this year. |
And then next year we’ll do the same thing for the sigma variant? |
| The mayor needs to enforce vaccination for city employees now. Yesterday. |
Good to know. Thanks. |
I never thought Republicans would show leadership on educational issues until this pandemic. (I still hope he loses, but glad he is putting this pressure on.) |
LOL, that should tell you something about the wisdom of opening schools. |
Or.....nothing will happen and we are all flying into a panic based on last year's debacle. Did we see this article about the UK? https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/europe/britain-covid-cases-plummet-mystery/2021/07/28/4fa3a734-ef7c-11eb-81b2-9b7061a582d8_story.html Something strange is happening in Britain. Covid cases are plummeting instead of soaring. |
It's just getting dumb to politicize everything. Much of Europe kept schools open throughout much of last year. Are they also shitty at education? |
+1. Also, Delta is in retreat in England and India. |
No, that tells me that even a blind chicken sometimes finds a seed. And your response tells me that a big reason many liberals dug in on the school issue is their reflexive opposition to anything Republicans say. |
I will say, the school closures did not make me a Republican, but they gave me some respect for the Republican value of small government and self-reliance. While those qualities don’t always lead to policy choices I agree with, they did lead to an orientation of not being consumed with preventing all covid risk. But at the end of the day, I’m also not sure if it wasn’t just pure interest group politics. Because of course all sorts of childcare remained open in Democratic states and cities. It was just unionized schools that closed (with charters and neighboring jurisdictions riding coattails). |
| Our Plan B is moving for the year. I was looking at options last night. Will rent in another state with fulltime in person and either rent out our AUPark house or leave it empty and eat the costs. |
That's my thought. In a way, I wish Trump were in charge of the 12 and below vaccinations. I loved the way he leaned on the red tape. I read THIS week that the CDC has asked Pfizer and Moderna to double their kid test pools. Why did they not ask that when the kid trials started in March? I am 100% not a Trumper, but the way his administration leaned on efficiency in pushing the vaccine development through was brilliant. I want a safe vaccine for under 12s, but I am also pissed off at the thought that any time has been wasted for the deployment of a vaccine for them this fall. Apropos of that--what are we looking at. November? December? DCPS should just delay opening until then and go through summer 2022. Ugh. |
They have an over 70% adult vax rate. We don't and aren't close. |
|
Sorry, the FDA. Why are they asking this week? Why didn't they look at the study protocols in MARCH? This is going to set back approval. This lands on Biden. Zero urgency.
July 26 (Reuters) - U.S. regulators have asked Pfizer Inc -BioNTech and Moderna Inc to expand the size of ongoing trials testing their COVID-19 vaccines in children aged between five and 11, the New York Times reported on Monday. The Food and Drug Administration has indicated that the current strength of the studies was inadequate to detect the rare side effects, including myocarditis, an inflammation of the heart muscle, and pericarditis, an inflammation of the lining around the heart, the report said. (https://nyti.ms/3xgzuWZ) The health regulator has asked the companies to include 3,000 children in their trials, almost double the original number of study participants, the report said, citing people familiar with the matter. FDA, Pfizer and Moderna did not immediately respond to Reuters request for comment. (Reporting by Mrinalika Roy in Bengaluru; Editing by Shinjini Ganguli) |