Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Who are the people still voluntarily testing for covid?
Decent, unselfish people with class. You don’t know them.
Anonymous wrote:Who are the people still voluntarily testing for covid?
Anonymous wrote:Why do parents keep reporting positive cases?
Anonymous wrote:Why do parents keep reporting positive cases?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't understand why the Arlington VA daycare is closed for 10 days - ours stays open when there is a direct exposure. Honestly I wouldn't mind a quarantine of 5 days (an unpopular opinion on dcum)
The trouble is, it isn’t a quarantine. If you close daycare, I hire sitters and lean on family. So he has MORE exposures in a week of closed daycare than a week of open daycare.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:UGH. Someone in DC's class tested positive and they are shutting down the class for 10 days!! I thought CDC guideline was 5 days now. I hate that this will completely upend our lives - two working parents who now have to scramble for coverage.
Pandemic may be over, but COVID-related disruptions are still such a nightmare.
it should be five days from exposure to kid who tested positive. so if the kid who tested positive was last in on monday then 5 days would be saturday. you would need to get your kids tested on saturday or sunday to return to school monday with a negative test and no symptoms.
mask wearing would be required for day 6-10 that can removed during eating and napping.
if your school isnt masked then you get a 10 day.
I think this is our daycare’s policy too. Except the 10 day piece. In MoCo. I’d raise this with your center, OP. Other centers in VA do not follow the same guidance as yours (my coworker’s is one). You could have a case to get the policy changed.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:UGH. Someone in DC's class tested positive and they are shutting down the class for 10 days!! I thought CDC guideline was 5 days now. I hate that this will completely upend our lives - two working parents who now have to scramble for coverage.
Pandemic may be over, but COVID-related disruptions are still such a nightmare.
it should be five days from exposure to kid who tested positive. so if the kid who tested positive was last in on monday then 5 days would be saturday. you would need to get your kids tested on saturday or sunday to return to school monday with a negative test and no symptoms.
mask wearing would be required for day 6-10 that can removed during eating and napping.
if your school isnt masked then you get a 10 day.
Anonymous wrote:I feel like my daycare has rolled back all of the COVID policies that were inconvenient to THEM (not combining classes, no floater teachers, only one class on the playground, etc) but kept all he ones that are inconvenient for parents (long COVID shutdowns for a positive case, drs notes and testing to return if kids have symptoms even if it's just a cold, restricted hours, masks for the kids).
No surprise I guess
Anonymous wrote:This is getting absurd. When will someone fix this? Have any parents thought of going to the media to see if someone will do a story? It’s constant disruption to people’s lives and I think many are t aware this is still happening since the narrative is life has “returned to normal.”
Anonymous wrote:UGH. Someone in DC's class tested positive and they are shutting down the class for 10 days!! I thought CDC guideline was 5 days now. I hate that this will completely upend our lives - two working parents who now have to scramble for coverage.
Pandemic may be over, but COVID-related disruptions are still such a nightmare.