Anonymous wrote:What private school did they find with spots???? That's what I want to know.
Husband and I growing increasingly concerned about the same.
Almost comical, on Monday I saw a friend who was on a very cautious end of the COVID spectrum and quit her job to stay home with her three kids last year. She said to me, "there's no way they can't/won't open schools". I told her, that was what I was saying last Summer, and look how it turned out.
APS set such a crazy precedent last year, I don't know how they will walk it back. People are going to have to learn to live with this thing. It is not going away. With masks in schools, there should be a high degree of safety for unvaccinated kids.
But, we have lost ALL confidence in APS.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The rates are ticking up even here in Arlington despite 70% of adults having at least 1 dose (and probably more since that doesn't count those vaxxed on federal gov't sites) and Pfizer is saying they don't expect to seek EUA until September for school-age kids. The way to ensure 5 days per week is to be smart. Get vaccinated, keep your kids masked and social distancing for now. Delta is more contagious, so while we don't need to lock back down as we were last year, don't treat it like it's totally gone. I know way too many people who are doing sleepovers and indoor playdates since they don't see Covid as a huge health threat to kids. It might not be, but the case numbers might be a threat to in-person school so do your part.
Also - we probably weren’t going to maintain negative daily cases forever.
Anonymous wrote:The rates are ticking up even here in Arlington despite 70% of adults having at least 1 dose (and probably more since that doesn't count those vaxxed on federal gov't sites) and Pfizer is saying they don't expect to seek EUA until September for school-age kids. The way to ensure 5 days per week is to be smart. Get vaccinated, keep your kids masked and social distancing for now. Delta is more contagious, so while we don't need to lock back down as we were last year, don't treat it like it's totally gone. I know way too many people who are doing sleepovers and indoor playdates since they don't see Covid as a huge health threat to kids. It might not be, but the case numbers might be a threat to in-person school so do your part.
Anonymous wrote:I think we will be in school 5 days a week. That being said, I just read an article that said in MO there are 12 kids in the PICU and 10 on ventilators. I hope we don't get to that point here.
I haven't really researched much into SB 1303 but I was wondering what happens if there is a virus (not saying it has to be covid) that poses a significant clear and present danger. Something with a high mortality rate. Would the bill prevent schools from being closed?
Anonymous wrote:This might be purely anecdotal but my uber-involved-in-APS neighbor just told me that they are pulling all 3 of their kids from public school and going private because they have zero confidence that school will be 5 days a week next year given the rise of the new variant. I was floored! I am banking on 5 days a week with regular hours… am I naive?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think we will be in school 5 days a week. That being said, I just read an article that said in MO there are 12 kids in the PICU and 10 on ventilators. I hope we don't get to that point here.
I haven't really researched much into SB 1303 but I was wondering what happens if there is a virus (not saying it has to be covid) that poses a significant clear and present danger. Something with a high mortality rate. Would the bill prevent schools from being closed?
That was Mississippi and the guy who tweeted it walked it back to 7 in the ICU and 2 on ventilators by the end of the day. Still bad, but much lower.
Anonymous wrote:I think we will be in school 5 days a week. That being said, I just read an article that said in MO there are 12 kids in the PICU and 10 on ventilators. I hope we don't get to that point here.
I haven't really researched much into SB 1303 but I was wondering what happens if there is a virus (not saying it has to be covid) that poses a significant clear and present danger. Something with a high mortality rate. Would the bill prevent schools from being closed?