Anonymous wrote:OMG enough with the schools. We know you don't want to watch your kids -- too bad.
Construction workers are not packed into a 12-foot room with 25 other students for 8 hour days.
They are outside, spread out, often the solo person manning heavy machinery.
Its actually safer to be on a construction crew breathing fresh air than the recycled air classrooms with 3,000 coughing students in the same building.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It seems that the main argument for not opening schools is that students, who are generally not at risk from coronavirus, could spread the virus to vulnerable teachers, bus drivers, and family members at home. So schools remain closed and our children suffer major negative effects. Why was construction never halted around this entire city, and it is allowed to continue in Stage 1 unabated. Everyone of those construction workers are much more likely--we know adults carry a larger viral load than children--to everyone they come in contact with: their children, aging parents, spouses, public transportation drivers, the 5 to 6 other people they travel to their jobs in cars with. How can DC prioritize construction over children?
All the modern pandemics take off when the school are open. It’s the same for the flu. Schools are a major vector of transmission.
Actually we don't know that about coronavirus. Schools are a major vector of transmission for influenza virus, but coronavirus is not influenza virus.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It seems that the main argument for not opening schools is that students, who are generally not at risk from coronavirus, could spread the virus to vulnerable teachers, bus drivers, and family members at home. So schools remain closed and our children suffer major negative effects. Why was construction never halted around this entire city, and it is allowed to continue in Stage 1 unabated. Everyone of those construction workers are much more likely--we know adults carry a larger viral load than children--to everyone they come in contact with: their children, aging parents, spouses, public transportation drivers, the 5 to 6 other people they travel to their jobs in cars with. How can DC prioritize construction over children?
Except for those hospitalized with Multisystem Inflammatory Syndrome?
Anonymous wrote:It seems that the main argument for not opening schools is that students, who are generally not at risk from coronavirus, could spread the virus to vulnerable teachers, bus drivers, and family members at home. So schools remain closed and our children suffer major negative effects. Why was construction never halted around this entire city, and it is allowed to continue in Stage 1 unabated. Everyone of those construction workers are much more likely--we know adults carry a larger viral load than children--to everyone they come in contact with: their children, aging parents, spouses, public transportation drivers, the 5 to 6 other people they travel to their jobs in cars with. How can DC prioritize construction over children?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OMG enough with the schools. We know you don't want to watch your kids -- too bad.
Construction workers are not packed into a 12-foot room with 25 other students for 8 hour days.
They are outside, spread out, often the solo person manning heavy machinery.
Its actually safer to be on a construction crew breathing fresh air than the recycled air classrooms with 3,000 coughing students in the same building.
I do not need school to babysit my teen. I want my teen to learn and be in school the way it was meant to be. Not everyone who’s wishing schools would reopen are whining about needing it for childcare. I also want my college to student to be back at school and have the college experience the way it was meant to be. This isn’t about babysitting.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It seems that the main argument for not opening schools is that students, who are generally not at risk from coronavirus, could spread the virus to vulnerable teachers, bus drivers, and family members at home. So schools remain closed and our children suffer major negative effects. Why was construction never halted around this entire city, and it is allowed to continue in Stage 1 unabated. Everyone of those construction workers are much more likely--we know adults carry a larger viral load than children--to everyone they come in contact with: their children, aging parents, spouses, public transportation drivers, the 5 to 6 other people they travel to their jobs in cars with. How can DC prioritize construction over children?
All the modern pandemics take off when the school are open. It’s the same for the flu. Schools are a major vector of transmission.
Anonymous wrote:OMG enough with the schools. We know you don't want to watch your kids -- too bad.
Construction workers are not packed into a 12-foot room with 25 other students for 8 hour days.
They are outside, spread out, often the solo person manning heavy machinery.
Its actually safer to be on a construction crew breathing fresh air than the recycled air classrooms with 3,000 coughing students in the same building.
Anonymous wrote:It seems that the main argument for not opening schools is that students, who are generally not at risk from coronavirus, could spread the virus to vulnerable teachers, bus drivers, and family members at home. So schools remain closed and our children suffer major negative effects. Why was construction never halted around this entire city, and it is allowed to continue in Stage 1 unabated. Everyone of those construction workers are much more likely--we know adults carry a larger viral load than children--to everyone they come in contact with: their children, aging parents, spouses, public transportation drivers, the 5 to 6 other people they travel to their jobs in cars with. How can DC prioritize construction over children?